India initiates talks with Taliban Government

India initiated talks with the Taliban militants, the Indian foreign ministry said, which marks the first formal diplomatic engagement since the hardline Islamist group took over Afghanistan.

Indian envoy Deepak Mittal met Sher Mohammad Abbas Stanekzai, the head of the Taliban’s Political Office in Doha, at the request of the Taliban, the foreign ministry said.

The foreign ministry added that the two sides discussed the safety of Indians left behind in Afghanistan and the Indian envoy also conveyed India’s fears that anti-India militants could use Afghanistan’s soil to mount attacks.

“The Taliban representative assured the ambassador that these issues would be positively addressed,” the foreign ministry said.

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Trial-at-bar appointed to hear case over Easter Sunday attacks

A trial-at-bar has been appointed to hear the case over the Easter Sunday attacks.

The Attorney General had requested the Chief Justice to appoint a special three-member high court bench to hear the case.

Accordingly, the Chief Justice has appointed the three-member bench led by High Court Judge Damith Thotawatte.

Judges Amal Ranaraja and Navaratne Marasinghe will serve as the remaining judges in the trial-at-bar.

A local group that allegedly pledged allegiance to the ISIL (ISIS) group were blamed for the six near-simultaneous suicide bomb attacks which hit three churches and three hotels on April 21, 2019.

Another suicide bomber who had entered a fourth hotel left without setting off his bomb but later died by suicide after detonating his explosives at a different location.

The Attorney General has filed 23,270 charges against 25 people in connection with the attacks killed 269 people.

Cardinal refuses to meet Foreign Minister until conditions are met

The Archbishop of Colombo, His Eminence Malcolm Cardinal Ranjith has refused to meet Foreign Minister, Professor G.L Peiris, until certain conditions are met.

Reverend Father Cyril Gamini Fernando, the Parish Priest of St. Anne’s church, Kurana (Negombo) said that Peiris had written to the Cardinal requesting for a meeting.

The Cardinal has responded saying he is willing to meet provided certain conditions are met.

Reverend Father Cyril Gamini Fernando said that the Cardinal has asserted he will not meet the Foreign Minister until the conditions are met.

Malcolm Cardinal Ranjith has informed the Foreign Minister in writing that the investigations into the Easter Sunday attack must be conducted in a manner that wins the confidence of the public.

The Cardinal has said that in order to win the confidence of the Catholic community and the general public, the Government must implement the recommendations in the final report of the Presidential Commission on the Easter Sunday attacks.

Reverend Father Cyril Gamini Fernando said that recent statements made in the media, including by the Police, with regards to the Easter Sunday attacks, does not build confidence in the investigations into the attacks.

As a result, the Cardinal has said he will meet the Foreign Minister only after confidence is built with regards to the investigations into the Easter Sunday attacks.

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Special meeting to decide on next week’s Parliamentary proceedings

Despite the next special sitting of Parliament taking place on Monday (06), the Government and the Leader of the House Dinesh Gunawardena have proposed to include an additional special Parliamentary day.

This decision was made as the Government has to answer questions of current importance.

The motion was moved by Gunawardena to the Committee on Parliamentary Affairs held on 5th August, and was approved by the members of the Government as well as the Opposition in the Committee. Accordingly, it was decided to declare September 06 and 27 as Special Parliamentary Days.

Gunawardena iterated that only certain unanswered questions will be allowed to be raised during the sittings.

Daily COVID case count climbs to 3,828 as deaths spike by 215

The Epidemiology Unit of the Health Ministry reports that another 944 persons have tested positive for COVID-19 in Sri Lanka, moving the daily total of new cases to 3.828.

This brings the total number of confirmed cases of coronavirus reported in the country to 444,130.

As many as 376,216 recoveries have been confirmed in Sri Lanka since the outbreak of the pandemic.

The Epidemiology Unit’s data showed that 58,729 active cases are currently under medical care.

Meanwhile, Sri Lanka has registered 215 more COVID-19 related fatalities on Tuesday (August 31).

The new development has pushed the official death toll from the virus outbreak in Sri Lanka to 9,400.

According to the data released by the Department of Government Information, the latest victims confirmed today include 115 males and 100 females.

Reportedly, among the victims two are aged below 30 years, 46 victims are aged between 30-59 years and 167 others aged 60 and above.

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Opposition slams govt. for imposing emergency

Opposition political parties today came out against the imposing of emergency and urged the government to reverse the decision.

Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) General Secretary Ranjith Madduma Bandara said the emergency imposed under the National Security Ordinance does not have any relevance to the current situation. “The distribution of essential commodities have run into trouble because of inefficacy and due to bad management. Distribution of essential goods have not come to standstill because of any security reasons. Therefore imposing an emergency is not relevant at this moment,” he said.

“Therefore we urge the government to reverse the decision to impose emergency and make use of Disaster Management Bill of 2005 which is more appropriate for today especial when there is a pandemic situation,” he added.

TNA MP M. A. Sumanthiran also expressed similar sentiments where he said emergency laws would give more power to the President and the government.

“Government should have got a health emergency Bill approved by Parliament,” he said.

UNP General Secretary Palitha Range Bandara who had a different view said one has to be practical rather than imposing regulations under various laws. “One has to take practical steps to ensure smooth distribution of essential items. Laws seem to be not followed in this country and the government is losing its control,” he said.

“Government should hand over the state machinery to capable persons,” he added.

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Sri Lanka’s macroeconomic policy setting: Cohesion or confusion? By Dushni Weerakoon

The hike in policy interest rates by the Central Bank of Sri Lanka (CBSL) in August 2021 marks a shift from stimulus to exit strategies in the pandemic era. Such recalibrations globally are focused on how to tackle the historically large debt-to-GDP ratios that the COVID-19 pandemic leaves in its wake.

At end 2020, Advanced Economies (AEs) on average had amassed debt to the tune of 120% of their GDP, with Emerging Markets Economies (EMEs) trailing some distance at 65% of GDP. As the spotlight moves, the full impacts of the macroeconomic policy measures, hitherto obscured by the urgency to deal with the health crisis, are now coming under greater scrutiny.

Sri Lanka’s debt metrics make an orderly exit more difficult

Many countries, especially AEs, exercised their ‘monetary sovereignty’ to create and print their own money to support stimulus efforts. They have done so through coordinated monetary/fiscal policies – i.e. using monetary policy to keeping borrowing costs low while fiscal authorities provide back-stop assurance. Some are better positioned to manage the inherent risks and conflicts of interest that are involved in this exercise.

AEs have an advantage as issuers of reserve currencies with global demand and historically low interest rates; EMEs with limited exposure to foreign currency-denominated debt and holding comfortable stockpiles of reserves are less exposed to disruptive tail events.

Such countries can bring down their debt ratios if they are able to maintain nominal GDP growth persistently above the average interest rates that they pay on their debt – i.e. the growth-corrected interest rate (r-g) whereby countries can run modest primary deficits and still have a stable or falling debt-to-GDP ratio.

Sri Lanka is not similarly positioned. Its debt metrics point to high vulnerabilities – a high debt-to-GDP ratio of 101% of GDP, large exposure to foreign currency-denominated debt, and a hefty foreign debt repayment schedule. Under these conditions, the threat from exercising monetary sovereignty was always self-evident. A depreciating currency, notwithstanding distortionary controls on imports and capital flows, worsens the debt vulnerabilities.

Domestic and foreign debts are hardly similar. Given Sri Lanka’s debt metrics and the fundamental economic imbalances that have generated them, simple accounting identities do not always offer very plausible solutions. If the exchange rate depreciates, it adds to the real value of outstanding debt, relative to the size of the economy, even if interest rates remain modest. Further, shocks like COVID-19 raise risk premia, and marginal borrowing costs can rise suddenly and sharply, cutting countries abruptly out of financial markets.

Crucial to instil and retain macroeconomic policy credibility

Short of distortionary measures such as inflating debt away or maintaining an overvalued currency, a primary surplus is needed to stop the public debt-to-GDP ratio from rising and an even larger surplus is needed to reduce it. Improving the primary budget balance calls for tax increases or public spending cuts that are unpopular and have upfront costs. Given the government’s unwillingness to go down this path, households and firms will be required instead to bear the cost through higher interest rates that will affect their consumption and investments.

Higher interest rates in this instance will also not ‘pull in’ foreign capital to firm up the exchange rate given the risk premia on the currency front as depreciating pressure deepens. With reserves in hand to cover barely two months of imports, the forex market will continue to face volatility and instability until a steady stream of capital inflows, beyond short-term swaps, emerge. Until such time, a depreciating domestic currency will increase the interest burden as calculated in that currency. If debt servicing interest rate costs are pushed persistently above the economic growth rate, Sri Lanka’s debt burden will grow steadily even in the absence of new borrowing – a context sometimes called a ‘debt spiral’.

Without a clearly spelt-out debt sustainability path, Sri Lanka seems to be placing all its bets on Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) to ease external pressures and revive economic growth. For a successful outcome – i.e. productivity gains to drive long-term growth – the type of FDI matters. The more desirable is efficiency-seeking FDI, but this is also harder to attract.

For now, a policy environment of import curbs and capital controls is more likely to see strategic-seeking infrastructure-led FDI. The latter runs the risk of switching resources to non-tradable sectors – reducing the availability of external financing over the longer term – and the prospect of a short-lived growth burst as before in the post-war years. Crucially too, the sole reliance on FDI leaves Sri Lanka at the mercy of developments beyond its control.

Rather, efforts to attract FDI should be coupled with building effective policy strategies that instil and maintain credibility. Indeed, this is all the more important as Sri Lanka appears to be firmly against an International Monetary Fund (IMF) bailout. IMF loan amounts are small and it no longer has much sway on debt relief with much of EME foreign debt held by private institutional investors and China.

An IMF programme is mostly useful in firming up sovereign credit ratings and reviving the sentiments of investors. But investor sentiments can also improve if governments put forward and implement credible policy strategies.

By contrast, the CBSL’s policy rate adjustment to anchor expectations, for instance, will not stick if direct financing of fiscal spending is to continue under yield control measures. Instead, market convictions on the credibility of the policy mix will drive economic fundamentals. As Sri Lanka readies to transition out of pandemic-related emergency support, some notion of fiscal and debt sustainability to anchor confidence should be the priority in Budget 2022 preparations.

(This blog is based on the comprehensive chapter on “Economic Performance and Outlook: Managing the Crisis and Promoting Recovery” in IPS’ forthcoming annual flagship publication ‘Sri Lanka: The State of Economy 2021’. Link to blog: https://www.ips.lk/talkingeconomics/2021/08/30/sri-lankas-macroeconomic-policy-setting-cohesion-or-confusion/)

[Dushni Weerakoon is the Executive Director of the Institute of Policy Studies of Sri Lanka (IPS) and Head of its Macroeconomic Policy research. She joined IPS in 1994 after obtaining her PhD, and has written and published widely on macroeconomic policy, regional trade integration and international economics. She has extensive experience working in policy development committees and official delegations of the Government of Sri Lanka. Dushni Weerakoon holds a BSc in Economics with First Class Honours from the Queen’s University of Belfast, U.K., and an MA and PhD in Economics from the University of Manchester, U.K.]

Lockdown costing billions – FT.LK

A day of lockdown in Sri Lanka causes a negative impact of Rs. 22.4 billion, or $ 112 million, according to the economic projection model developed by the Imperial College.

It estimates the 10-day lockdown as of 30 August to have had an impact of $ 1.12 billion, or 1.3%, of GDP (Rs. 224 billion) whilst a four-week lockdown till 18 September would cost $ 1.67 billion, or 1.9% (Rs. 334 billion). A six-week lockdown ending 2 October followed by gradual relaxation would cost the economy $ 2.22 billion, or 2.5%, of GDP (over Rs. 444 billion).

The estimate was shared by the Independent Technical Expert Group following its sixth meeting held last week.

The Group’s chair is WHO Representative to Sri Lanka Dr. Alaka Singh and its facilitator is WHO Consultant and WHO Director-General’s Special Envoy For COVID-19 Preparedness and Response for the South East Asia Region Dr. Palitha Abeykoon.

The Experts Group following the sixth meeting recommended that the ongoing lockdown should be extended till 18 September.

“Overall, global and local evidence indicates that economies bounce back quickly once stringencies are removed,” the Experts Group said.

It said maintaining stringency to reduce transmission, caseload and deaths will enable quicker economic recovery.

It also noted that the current classification of Sri Lanka is ‘Red’ which adversely affects tourism. It said the ‘Green’ status (UK) requires daily cases less than 950 and a test positivity rate less than 2.5%.

“Extending the stringency measures would reverse the current trajectory and move Sri Lanka towards ‘amber’ and achieving ‘green’ status by end of the year,” the Experts group noted.

Citing a Monash University study, the Experts Group said extending lockdowns past 31 August was projected to reduce deaths from COVID-19. If the lockdowns are extended to 18 September and 2 October respectively, 7,500 and 10,000 deaths can be prevented relative to a release of lockdown on 31 August.

In the first week of the latest quarantine curfew, a record 1,188 deaths and 34,504 new cases were reported. A further 9,208 persons tested positive over the weekend. Yesterday a further 4,562 active cases were detected bringing the total to 55,098. The death toll rose to a highest ever daily tally of 216 on Sunday increasing total fatalities to 8,991.

Health experts and civil society groups have criticised the Government for being less stringent in the current quarantine curfew phase though officials have insisted a complete lockdown isn’t possible given the need for essential services to operate.

The Experts Group listed crucial enabling factors as saving lives, key adjustments in service delivery to care for cases, effective triage system supported by health professionals, optimising the home management protocols and monitoring of hypoxia, accelerating vaccination, and targeting the vulnerable to be given the most effective vaccines.

Among recommendations to prevention of transmission are the extension of strict social measures to reduce transmission; crucial household and individual compliance; reduce mobility by better targeting the measures that should be tightened using mobility data from Google Maps, mobile phone data and Facebook data, to identify the most important measures and plan in advance for a systematic re-opening of sectors, regions, and a return of employment categories.

The Experts Group also recommended the need for establishing safety nets by strengthening social support systems by engaging with temples and religious groups, NGOs, civil society etc. (i.e. a national mobilisation effort) to overcome needs of lower income groups, led by the Government (and supported by development partners as needed).

Other members of the Experts Group are Consultant in Community Medicine and Former Chief Epidemiologist in Sri Lanka and College of Community Physicians in Sri Lanka President Dr. Nihal Abeysinghe; Public Health Specialist and Sarvodaya President Dr. Vinya Ariyaratne; Senior Professor of Pharmacology at the University of Kelaniya and Sri Lanka Association of Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics President Prof. Asita de Silva; Consultant Immunologist and Head of the Department of Immunology – MRI Dr. Rajiva de Silva; Centre for Clinical Management of Dengue and Dengue Haemorrhagic Fever Clinical Head, Consultant Paediatrician, Association of Medical Specialists President Dr. LakKumar Fernando; Consultant Neuro Physician and Sri Lanka Medical Association President Dr. Padma Gunaratne; Consultant Physician and University of Colombo Prof. Emeritus of Medicine Prof. Saroj Jayasinghe; Prof. in Medical Education at the Department of Medical Education at the Faculty of Medicine and SLMA Former President Prof. Indika Karunathilake; Professor and Department of Immunology and Molecular Medicine Head at Sri Jayewardenepura University Prof. Neelika Malavige;, University of Colombo Professor Emeritus, Public Health Expert and former WHO Malaria expert Prof. Kamini Mendis; School of Public Health Chair/Professor at The University of Hong Kong, Faculty of Medicine, Hong Kong Prof. Malik Peiris; Prof in Community Medicine – Faculty of Medicine at the University of Colombo Prof. Manuj Weerasinghe; National Institute of Infectious Diseases Consultant Physician and Past President of the College of Physicians Dr. Ananda Wijewickrama; Former Professor of Community Medicine at the Faculty of Medicine – University of Colombo Dr. Lalini Rajapaksa; and Professor of Psychiatry – Keele University, UK, Emeritus Professor of Global Mental Health – Kings College London, and NIFS Chair Prof. Athula Sumathipala; and several WHO officials.

Influx of funds from IMF, China & Bangladesh to strengthen Sri Lankan reserves

Sri Lankan reserves have been strengthened by the receipt of influx of USD 787 Million from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and USD 150 Million from Bangladesh Central Bank as a swap arrangement, says Finance Secretary S.R. Attygalle.

In addition, Sri Lanka is expecting RMB 2,000 million (around USD 300 Million) from the China Development Bank today (August 31), he added.

Funds from Bangladesh is provided under the currency-swap agreement signed between the Bangladesh Bank (BB) and the Central Bank of Sri Lanka (CBSL) on August 03.

According to the deal, the BB is set to provide USD 250 million in total to help boost the island nation’s fast-depleting foreign reserves and ease pressure on its exchange rate.

On August 18, the BB transferred USD 50 million to the CBSL as the first tranche under the currency-swap deal initiated in March this year. The remaining two tranches involve USD 100 million each.

As the second instalment, Bangladesh released USD 100 million today, increasing the total to USD 150 million.

The BB will transfer USD 50 million more shortly to Sri Lanka if the CBSL sends a request within five working days after receiving the second tranche of the aid, a Bangladeshi newspaper reported quoting officials.

Last week, the IMF allocated a total of USD 650 billion as Special Drawing Rights (SDR) to its member countries to be exchanged as reserves or used as currencies.

Considered the largest allocation of SDRs in history, it came into effect on August 23.

Accordingly, Sri Lanka was allocated 554 million SDRs, which converts to about USD 787 million.

Speaking on the allocation, IMF Managing Director, Kristalina Georgieva said: “SDRs are being distributed to countries in proportion to their quota shares in the IMF. This means about US$275 billion is going to emerging and developing countries, of which low-income countries will receive about US$21 billion – equivalent to as much as 6 percent of GDP in some cases.”

Georgieva also stated that the allocation is a significant shot in the arm for the world and, if used wisely, a unique opportunity to combat this unprecedented pandemic crisis.

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Sri Lanka to declare protesting teachers, principals “closed service” to end long strike

Sri Lanka is set to recognise school teachers’ and principals’ services as a “closed service”, according to Education Minister Dinesh Gunawardena, in a bid to resolve a crisis that has brought online education to a standstill, without stirring other public services.

Though the move, the result of a proposal approved by the cabinet of ministers on Monday (30), could help end a long strike by teachers and principals and restart online school education, it will open many a can of worms in the future, two government officials said.

Both teachers’ and principals’ services were under the public service. But declaring them a closed service will allow the government to treat teachers and principals separately from the rest of the public service when resolving their demands of salary anomalies, wages, transfers, and other benefits.

This will also mean that cadres from the teachers and principals services cannot be transferred to any other public services, government sources explained.

“The implementation of the national decision to close down the teachers’ service will be implemented in the next few months,” Gunawardena said, adding that the cabinet decided to issue a gazette before November 20 declaring the services a closed service.

“All these decisions are taken to provide solutions to existing problems and the decisions are made taking into consideration the 4.3 million children in the country and their teachers who will pave the way for their future.”

The closed service move comes in line a the recommendation by a four-member cabinet subcommittee which looked into the salary anomalies of teachers and principals.

However, two senior government officials warned the move could be detrimental to the public service in the future.

“The government is setting a bad precedent,” said one official who asked not to be named as he is not authorised to speak to the media.

“Tomorrow doctors or nurses or another pubic service can also demand to declare them as a closed service and resolve their issue.”

Another official said Sri Lanka Railways had demanded a similar request two years back.

Forced decision

The government was forced to look into the teachers’ protests as a raft of trade unions of teachers and principals have been on strike since July 11 and have withdrawn from online education and from issuing results of the GCE Ordinary Level exam held early this year.

The education minister said despite financial difficulties, a special allowance of 5,000 rupees will be granted for teachers and principals who will be on duty during September and October 2021, the months in which the government has planned to hold GCE Advanced Level and grade 5 scholarship examinations.

The government has postponed the two key exams that help students select a national school for grade 6 and university entrance, drawing public criticism.

The minister, however, said, implementation of the salary revisions will be done in stages through a 2022 budget proposal. Full implementation will be done in the next four years.

“A decision was taken on Monday (30) to implement these measures in parts before the next four years to find a permanent solution,” he said.

A key teacher trade union welcomed the government’s decisions on “closed service” and salary hike through 2022 budget proposals.

“But we do not accept the 5,000 rupee allowance. We want our salary anomalies to be fixed as a part of the previous Subodhini committee report,” Joseph Stalin, the General Secretary of Sri Lanka Teachers’ Union told EconomyNext referring to a report which teacher unions had demanded the most.

“We don’t accept these increments or allowances otherwise. We will continue our strikes if that does not happen,” said Stalin.