|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: Sri
Lanka
Anger grows over rising prices in Sri Lanka
By our reporters
11 April 2008
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
Sri Lankas official annualised inflation rate skyrocketed
to 28 percent in March, up from 24 percent in February. Prices
for essential food items are soaringthe inflation rate for
food and beverages reached a staggering 37 percentwhile
transport prices and housing rents followed with 24 percent and
11 percent respectively.
Over the past three months, the Colombo Consumer Price Index
(CCPI) has jumped by 487 points, from 5,955 in December to 6,442
in March, and the impact is sharply eroding the living standards
of workers, the rural poor and students. People are particularly
angry because the price of rice, the main staple food in Sri Lanka,
has nearly doubled since January last year, causing immense hardship.
Worse conditions lie ahead. The government has admitted that bread
prices could rise to 100 rupees by the end of this year, a threefold
increase.
Nervous about the rising discontent, the government asked India
to supply rice stocks. However, India has curbed exports of 40
items, including rice, because of shortages and rising inflation
at home. The Colombo government then turned to Pakistan, but received
a similar response, and has now sent the trade minister to Myanmar
to ask for imports from there. According to the United Nations,
Cambodia, China and Vietnam have also restricted exports.
These difficulties highlight the global character of the crisis,
with prices for rice, flour, milk powder and other essential food
items, as well as oil, rising at unprecedented rates. The UN under-secretary-general
for humanitarian affairs, Sir John Holmes, warned a conference
in Dubai this week that escalating prices would trigger protests
and riots in vulnerable countries. He said food prices had risen
globally by an average of 40 percent since the middle of last
year.
Several factors produced by global capitalism are driving the
shortages and price hikes worldwide. These include the vast urbanisation
taking place in China, India and other countries formerly dominated
by small farming, the diversion of land and crops to produce bio-fuels,
and widespread speculation in food and other commodities. In its
latest World Economic Outlook, issued this week, the International
Monetary Fund stated that because of the losses hitting financial
markets, investors were pulling funds out of financial assets
to buy metals, oil and food staples.
In Sri Lanka, the situation has been exacerbated by huge increases
in military spending after the government of President Mahinda
Rajapakse plunged the island back to war in 2006. Around 167 billion
rupees ($US1.5 billion) has been allocated for defence expenditure
this year, a 20 percent increase from the budget presented last
November. To pay for the war, the government has increased taxes,
borrowed at high interest rates and run the printing presses.
All of these measures have pushed prices higher.
WSWS correspondents spoke to workers, students and youth about
the increasing cost of living. They expressed deep discontent
and hostility toward Rajapakses government for imposing
the burden on ordinary people.
Plantation workers are among the worst affected. Most of them
still live in very small line rooms built during British colonial
rule and are not provided with even basic facilities. Now their
families have started to skip one meal a day.
Subramaniyam from Strathdon Plantations in Hatton said: Under
Rajapakse, prices have increased three-fold. We went on strike
in December 2006, demanding the doubling of our daily wage to
300 rupees ($US 2.7). At that time, one kilogram of flour cost
22 rupees, a kilo of rice was 25 rupees, one litre of kerosene
oil was 32 rupees, and a coconut cost 12 rupees. See the change
now! These prices are now 75, 80, 80 and 45 rupees respectively.
This government is spending millions of rupees on war
every day. If the war were stopped, a lot of the problem would
be solved. I know that the prices of oil and flour are increasing
on the world market. But when there is a 5-rupee increase globally,
we get a 10-rupee increase. Workers want to fight against this
oppression and improve their living standards but theres
no leadership.
Jatheesan, 48, a father of four children from the Panmoor Estate
at Hatton, said: I just cant imagine my familys
future under this unbearable cost of living. These days we dont
have three meals a day like we did before. If growing children
dont get proper meals they become sick, and I cant
work without proper meals continuously. If we become sick, there
are no medical facilities available. We have to travel to another
estate, which is six kilometres away.
Trade union leaders speak and give interviews to the
media, claiming that the plantation sector welfare system has
improved very much, but it has gone from bad to worse. We get
only 200 rupees per day. Very rarely do we get the attendance
allowance of 120 rupeesunless you work for 25 days you dont
get it. Just imagine what you can buy for 200 rupees a day for
a family.
S. Kaliammah, a retired female worker, explained that a 400-gram
packet of milk powder now sold for 275 rupees, up from 190 rupees
in January. Plantation families were compelled to dilute the milk
powder with more water. She showed us the conditions inside a
line room, built in 1912. It had no proper water facilities and
no toilet. We havent seen any improvement in living
standards during our lifetime, other than it is getting worse,
she said.
Workers in the free trade zones are faring little better. About
50,000 workers, mostly female, are employed in the Katunayake
Export Processing Zone. Fear has spread that the US economic slowdown
will impact on their jobs because the US is the largest market
for Sri Lankan garment exports. Workers at two Jaqalanka factories
did not receive their full salaries in January and the two operations
closed down in early February, throwing about 1,400 people out
of work.
Nishanthi, a young female employee of the US-owned Smart Garment,
told us: I have been working for one year. When I started,
my basic salary was 6,200 rupees ($US59) per month. As a result
of a strike last December, we gained a 1,500-rupee increase. If
we do overtime we can earn some more, but then our working hours
lengthen to 12 hours. Our attendance allowance is cut if we take
leave.
I share my house rent of 2,000 rupees [a month] with
another colleague. For cooking we use kerosene oil, the price
of which has gone up several times last year and this year. Prices
of rice, soap, biscuits, milk powder, clothes and other things
have gone up by two- to three-fold compared to a year ago. We
cant have a proper meal.
We have had to stop consuming many things, including
milk powder. We cant buy clothes as we did earlier. With
difficulty, I deposit 1,000 rupees in a bank account for my child
every month, but we cant think about the future.
I voted for the present government, hoping it would do
something for the poor. The Sri Lanka Freedom Party [SLFPthe
main partner in the ruling coalition] and the United National
Party [UNP] have ruled the country successively but nothing has
been done for the poor.
I agree that the war is contributing to the increased
prices for essentials. And there is no economic development that
we can feel. The war must be stoppedits victims are poor
people. We cant even travel by bus due to fear of the war.
What we need is a peaceful society that has affordable prices
for the working people.
L.S. De Soyza, a railway worker from the Ratmalana Industrial
Zone on the outskirts of Colombo, said his take home pay was 7,000
rupees monthly, after deductions for loan repayments. He has three
children, only two of whom are employed. He pays 800 rupees for
rent, 1,000 rupees for electricity and 1,200 for the telephone
bill.
I have debts of hundreds of thousands of rupees to banks
because I use credit cards and overdrafts to bridge my familys
monthly expenditure. The better part of my salary goes for food.
Not enough is left to cover other expenses such as transport and
clothing.
Soyza said that while the government insisted price increases
were due only to world market changes, the prices of locally produced
food items were also going up.
He explained: I am not a supporter of the war. There
are so many injustices happening to the Tamil people. They are
denied jobs and management positions. This ethnic issue cannot
be solved through war. I think the government is fooling the Sinhala
masses by promising a victory.
Soyza is disgusted with the trade union leaders in the government-owned
railway service. Some leaders say they are trying to get
wage increases. But others such as the JVP [Peoples Liberation
Front, a Sinhala chauvinist party] leaders are supporting the
government and praising it for launching the war. I do not see
any of the old parties fighting to improve the living and social
conditions of working people.
Indika, a final year art student at Colombo University, said
students were struggling to cope up with rising prices.
I have to spend 30 rupees per day for travelling. I take
breakfast and lunch from the university canteen because it is
given at a subsidised rate. For those two meals I now have to
pay about 50 rupees. In 2005, a plate of rice and curry, with
two or three vegetables, and fish, meat or egg, was 13 rupees.
Now it is 25 rupees. They are going to increase it to 30 rupees.
It is still not a good meal and the quantity is not enough.
For stationery and photocopying I have to spend at least 1,000
rupees per month. Poor students like me receive 2,500 rupees [a
month] as financial assistance but that is not even enough to
cover essential expenditure. Many students are forced to do part-time
jobs and we have no time or money even to see a film.
See Also:
Sri Lanka: Escalating war
fuels rising prices
[29 February 2008]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |