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QUEST FOR BALANCE - Our Country- Vanity, Sanity and Reality Prepared for the 32 nd National Conference of the Institute of Chartered Accountants (ICASL), Sri Lanka Anila Dias Bandaranaike 21 October 2011 1

QUEST FOR BALANCE - Our Country- Vanity, Sanity and Reality

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QUEST FOR BALANCE - Our Country- Vanity, Sanity and Reality. Prepared for the 32 nd National Conference of the Institute of Chartered Accountants (ICASL), Sri Lanka Anila Dias Bandaranaike 21 October 2011. Basic Premise. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: QUEST FOR BALANCE - Our Country- Vanity, Sanity and Reality

QUEST FOR BALANCE- Our Country-

Vanity, Sanity and Reality

Prepared for the 32nd National Conference of the Institute of Chartered Accountants (ICASL), Sri Lanka

Anila Dias Bandaranaike21 October 2011

Page 2: QUEST FOR BALANCE - Our Country- Vanity, Sanity and Reality

Basic Premise

A Nation strives to improve the quality of life of all its citizens through sustainable development that uplifts human well-being

As Sri Lanka strives, how do we “balance” our development?

Page 3: QUEST FOR BALANCE - Our Country- Vanity, Sanity and Reality

What is Human Well-being? • Material Well-being - food, clothing, housing,

economic services, physical health, clean environment

• Intellectual Well-being - educational, professional, aesthetic, cultural pursuits

• Emotional Well-being - freedom of thought, speech and beliefs, family, community, personal safety, mental healthHuman well-being requires material needs as well as intellectual stimulation and emotional security.

Page 4: QUEST FOR BALANCE - Our Country- Vanity, Sanity and Reality

4

Reality - Sri Lanka’s Resourcesfor Physical , Intellectual, Emotional Well-being

• Island: national security, beautiful beaches, harbours, ocean resources, strategic location

• Land: mostly arable, mostly flat, accessible mountains, plentiful water, nutrition, easy road/air/sea access

• Cultural: rich, diverse traditions of Sinhala, Tamil, Muslim, Burgher heritage

• Religious: teachings of 4 great religions - Buddhism, Hinduism, Islam, Christianity

• Communication: 2 ancient languages (Sinhala, Tamil) and global business language (English)New Era - end of 30 years of terrorism and conflict

Page 5: QUEST FOR BALANCE - Our Country- Vanity, Sanity and Reality

National Priorities in our Quest for Balance

• Achieve – our potential by ethical means• Safeguard – our rich multicultural heritage• Maintain – unity in our diversity• Preserve – our natural environment• Share – leisure with family and community• Enjoy – living in harmony and health

Our Country’s potential is unlimited – Develop it with wisdom and balance!

Page 6: QUEST FOR BALANCE - Our Country- Vanity, Sanity and Reality

(a) Share of Households with access In 2010, Samurdhi provided 1.6 mn families Rs.9.2 bn , while 1.8 mn

migrant workers remitted USD 4.1 bn (Rs. 465 bn) to Sri Lanka

Current Reality – Material Well-being(a)

Category 1973 2010Housing-owned/rent freeHousing-permanent floor, walls, roof

nana

8986-92

Electricity 8 85Safe water 46 88Sanitation 59 90TV 0 80Telephone 1 77Poverty Headcount (26% in 1996) na 8.9

Page 7: QUEST FOR BALANCE - Our Country- Vanity, Sanity and Reality

Current Reality – Regional Disparities Province We

stern

North Western

Central

Southern

Sabaragamuwa

North Central

Eastern

Uva

Northern

Share of GDP 45 10 10 10 6 5 6 5 3Share of Households 27 13 13 13 10 6 7 6 5Monthly Household Expenditure-Rs,000

42 26 28 29 26 29 25 24 26

Poverty Headcount 4 11 10 10 11 7 15 14 13•Strongest disparity between WP and others Source: DCS HIES 2009/10

Page 8: QUEST FOR BALANCE - Our Country- Vanity, Sanity and Reality

Current Reality – Intellectual Well-BeingCategory 1970 2010Population growth rate-% 2.1 1.0

Dependency ratio-% (a) 88 61Life expectancy-yrs 66 73Infant mortality/ ‘000 48 10Secondary Education or higher 34 71

LFPR-% 35 49Unemployment-% 19 5

• Free preventive and curative health services

• Needs of aging population rising. Private health care expanding.

• In 2010, 61% eligible, but only 10% could enter Free State Universities. Opinion divided on Private Universities• State provided 14 % of employment in 2010. • 1.8 mn migrant workers equal about 20% of labour force

Page 9: QUEST FOR BALANCE - Our Country- Vanity, Sanity and Reality

• Terrorism no longer a threat, but inadequate trained professionals to treat post conflict mental trauma

• Rising political thuggery, gun culture, underworld violence – do police, courts protect citizens?

• Balanced language policy, but no minority rights in practice – for official letters, notices, court proceedings

• perceived apathy on reconciliation issues – e.g. excessive army presence , weak inclusivity in North development

• Self-defeating attitude to criticism – attacks on local media personnel and offices, poor diplomacy to counter international hypocrisy

Current Reality – Emotional Well-being

Page 10: QUEST FOR BALANCE - Our Country- Vanity, Sanity and Reality

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Current Reality – Summary• Material Well-being? - Sri Lanka a lower-middle income

country with national socio-economic indicators at upper income levels. But regional disparities high, aging burden rising

• Intellectual Well-being - Good basic indicators. But mismatch between education and labour market with poor access to tertiary education

• Emotional Well-being? - Significantly improved when conflict ended. But, inadequate resources to address post-conflict trauma and minority rights in practice, while freedom of speech and personal security questionable

Good progress on economy and material well-being, but need to balance with intellectual and emotional well-being

Page 11: QUEST FOR BALANCE - Our Country- Vanity, Sanity and Reality

Current Reality - Structure of Economy Sector 1970 2010Agriculture 28 12

Industry 24 29

Services 48 59Total 100 100

• Agriculture share declining, Services increasing, as economy develops• Minimal change in Industry share •Efficient services needed to fuel growth in other sectors•More and better services required as household needs expand with higher incomes

Page 12: QUEST FOR BALANCE - Our Country- Vanity, Sanity and Reality

Our Country Today – The RealityDevelopment model targets material well-being• Provides for infrastructure to improve regional

economic access • Focuses on “Hubs” in Services sector to grow• Advocates private participation in development • Encourages foreign employment to raise foreign

earnings and reduce unemployment• Overlooks environmental implications of chosen path• Pushes chosen path by discouraging alternate views

Page 13: QUEST FOR BALANCE - Our Country- Vanity, Sanity and Reality

Sri Lanka’s Economy Past Reality vs. Future Vanity or Sanity?

Indicator 1983- 2008 2009 2010 2011 Target

2014Target

Per Capita GDP-$ 335 – 2,014 2,057

2,399

2,794 4,190

Investment: GDP 22 – 29 24.4 27.8 29.5 34.0

National Savings: GDP 14 – 24 23.7 24.7 25.8 32.3Inflation 0.9 -17.1 5.9 7.3 6.0 5.0

GDP Growth 5.2 3.5 8.0 8.5 9.5Budget Deficit 6.1 -12.7 9.9 7.9 7.2 4.8Debt :GDP 68-109 86 82 80 67External Debt Servicing 11.6 - 28.6 19.0 15.2 13.5 14.3

Targets based on post-conflict optimism that investment-led, infrastructure-led, consumption-led development will generate revenue to meet government’s expenditure and debt-servicing

Page 14: QUEST FOR BALANCE - Our Country- Vanity, Sanity and Reality

Current Focus – Vanity or Sanity?1. National Policy Targets and Performance• Can we expect private investment with expanding role

o f state and armed forces in economy?• Can we achieve investment and growth targets on low

credibility with investors?• Can we boast of high external reserves built on rising

market borrowings?• Can we reduce budget deficit and maintain debt, debt-

servicing targets with rising state employment and current borrowing trends?

• Can CBSL intervene to maintain current interest and exchange rates and also sustain growth targets?

Page 15: QUEST FOR BALANCE - Our Country- Vanity, Sanity and Reality

Current Focus - Vanity or Sanity?Following on positive developments, – Are we on a balanced path to our medium-term development goals?– Can sanity overcome vanity to rectify perceived policy inconsistencies? – Will Sanity overcome Vanity to gain credibility with investors and other stakeholders? – Will Vanity prevent the Sanity of realistic performance evaluation and public pronouncements?– Does Sri Lanka balance attitude, nationally and internationally?

Page 16: QUEST FOR BALANCE - Our Country- Vanity, Sanity and Reality

Current Trends – Vanity or Sanity?2. Emphasis on foreign employment• End to civil conflict, but no end to out-migration, brain and

skills drain• Retirees returning, but middle management and young

skilled workers leaving • Government policy encourages migration• Inadequate options, incomes and challenges to retain

trained and untrained Sri Lankans• Declining HR capacity to deliver on Sri Lanka’s post-conflict

development targets

Page 17: QUEST FOR BALANCE - Our Country- Vanity, Sanity and Reality

Current Trends – Vanity or Sanity?

Do state and citizens balance options for and against living in Sri Lanka today?

Will Vanity prevent the Sanity of recognising the inconsistency between meeting Sri Lanka’s HR needs and pushing foreign employment?

Page 18: QUEST FOR BALANCE - Our Country- Vanity, Sanity and Reality

Current Focus – Vanity or Sanity?3.Show-casing Sri Lanka as “Emerging Wonder of Asia” • Can 20 million people and environment cope with 2.5

million tourists? Why target numbers – not $ earnings?• At current migration, labour force entry rates, are 500,000

jobs in tourism by 2016 realistic; also, targets for BPO, IT sectors, as envisaged?

• 2nd international airport, Hambantota seaport, International sports venues - True benefits vs. colossal costs to Sri Lanka?

• “Hype” vs. performance (e.g. Gas) – “Walk the talk”?

Page 19: QUEST FOR BALANCE - Our Country- Vanity, Sanity and Reality

Current Focus – Vanity or Sanity?

Is there balance in our show-casing of Sri Lanka’s potential as the “Emerging Wonder of Asia”?

Will Vanity prevent the Sanity of clarity, consistency and credibility, when show-casing our future?

Page 20: QUEST FOR BALANCE - Our Country- Vanity, Sanity and Reality

Current Trends – Vanity or Sanity?4. Emphasis on money and material well-being• What money can buy drives lifestyles• Monetary gains, not professional standards, drive most

businesses• Non-communicable diseases linked to stress rising• Globalisation and unrestrained marketing, not facts,

influence food habits; also lifestyles• Energy, water and waste disposal under strain with

“development”• Rising noise, water, air pollution, traffic congestion with

“development”• Do those who make “big bucks” enjoy optimal well-being?

Page 21: QUEST FOR BALANCE - Our Country- Vanity, Sanity and Reality

Current Trends – Vanity or Sanity?

Is there balance in our use (and abuse) of resources for “development”?

Will Vanity prevent the Sanity of valuing our non-material advantages and conserving our resources?

Despite improvements in material well-being, is there balance towards achieving total human well-being?

Page 22: QUEST FOR BALANCE - Our Country- Vanity, Sanity and Reality

How do we regain our Balance?

• Recognise Reality•Avoid Vanity

•Maintain Sanity ……

to ensure that Sri Lanka’s development will be sustainable and uplift human well-being

Page 23: QUEST FOR BALANCE - Our Country- Vanity, Sanity and Reality

Thank You