The economic crisis in Sri Lanka has engendered a mélange of complex, seemingly sophisticated analyses – around populism, illiberalism,
majoritarianism, social harmony (or the lack of it) and how they militate against sound policymaking. With the inevitable undertone that India should be “careful” about falling into a similar trap.
But that just doesn’t hold. The key factor in the Lanka crisis is structural weakness in the economy, which made a crisis like this a matter of “when” rather than “if”. Anti-liberal political posturing had nearly no role. If anything, Lanka adopting some of the most treasured liberal causes may have exacerbated the crisis.
Sri Lanka has been a South Asian exemplar for many decades on Human Development Indicators (HDI). Health, education have been at near-European levels. Average income has been above the rest of the subcontinent – with a pre-crisis per-capita income nearly double that of India.
But there were always problems in the island nation.
● The HDI sheen hides the fact that Lanka received IMF bailouts 16 times since 1965.
● There hasn’t been a single decade since the 1960s when Lanka did not receive at least 2 IMF bailouts.
● With time, size of the bailouts has gone up, but essential bug has persisted.
● During this time, Lanka has endured civil war, political instability and long periods of presumptively “liberal, tolerant” governments – but frequency of bailouts needed didn’t change.
Esta historia es de la edición July 12, 2022 de The Times of India.
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Esta historia es de la edición July 12, 2022 de The Times of India.
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