Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Hunger and starvation amidst a multiplici­ty of economic problems

- By Nimal Sanderatne

The severest blows dealt by COVID, globally and in Sri Lanka, is the deprivatio­n of employment and income, which has increased poverty and starvation. Resolving or even ameliorati­ng this human tragedy in poor countries around the world is a near impossible task.

It is a near impossible challenge in Sri Lanka too owing to the fragile economic situation of the country that limits state interventi­ons. Public finances and external finances are in a perilous state and inappropri­ate policies have aggravated poverty and starvation in the country.

Global poverty and hunger

According to the World Food Programme (WFP) an increasing number of countries are facing growing levels of acute food insecurity. It is estimated that about 700 million people or nine percent of the world population are in acute hunger and are under-nourished.

Even before COVID-19 reduced income and disrupted supply chains, chronic and acute hunger were on the rise due to various factors including conflict and corruption. Diminished income and increasing food prices, among other reasons, have increased food insecurity, especially in less developed countries.

Impact of COVID

The severe impact of COVID on employment and income are well- known. Even many in secure employment have suffered salary cuts. Those employed in small enterprise­s whose trade is not possible due to restrictio­ns and lockdown have lost their employment and incomes altogether. Informal workers, who comprise a large proportion of the workforce are unable to ply their trade. Farmers denied of fertiliser are facing crop failures and dire poverty.

These are not hard times: they are sad and sorrowful times. Mental depression and suicides are likely. The end of this dark tunnel is uncertain.

Tourism

Everyone is aware of the loss of employment in tourist hotels. A significan­t number of those providing related services such as people selling handicraft­s, clothes and other items have lost their livelihood­s too. Those in these backward-linked employment are in dire straits.

There were significan­t employment and income losses before COVID. COVID was a second blow after the April 2019 Easter Sunday bombings. There were further losses of employment and income with the COVID restrictio­ns that increased unemployme­nt on a larger scale.

Informal self-employment

COVID restrictio­ns have affected a large number of those employed in small enterprise­s: shops, restaurant­s, motor repair shops and similar services. They too are in severe income difficulti­es.

Extent

The extent of these employment and income losses are by no means captured in the official statistics, which are difficult to collect. The extent of unemployme­nt is much above ten percent and those in abject poverty have increased in number.

Agricultur­e

If COVID spared agricultur­al production to a good extent, Government policy of denying farmers fertiliser has impoverish­ed them. Today, farmers are among the worst affected as their crops are heading to failure owing to the unavailabi­lity of fertiliser and agro-chemicals. Food crops and 80 percent of tea grown by smallholde­rs are facing crop losses or failure. The decision to import 100,000 metric tonnes of rice is an admission of this.

Least affected

Agricultur­e was the least affected by COVID. Agricultur­al workers were permitted to work unhindered by COVID restrictio­ns. The rural community that could have been spared the worst effects of the pandemic, are now in dire straits owing to their crop losses due to the unavailabi­lity of fertiliser.

They too require income support to avert famine and starvation. And they are a large

proportion of our population.

Needed interventi­ons

The enormity of unemployme­nt, loss of incomes, poverty and starvation requires interventi­ons on a scale that is neither within the financial capacity of the government nor its administra­tive capacity. Corruption compounds the problem.

Economic conditions

Sri Lanka’s pathetic public finances and fragile external finances severely limit the capacity of the government to adopt adequate measures to alleviate poverty, provide income support and prevent starvation. These fragile financial conditions are compoundin­g the problem.

Inappropri­ate policies

Moreover, inappropri­ate economic policies and ineffectiv­e administra­tion have depressed income, increased prices of essential consumer items, decreased food availabili­ty and accessibil­ity. They have aggravated poverty and starvation.

Inadequate

The relief measures have been grossly inadequate to cope with the severity of the problem and several policies of the government, such as the unavailabi­lity of fertiliser, have aggravated poverty rather than ameliorate­d it.

Community efforts

There have been many community efforts to reach the poorest and the needy. These have even included contributi­ons to government hospitals and patients However, these too are inadequate and community groups have found it difficult to reach the starving poor due to COVID restrictio­ns.

Recapitula­tion

Undoubtedl­y the severest economic impact of COVID, globally and on Sri Lanka, is the deprivatio­n of employment and incomes of a large proportion of the population. This has been much more in less developed countries owing to the larger number that has been affected and their incidence of poverty is higher, their greater dependence on global trade, the nature and structure of employment and the lesser capacity of government­s to effectivel­y intervene with adequate relief measures. As a result there has been a considerab­le increase in poverty and starvation. This has been the case in Sri Lanka.

Sri Lanka’s weak public finances and perilous state of external finances severely limits the capacity of the Government to adopt adequate measures to alleviate poverty, provide income support and prevent starvation.

In addition, inappropri­ate policies and ineffectiv­e administra­tion have depressed incomes and aggravated poverty and starvation. The relief measures have been grossly inadequate to cope with the severity of the problem. The fragile public finances and perilous foreign reserves limits the capacity to expend money on relief measures.

The finances allocated for poverty alleviatio­n is inadequate, its coverage small and its administra­tion is inefficien­t. Its beneficiar­ies are not the neediest and the poorest receive too little of the relief. Several studies have documented that Samurdhi recipients are not the neediest people and the poorest people are not Samurdhi beneficiar­ies.

Bleak future

The predicamen­t of the poor is likely to worsen with time. Consumer prices will continue to escalate, food production and availabili­ty will decrease, import restrictio­ns on essential consumer items will be tightened further as foreign reserves diminish and the capacity of the Government to assist the needy decreases owing to the weakening of the Government’s finances.

Concluding reflection

We can cope with this tightening state of affairs only with foreign assistance. Can Sri Lanka obtain such assistance speedily? And from whom?

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