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No Sri Lankan, rich or poor, spared as economic crisis worsens

Imran Khan

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No Sri Lankan, rich or poor, spared as economic crisis worsens​

Savings evaporate, businesses face closure and the Sri Lankan poor struggle to eat as economic crisis sends value of rupee plummeting.

A man rests while waiting in a line to buy diesel near a Ceylon Petroleum Corporation fuel station, amid the country's economic crisis in Colombo

A man rests while waiting in a line to buy diesel near a fuel station in Colombo, Sri Lanka [Dinuka Liyanawatte/Reuters]
By Zaheena Rasheed
Published On 8 Apr 20228 Apr 2022

Colombo, Sri Lanka – Sri Lankans, both rich and poor alike, are fed up.
Hit by a deepening economic crisis, people in the informal settlements of the capital, Colombo, say they are eating half of what they used to as food prices have doubled in less than a year. In middle-class neighbourhoods, meanwhile, owners of cafés, bakeries and salons have had to let go of staff and are facing the prospect of closing shop altogether, with hours-long power cuts and reduced earnings keeping customers away.

Keep reading​

list of 4 itemslist 1 of 4

Infographic: Sri Lanka’s economic crisis and political turmoil

list 2 of 4

Sri Lanka President Rajapaksa ‘will not resign’, says minister

list 3 of 4

Sri Lanka’s poor queue for hours to buy kerosene amid crisis

list 4 of 4

Crisis-hit Sri Lanka is hosting thousands of stranded Ukrainians

end of list

“The whole country is destroyed,” said one woman in Colombo’s Nugegoda district. “Even stray dogs live better than us.”
“Everything is expensive,” said another. “We cannot manage.”
Sparked by a foreign exchange crisis, Sri Lanka – an island nation of 22 million people – is grappling with its worst economic downturn in decades.
The foreign currency crunch has left President Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s government unable to pay for fuel imports and other essentials. This has resulted in fuel shortages that have caused rolling electricity blackouts of up to 13 hours and brought ground transport in parts of the country to a halt.
Queues for diesel, cooking gas and kerosene are a common sight, with people reporting having to wait in line for days on end to get their rations. Police say at least two people have died while waiting in the scorching heat.
Prices of medicines have also skyrocketed, while the value of the Sri Lankan rupee has plummeted by 30 percent against the United States dollar this year, making it the worst-performing currency in the world.

The Rajapaksa government has turned to the International Monetary Fund for a bailout and is also seeking financial assistance from India, which provided a $500m credit line for fuel imports in February and approved a second $1bn credit line to help ease shortages of essentials in March.
Sri Lankans protest demanding president Gotabaya Rajapaksa resign, in Colombo, Sri Lanka, Tuesday, April 5, 2022.
Sri Lankans protest demanding President Gotabaya Rajapaksa resign, in Colombo, Sri Lanka, Tuesday, April 5, 2022 [Eranga Jayawardena/ AP]
But that has done little to end the crisis, and protests calling for the president’s resignation have broken out across the country since early March, two years after the COVID-19 pandemic decimated one of Sri Lanka’s key economic sectors: tourism. Protesters chanting “Go home, Gota”, a reference to the president’s nickname, have been taking to streets across cities and towns at different times throughout the day.

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In Colombo, a city that has endured bombings, riots, curfews and rationings – mostly during Sri Lanka’s 26-year civil war against Tamil separatists, which ended in 2009 – many residents told Al Jazeera these were the hardest times they could remember.
In Nugegoda, along a row of low-slung houses perched on the edges of a railway track, residents said they barely had enough to eat. Chandra Madhumage, who has struggled to find work as a domestic servant since the start of the pandemic, was worried she might soon run out of money to pay for medication for her diabetes and high cholesterol.

“This is a disaster,” said the mother of three. “How can we survive?”
Across the road from Madhumage’s house, DW Nimal, who was clearing weeds at the roadside with his hands, said he too was barely making ends meet. Most of his monthly earnings of 30,000 Sri Lankan rupees ($100) went to food.
“I am fed up with this life,” he said.
Up the road, Gayan Kanchana, a 42-year-old tuk-tuk driver said, “This is the hardest it’s ever been.”

The father of two said he was getting fewer and fewer calls for hires, as the cost of a ride has increased due to the doubling of the price of petrol. His family can no longer afford meat, bread, milk powder or eggs.
“We used to eat chicken two to three times a week,” he said. “Now, it’s just dried fish and rice.”
Figures from the Sri Lankan Central bank show that inflation in the country rose by 18.7 percent in March, compared with the same period last year. Food prices have jumped by 30.2 percent, with onions, dhal and rice costing double what they used to. The price of tomatoes has tripled, while that of turmeric, which is imported, has quadrupled.
INTERACTIVE_SRI_LANKA_FOOD PRICES1


Vendors at a fruit and vegetable market in Narahenpita, in the southeast of Colombo, said they had enough supplies but added people no longer had the money for groceries. At a stall that was well-stocked with carrots, beans, spring onions and chillis, PKP Sampath said “no one comes to buy food any more”.
Pointing at a customer holding a plastic bag that was only half full, Sampath said, “He’s been coming here for the past 13 years, and he used to buy bags full of vegetables. Now, he’s had to cut down.”
The vendor said “people used to buy what they want” in the past, but now, “they only buy what they need to survive.”
At the adjacent fruit stall, Shriyani Jayasuriya, who was stocking up on watermelon, said she might have to close her food business because of the high cost of produce. The owner of Kindred Foods said she used to get at least 50 customers a day, but now, it was only 10 or 12.

“These are terrible times,” she said. “We cannot live in Sri Lanka.”
Many business owners said the crisis has hit the middle class the hardest.
Shiranshi Jayalath, who owns a salon in Ethulkotte, said she may also have to close shop due to power cuts lasting at least four hours during the day. Speaking from a protest outside the parliament, the 43-year-old said she has already had to let go of three of her workers.
“The middle class itself is disappearing,” she said. “This government needs to go.”

Smaller construction firms have also been hit hard.
“Many people who had started work on their homes have no hope of completing their buildings,” said Dilina Hettiarachchi, a 37-year-old structural engineer. “Prices of cement and reinforced steel have tripled and the bank loans people had taken out for home construction are no longer sufficient.”
Bigger projects were continuing, however, he said, as the industry’s strongest players had stocks of material as well as the foreign currency reserves to buy what they need. But even they were not taking on any new projects, he said, demonstrating just how widespread the impact of the crisis is.
One resident said the well-to-do in Sri Lanka have usually been insulated from the multiple crises that have roiled the country. But now, they are watching the situation unfold with a “new horror” as the value of their savings drop by the day.

In March, many rushed to get rid of their rupees by buying up gold, only to send up gold prices to a record high at the end of that month.
INTERACTIVE_SRILANKA_ECONOMY_EXCHANGE RATE

As the crisis worsens, anyone who can leave Sri Lanka is planning to do so.
Antoinette Prabalini Benjamin George, a 30-year-old lawyer, is one of them – but the dropping value of the currency has complicated her plans.

George applied for a bank loan of 2.2 million Sri Lankan rupees to go study abroad two months ago. At the time, 200 rupees could buy one US dollar. But by early March, the pegged value of the rupee dropped to 230 to a dollar, and by the first week of April, it was hovering at 300 rupees to the dollar.
George said the loan she had applied for was no longer enough, and it was also unclear if any Sri Lankan bank would issue her the foreign currency she needed to pay for her tuition fees.
One official at the Commercial Bank told Al Jazeera the bank was not issuing any foreign currency to new students seeking to leave the country, while those who were already abroad are facing “inordinate delays” in getting their payments approved.
But George said she is determined to leave.

“I think the value of the rupee will only decrease,” she said.
“When I was first making my plans, the country was already in a bad state. And then things only got worse. I’m going to find a way to leave.”
Source: Al Jazeera


 
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I hope this happens under PDM, but I suspect it may be supported by the masters... at least for a while.
 
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Our future is the same. We are half way there already. And since we are 10 times bigger than Sri Lanka, our crisis is gonna be much worse.
 
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Sri Lanka needs a donation of $5 billion pronto :undecided:
 
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SL is a hot tourist destination but covid devastated their tourism industry as well though now virus has been generally subsidized but damage has been done already
 
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I hope this happens under PDM, but I suspect it may be supported by the masters... at least for a while.
PDM will collapse like a pack of cards, 12 alliance parties of thugs is very difficult to sustain, whatever is happening in Sri Lanka, if it happens in Pakistan, PDM will flee Pakistan to the west.
 
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Sri Lanka's problem started when a populist/nationalist government (that was elected in 2019), decided to fulfill its campaign promise of unbridled tax cuts. The new tax cuts reduced the tax base of the country by 33% and decreased the gross revenue by 25%. The cost of carrying debt rose to 70% of the country's gross revenue. Credit agencies quickly noted the fact that the country will not be able to service its debt for much longer and reduced the country's credit rating to junk. As a result the country lost its ability to borrow more money to service debt like it always used to. On top of this, COVID made the country loose its forex revenue from tourism and the silly gov. move to make food production 100% organic destroyed what was left. In all, it became a perfect storm.
 
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A glimpse into the Pakistani future? Debatable but considering Pakistan is replacing a semi-incompetent government with a fully corrupt one it would be interesting to see if this transpires.

If we don't act now, this will be our future.
 
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No Sri Lankan, rich or poor, spared as economic crisis worsens​

Savings evaporate, businesses face closure and the Sri Lankan poor struggle to eat as economic crisis sends value of rupee plummeting.

A man rests while waiting in a line to buy diesel near a Ceylon Petroleum Corporation fuel station, amid the country's economic crisis in Colombo's economic crisis in Colombo

A man rests while waiting in a line to buy diesel near a fuel station in Colombo, Sri Lanka [Dinuka Liyanawatte/Reuters]
By Zaheena Rasheed
Published On 8 Apr 20228 Apr 2022

Colombo, Sri Lanka – Sri Lankans, both rich and poor alike, are fed up.
Hit by a deepening economic crisis, people in the informal settlements of the capital, Colombo, say they are eating half of what they used to as food prices have doubled in less than a year. In middle-class neighbourhoods, meanwhile, owners of cafés, bakeries and salons have had to let go of staff and are facing the prospect of closing shop altogether, with hours-long power cuts and reduced earnings keeping customers away.

Keep reading​

list of 4 itemslist 1 of 4

Infographic: Sri Lanka’s economic crisis and political turmoil

list 2 of 4

Sri Lanka President Rajapaksa ‘will not resign’, says minister

list 3 of 4

Sri Lanka’s poor queue for hours to buy kerosene amid crisis

list 4 of 4

Crisis-hit Sri Lanka is hosting thousands of stranded Ukrainians

end of list

“The whole country is destroyed,” said one woman in Colombo’s Nugegoda district. “Even stray dogs live better than us.”
“Everything is expensive,” said another. “We cannot manage.”
Sparked by a foreign exchange crisis, Sri Lanka – an island nation of 22 million people – is grappling with its worst economic downturn in decades.
The foreign currency crunch has left President Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s government unable to pay for fuel imports and other essentials. This has resulted in fuel shortages that have caused rolling electricity blackouts of up to 13 hours and brought ground transport in parts of the country to a halt.
Queues for diesel, cooking gas and kerosene are a common sight, with people reporting having to wait in line for days on end to get their rations. Police say at least two people have died while waiting in the scorching heat.
Prices of medicines have also skyrocketed, while the value of the Sri Lankan rupee has plummeted by 30 percent against the United States dollar this year, making it the worst-performing currency in the world.

The Rajapaksa government has turned to the International Monetary Fund for a bailout and is also seeking financial assistance from India, which provided a $500m credit line for fuel imports in February and approved a second $1bn credit line to help ease shortages of essentials in March.
Sri Lankans protest demanding president Gotabaya Rajapaksa resign, in Colombo, Sri Lanka, Tuesday, April 5, 2022.
Sri Lankans protest demanding President Gotabaya Rajapaksa resign, in Colombo, Sri Lanka, Tuesday, April 5, 2022 [Eranga Jayawardena/ AP]
But that has done little to end the crisis, and protests calling for the president’s resignation have broken out across the country since early March, two years after the COVID-19 pandemic decimated one of Sri Lanka’s key economic sectors: tourism. Protesters chanting “Go home, Gota”, a reference to the president’s nickname, have been taking to streets across cities and towns at different times throughout the day.

Sign up for Al Jazeera​

Weekly Newsletter​

The latest news from around the world.Timely. Accurate. Fair.


right-mark-icon.3a446adc.svg
Please check your email to confirm your subscription
By signing up, you agree to our Privacy Policy
In Colombo, a city that has endured bombings, riots, curfews and rationings – mostly during Sri Lanka’s 26-year civil war against Tamil separatists, which ended in 2009 – many residents told Al Jazeera these were the hardest times they could remember.
In Nugegoda, along a row of low-slung houses perched on the edges of a railway track, residents said they barely had enough to eat. Chandra Madhumage, who has struggled to find work as a domestic servant since the start of the pandemic, was worried she might soon run out of money to pay for medication for her diabetes and high cholesterol.

“This is a disaster,” said the mother of three. “How can we survive?”
Across the road from Madhumage’s house, DW Nimal, who was clearing weeds at the roadside with his hands, said he too was barely making ends meet. Most of his monthly earnings of 30,000 Sri Lankan rupees ($100) went to food.
“I am fed up with this life,” he said.
Up the road, Gayan Kanchana, a 42-year-old tuk-tuk driver said, “This is the hardest it’s ever been.”

The father of two said he was getting fewer and fewer calls for hires, as the cost of a ride has increased due to the doubling of the price of petrol. His family can no longer afford meat, bread, milk powder or eggs.
“We used to eat chicken two to three times a week,” he said. “Now, it’s just dried fish and rice.”
Figures from the Sri Lankan Central bank show that inflation in the country rose by 18.7 percent in March, compared with the same period last year. Food prices have jumped by 30.2 percent, with onions, dhal and rice costing double what they used to. The price of tomatoes has tripled, while that of turmeric, which is imported, has quadrupled.
INTERACTIVE_SRI_LANKA_FOOD PRICES1


Vendors at a fruit and vegetable market in Narahenpita, in the southeast of Colombo, said they had enough supplies but added people no longer had the money for groceries. At a stall that was well-stocked with carrots, beans, spring onions and chillis, PKP Sampath said “no one comes to buy food any more”.
Pointing at a customer holding a plastic bag that was only half full, Sampath said, “He’s been coming here for the past 13 years, and he used to buy bags full of vegetables. Now, he’s had to cut down.”
The vendor said “people used to buy what they want” in the past, but now, “they only buy what they need to survive.”
At the adjacent fruit stall, Shriyani Jayasuriya, who was stocking up on watermelon, said she might have to close her food business because of the high cost of produce. The owner of Kindred Foods said she used to get at least 50 customers a day, but now, it was only 10 or 12.

“These are terrible times,” she said. “We cannot live in Sri Lanka.”
Many business owners said the crisis has hit the middle class the hardest.
Shiranshi Jayalath, who owns a salon in Ethulkotte, said she may also have to close shop due to power cuts lasting at least four hours during the day. Speaking from a protest outside the parliament, the 43-year-old said she has already had to let go of three of her workers.
“The middle class itself is disappearing,” she said. “This government needs to go.”

Smaller construction firms have also been hit hard.
“Many people who had started work on their homes have no hope of completing their buildings,” said Dilina Hettiarachchi, a 37-year-old structural engineer. “Prices of cement and reinforced steel have tripled and the bank loans people had taken out for home construction are no longer sufficient.”
Bigger projects were continuing, however, he said, as the industry’s strongest players had stocks of material as well as the foreign currency reserves to buy what they need. But even they were not taking on any new projects, he said, demonstrating just how widespread the impact of the crisis is.
One resident said the well-to-do in Sri Lanka have usually been insulated from the multiple crises that have roiled the country. But now, they are watching the situation unfold with a “new horror” as the value of their savings drop by the day.

In March, many rushed to get rid of their rupees by buying up gold, only to send up gold prices to a record high at the end of that month.
INTERACTIVE_SRILANKA_ECONOMY_EXCHANGE RATE

As the crisis worsens, anyone who can leave Sri Lanka is planning to do so.
Antoinette Prabalini Benjamin George, a 30-year-old lawyer, is one of them – but the dropping value of the currency has complicated her plans.

George applied for a bank loan of 2.2 million Sri Lankan rupees to go study abroad two months ago. At the time, 200 rupees could buy one US dollar. But by early March, the pegged value of the rupee dropped to 230 to a dollar, and by the first week of April, it was hovering at 300 rupees to the dollar.
George said the loan she had applied for was no longer enough, and it was also unclear if any Sri Lankan bank would issue her the foreign currency she needed to pay for her tuition fees.
One official at the Commercial Bank told Al Jazeera the bank was not issuing any foreign currency to new students seeking to leave the country, while those who were already abroad are facing “inordinate delays” in getting their payments approved.
But George said she is determined to leave.

“I think the value of the rupee will only decrease,” she said.
“When I was first making my plans, the country was already in a bad state. And then things only got worse. I’m going to find a way to leave.”
Source: Al Jazeera



As a result of a bumper crop of potatoes in Pakistan, we could donate some to Sri Lanka as a goodwill gesture.
 
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Too much reliance on one major source of income, and such income depending too much on foreign markets, is always dangerous. Lebanon, Venezuela and many other small countries in the world which neglected by media but having the same fate, are sharing similar stories.

The tourist cities in Vietnam of Da Nang and Nha Trang, especially Nha Trang, which depend too much on Chinese and Russian tourists, have been devastated since Covid. Other places can survive with domestic tourists.

Diversifying is important, but not easy for small countries, especially when people have been spoiled with easy money from tourism and other service works. They will become too lazy to indulge into hard works, like studying maths / science and working in manufacturing.

It is easy to blame everyone, from government to foreign lenders, rather than oneself.
 
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Too much reliance on one major source of income, and such income depending too much on foreign markets, is always dangerous. Lebanon, Venezuela and many other small countries in the world which neglected by media but having the same fate, etc. are sharing similar stories.

The tourist cities in Vietnam of Da Nang and Nha Trang, especially Nha Trang, which depend too much on Chinese and Russian tourists, have been devastated since Covid. Other places can survive with domestic tourists.

Diversifying is important, but not easy for small countries, especially when people have been spoiled with easy money from tourism and other service works. They will become too lazy to indulge into hard works, like studying maths / science and working in manufacturing.

It is easy to blame everyone, from government to foreign lenders, rather than oneself.
Poorer nation should live off industries not tourism,which are supposed to be for wealthy nations.
 
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Fear of Pak going the Lankan way is overblown. Pak economy is far more diversified and resilient than Lankas. While the public finances of Pak are nothing worth bragging about, Pakistani households and individuals are relatively well off in the South Asian context.

Regards
 
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Too much reliance on one major source of income, and such income depending too much on foreign markets, is always dangerous. Lebanon, Venezuela and many other small countries in the world which neglected by media but having the same fate, etc. are sharing similar stories.

The tourist cities in Vietnam of Da Nang and Nha Trang, especially Nha Trang, which depend too much on Chinese and Russian tourists, have been devastated since Covid. Other places can survive with domestic tourists.

Diversifying is important, but not easy for small countries, especially when people have been spoiled with easy money from tourism and other service works. They will become too lazy to indulge into hard works, like studying maths / science and working in manufacturing.

It is easy to blame everyone, from government to foreign lenders, rather than oneself.
Nha Trang is a nice place, I like it there.
Because of COVID, my family and I have not traveled abroad for several years. Tourism is so unstable that a country cannot rely entirely on tourism. The Vietnamese govt understands this truth and Sri Lanka has made a mistake.

This is a picture I took in Nha Trang.
IMG_20210903_135725.jpg
 
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