Budget to focus on rebuilding N&E - Bogollagama
Sri Lanka is on the verge of an economic renaissance at the decisive
conclusion of a three decade long conflict. The Business Community of
Sri Lanka is free, free at last from terrorism to resurge and achieve
its full potential, said Foreign Minister Rohitha Bogollagama, the chief
guest at the Exporters Association AGM. In fact, one could go even
further and declare that Sri Lanka is at a pivotal moment in its long
history. Being now in a post conflict phase, it is an opportune moment
for Sri Lanka's entrepreneurial spirit to take the fore and take this
country's economy forward from strength to greater strength.
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Foreign Minister
Rohitha Bogollagama |
The Government of President Mahinda Rajapaksa is making huge
investments in infrastructure and developing productive assets so that
Sri Lanka's strengths will be optimized now that the war is over. In
fact, the Ministry of Finance will focus next year's budget on
rebuilding areas liberated from the LTTE.
A new era
A new era has dawned in the whole country and in the North and the
East particularly, with the rapid development process, speedy
resettlement of displaced persons and restoration of democracy.The
devastated road network, highways, buildings and homes in the Northern
Province will be redeveloped under the "Uthuru Wasanthaya" accelerated
180-day development project, and all Government Ministries, are
coordinating to achieve the Government's goals in this regard.
It is also intended to increase the national gross production in the
North while finding a solution to the unemployment problem as a result
of the economic stagnation that resulted from the era of LTTE terror.
The economic opportunities being unleashed by the Government's
visionary policies for the Northern Province will naturally result in
rich dividends for business leaders both international and local who are
excited about the huge potential inherent in investing in the
reconstruction of the Northern and Eastern Provinces.
My personal interactions with Statesmen and women and business
leaders from countries around the world have made it more than clear
that Blue Chip Companies have tremendous interest in investing in the
reconstruction of the North and East of Sri Lanka. This is in addition
to several Board of Investment projects for which agreements have
already been signed. Several high-rise apartment complexes have been
planned by the private sector in addition to projects in the Leisure.
Financial Services (Banking and Insurance). Property Development, Retail
and Dairy sectors and major infrastructure projects. We will not merely
build back-we will build back better.
The Government's 180-day resettlement program is in progress with
another batch of 1,500 civilians from the Manik Farm relief village
being re-settled in Omanthai, Nochchimotai, Piramanalamkulam and
Pirappumadu last week. To ensure a trouble-free living for the displaced
persons, reconstruction of roads, supply of electricity and water were
already completed in these areas, which have been completely cleared of
landmines.
Lifting of fishing restrictions in Mannar, Trincomalee and Jaffna has
made the industry a thriving business. The fishermen are making good
money with a bountiful harvest. The Government has also provided the
civilians with agricultural equipment, seeds and other essential
requirements in Musali to boost the agro industry in the Mannar
District.
A joint railway-bus service from Vavuniya to Jaffna will commence
shortly for the benefit of Jaffna bound civilians and vice versa. The
rail-bus service will be a big boost for the people in the area and will
meet the long-felt need of the Jaffna civilians.
The Government has so far opened 17 new police stations in the newly
liberated areas to maintain law and order. Civil administration too is
operative.
Apart from the displaced persons, the Government has shown its
sincere commitment to rehabilitation ex-terrorist cadres.
Despite all these positive developments, we still find a few
countries, INGOs and individuals who are trying to project a distorted
picture. All I can say - and I continue to state this at the highest
diplomatic levels - is that no country, organisation or individual could
have a greater feeling for the displaced persons in Sri Lanka than
President Mahinda Rajapaksa and the Government of Sri Lanka. For those
displaced persons are our own countrymen and women. They are our
brothers and sisters.
optimism
Your would therefore no doubt agree with me that there is cause for
irrepressible optimism on the national front in the light of the
reunification of our proudly multicultural nation under one flag and the
phenomenal economic potential emerging from the national reconstruction
drive.
On the international scene too, there is increasing cause for
cautious optimism: Data released last Friday in the US showed
unemployment had fallen 0.1 percentage point to 9.4 percent in July as
President Barack Obama's multi-billion-dollar stimulus plan kicks in.
On Monday reports showed Japan's current account surplus growing for
the first time in 16 months, in June. Auto and electronic makers were
boosted by the weaker yen, which is good for exporters. These figures
sent the Dow Jones Industrial Average up 1.23 percent to its highest for
more than nine months. Lifted by better than expected jobs figures out
of the United States and stronger Japanese data, Asian markets jumped on
Monday, boosting hopes the recession-hit economies were on the mend.
Globalisation has resulted in the world witnessing a rapidly
increasing international integration of markets for consumer goods,
technology, and factors of production and the globalization process has
offered unlimited opportunities as well as challenges for tea producing
countries, in particular.
Global trade has vastly outpaced global production since 1960.
Cross-border flows financial capital have exploded. Labour is also
becoming more mobile. The implication of all this is that the
competitive pressure on businesses today is probably stronger than ever
before. The rise of China as a global power in export markets is only
the most recent addition to a long line of outward-oriented economies,
in particular from Asia. But international integration does not only
mean increased competition. It also means that businesses have
unprecedented opportunities for expansion by taking advantage of
international demand for their products. And businesses can tap
international markets for new technology, knowledge, and finance.
Tea industry
In this context, it is significant that global tea production is now
dominated by four countries, India (1002 Mn kgs,) China (990 Mn kgs) Sri
Lanka (318.7 Mn kgs) and Kenya (286.0 Mn kgs) with Indonesia closely
following with a production of 139.8 Mn kgs. These countries account for
about 75-80% of the world's tea production and Sri Lanka was ranked as
the 3rd leading global producer marginally ahead of Kenya in 2008. Sri
Lanka's production which remained in the region of 233 Mn kg since the
early 90s has been rising almost annually to reach the highest level of
318.7 million kg in 2008. Tea crop productivity in Sri Lanka is a
different story altogether. Due to various reasons, productivity is
among the lowest in the global scenario. The profitability of the Sri
Lankan tea industry, like any other plantation industry, rests heavily
on the movement of the global market and production costs. With costs of
production in Sri Lanka very much higher than its competitors', and
international tea prices increasingly competitive with the emergence of
low-cost global producers like Kenya, India and Vietnam, domestic
producers and the corporate sector in particular may find it difficult
to make ends meet.
It is timely that Sri Lanka's Tea industry re-evaluates its strategic
vision, re-visiting in particular the tremendous potential for value
addition of a product that is linked to markedly to our national image,
in this context.
I would also like to take this opportunity to stress an important
dynamic occurring in the international sphere to you: Asia is returning
to the centre stage it occupied for eighteen centuries before the rise
of the West.
For the vast majority of recorded history, Asia, with the greatest
share of the world's population has had the greatest share of the
world's economy. In the first century AD Asia accounted for 76.3% of
global GDP. Western Europe at this time accounted for only 10.8% of
global GDP. This balance began to shift with the industrial Revolution.
By 1820 Western Europe's share of global GDP had grown to 23.6%, while
Asia's had shrunk to 59.2%.
A Goldman Sachs study predicted that by 2050, three of the four
largest economies in the world will be in Asia, and in this order:
China, the USA, India and Japan.
Having analysed emerging trends at the dawn of this 21st Century, Sri
Lanka's foreign policy is being recaliberated to fully explore the
potential inherent in our geo-political location.
In the recent past, Sri Lanka has stepped into several international
organizations and fora: This we have done in order to enable our country
to have the widest possible engagement with global decision-makers. I am
pleased to bring to your attention that Sri Lanka has moved well beyond
our traditional relationships in the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM), G77,
the Commonwealth and the UN system to membership in all the key
organizations where the new architecture for the international system is
being built: fora such as the ASEAN Regional Forum (ARF); the Shangri-La
Dialoge, ACD: the Shanghai Cooperation Organization; Asia Middle East
Dialoge (AMED), the G15 and the G11. Sri Lanka is also currently the
Chair of SAARC, as you would be aware.
Sri Lanka is now preparing with a keen degree of enthusiasm to host
the Asian Cooperation Dialoge (ACD) Ministerial Meeting in Colombo from
15-16 October and thereafter to take up the challenging but much
anticipated responsibility of serving as Chair. The theme of this Year's
ACD Ministerial Meeting will be of particular interest of you in the
business community: "Spirit of Asia: global economic recovery and
development prospects". |