Privatisation is the need of the hour:Advocata.

'At the interim budget last year, a list of SOEs reforms were provided to be restructured. 14 months later nothing has changed even in one SOE.'- Prof. Rohan Samarajiva, a policy expert and an advisor of the Advocata Institute.

He made these comments at Advocata's press briefing, organised to highlight the urgency of carrying out reforms to State Owned Enterprises (SOE), which have become a burden to the economy. 'The number of SOEs the government has added to the list of SOEs to be privatised has expanded but nothing has changed in any of them,' Professor Samarajiva said.

SOEs have played a fundamental part in the root of the current economic crisis, the large fiscal deficits the government has been consistently incurring.

From 2006-2021, the accumulated losses of SOE's were Rs. 1.5 trillion and the debt owed by these enterprises was Rs. 1.8 trillionin 2021.

Rehana Thowfeek, Research Associate at the Advocata Institute, stated that the disregard for fiscal rules, such as the Fiscal Management (Responsibility) Act, as evidenced by the government increasing the limit for guarantees on SOE liabilities have exacerbated the debt burden. She further stressed that, 'the root problem with SOEs are its conflicting objectives stemming from the lack of clearly defined ownership and responsibilities for each stakeholder where SOEs operate for the benefit of the government and managers of SOEs who dole out public employment opportunities, abuse resources for political purposes, and use SOEs as an

outlet for political patronage,'.

Expanding on how SOEs are a vehicle for corruption, Dhananath Fernando, Chief Executive Officer of Advocata Institute, explained that SOEs play a central role in facilitating corruption, and without a comprehensive restructuring, achieving transparency and freedom from corruption

in the country remains elusive. He emphasised that with the upcoming election year, delaying these SOE reforms comes at a cost, as their debts continue to mount, potentially leading to a return to the recent economic crisis.

'Restructuring SOEs offers a solution to four critical government challenges: limited revenue...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT