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Lanka
Sri Lankan president hands down war budget
By Saman Gunadasa
13 November 2007
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Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapakse, who also holds the
finance portfolio, presented what can only be described as a war
budget to parliament on November 7. Announcing a record allocation
on defence spending, he insisted that protecting the motherland
took priority over other areas of government spending.
Rajapakse is directly responsible for plunging the island back
to civil war. Tensions immediately began to rise after his narrow
victory in the November 2005 presidential election, followed by
open military offensives after July 2006. In his budget speech,
the president openly boasted of rescuing the entire eastern
province, including areas that were in the control of terrorists
consequent to the so-called ceasefire agreement through a successful
humanitarian operation.
The use of the term so-called underscores Rajapakses
contempt for the 2002 ceasefire agreement signed by the United
National Party-led government with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil
Eelam (LTTE). As for humanitarian; the militarys
offensives in the East have killed hundreds of civilians and driven
tens of thousands more from their homes.
Rajapakse has made absolutely clear that his government intends
to wage an all-out war to destroy the LTTE. Seizing on one of
the LTTEs few counterattacks, a raid last month on the Anuradhapura
air force camp, he declared: They [LTTE] will never be ready
to surrender arms and agree to a democratic political solution
... we have no alternative but to completely eradicate terrorism.
To wage this war, Rajapakse has increased the military budget
for 2008 by another 20 percent to 166 billion rupees ($US1.5 billion).
Since Rajapakse won office, the defence allocation has risen by
a massive 265 percent and now constitutes 16 percent of total
government expenditure. Daily spending on the military is $US4
million, in a country where much of the population is surviving
on less than $1 a day.
In his budget speech, the president said: The priority
that has been accorded to protect our motherland should not be
compromised to any challenge. Defence spending is now one
and a half times the total spending on public health and education.
On the same day as the budget speech, the armed forces launched
a new offensive in a bid to capture LTTE territory in the northern
Wanni region. Despite being supported by tanks and helicopter
gunships, the government troops were driven back in heavy fighting.
Official figures put the armys losses at 11 dead and 41
injured, but the actual figures may have been far higher.
In all likelihood, the operation was cynically pre-planned
to underscore the budget message. The Political Column
in last weekends Sunday Times noted: Even before
the offensive was launched, posters urging the public to forget
their mouths and stomachs when troops were on the doorsteps of
Wanni appeared in part of the City [Colombo].
The Rajapakse government is well aware of the mounting public
hostility to the war and the resulting economic burdens. While
rising world commodity prices, particularly for oil, are certainly
a factor, huge increases in defence spending have contributed
to soaring inflation that has hit working people hard. Rajapakse
offered a number of cosmetic measures aimed at the deflecting
popular anger, but the overall thrust of the budget will deepen
the countrys economic and social crisis.
An economic columnist for the Sunday Times commented:
The huge war expenditure has been one of the serious financial
and balance of payments problems for the country. This is quite
apart from the consequences of the war on the economy and the
undeniable fact that it is a serious check and constraint on the
growth of the economy. The expenditure on hardware and the armed
services has had a serious direct damaging impact on the economy
in many ways.
The article pointed out that expenditure on the war had contributed
to a public debt of 2,607 billion rupees, greater than the countrys
GDP. The largest allocation in the budget373 billion rupeesis
for debt servicing. The government has borrowed another $US500
million on international financial markets at high interest rates
that will further increase the debt burden.
Sections of the corporate elite are deeply concerned about
the economic impact of the war. The Business for Peace Alliance,
a grouping of business chambers, commented: [The] increase
in defence expenditure implies that there will be cutbacks in
large-scale investment projects. With the rate of inflation at
an unbearable level, such increased expenditure on non-constructive
sectors will have a negative impact on the economy.
Inflation has reached to its highest level in 17 years. For
the month of October, annualised inflation was 17.7 percent by
the Colombo Consumer Price Index and 22 percent by the Sri Lanka
Price Index. Cutbacks in government subsidies have resulted in
huge price increases for essential items: a kilogram of flour
rose from 39 rupees in January to 65 rupees in September and a
popular brand of milk powder increased from 140 rupees in January
to 250 rupees in October.
Further fuelling inflation, the government has resorted to
running the printing presses to cope with the lack of money in
the treasury. In 2006, the Central Bank printed 24.8 billion rupees
worth of paper money. In the first quarter of 2007, it printed
another 15.9 billion rupees.
The Rajapakse government has repeatedly rejected the demands
of striking workers for pay rises to cope with inflation. Government
ministers declared there was no money and accused workers of sabotaging
the war effort. In a bid to quell growing anger, Rajapakse announced
a limited 375-rupee cost of living increase to monthly wages in
January and another six months later. These will quickly be wiped
out by skyrocketing prices, as will various small subsidies for
the poor.
The president also promised to provide jobs for 15,000 graduates,
but offered no details. Last year he announced that the government
would provide 10,000 jobs for graduates but only 2,088 were employed.
In the past two months, police have broken up protest marches
by unemployed graduates demanding jobs. While Rajapakse boasted
that unemployment was now just 6.5 percent, the jobless rate for
young people 15-29 years old is 19 percent, forcing many to join
the army.
Taxes have been increased substantially. Economic analyst Harsha
de Silva commented in the Daily Mirror: The only
certainty in the budget for 2008 is that it will add further burdens
on the people of this country who are already reeling under 22
percent island-wide inflation. The revenue estimates indicate
that the total tax on goods and services will increase by a massive
25 percent in 2008. It is no secret that such consumption tax
increases will hurt the poor more than the rich.
Hoping to capitalise on widespread discontent, the opposition
United National Party (UNP) has declared that it will oppose the
budget. For the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP), however, the
budget has created an awkward political dilemma. While demanding
an intensification of the war against the LTTE, JVP also postures
as a defender of workers and the poor.
The JVP leaders have responded to the budget with bluster and
noisy criticisms. JVP MP Wasantha Samarasinghe declared the party
would bring private sector workers to the streets
because the government had not directed employers to increase
wages. Another JVP MP, Lal Kantha, leader of the partys
National Trade Union Centre (NTUC), has warned of strikes and
protests.
Parliamentary leader Wimal Weerawansa told Rivira that
the JVP was not satisfied with the budget because of rising inflation
and tax burdens. In the same breath, however, he declared that
the partys decision on the budget will depend on the
political issues that have emerged in the country, the war that
security forces are waging against separatist terrorists.
He added: There is no question over the increase of defence
expenditure.
The JVP, which is not part of the ruling alliance but supports
the government in parliament, is yet to indicate which way it
will vote. If the JVP rejects the budget, the Rajapakse government
is dependent on a highly unstable coalition of parties to pass
its measures. The budget could be defeated if just six government
MPs crossed floor. If the JVP votes for the budget or abstains,
its populist demagogy will be further exposed, undermining its
support, including among its Sinhala rural base.
Whatever the immediate outcome of the budget debate, the escalation
of the war and its economic burdens are setting the stage for
explosive social struggles.
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