sri lanka

Advocata SOE Briefing Note : Getting the State Out of Business: The Compelling Case for Privatisation of State-Owned Businesse

Sri Lanka's state-owned enterprises (SOEs) are a major hindrance to the country’s economic prosperity. The state's footprints extend across all major industries - telecommunications, banking, ports, petroleum, and power generation. With over 400 SOEs spread across 33 sectors and employing roughly 250,000 workers, they form an inefficient, bloated bureaucracy. The IMF's Governance Diagnostic Assessment flags SOEs as being high-risk for corruption, plagued by weak management, shoddy oversight, rigged procurement processes, political interference, and a lack of transparency. Sri Lanka cannot afford the status quo. Decisive action to privatise SOEs is essential to break free from the cycle of inefficiency and corruption, and unlock sustainable economic growth.

Here is the link to the Advocata SOE Briefing Note in English on

Getting the State Out of Business: The Compelling Case for Privatisation of State-Owned Businesses

Here is the link to the Advocata SOE Briefing Note in Sinhala

Here is the link to the Advocata SOE Briefing Note in Tamil

THE STATE OF STATE ENTERPRISES IN SRI LANKA – 2022

As a group, these SOEs have suffered large losses that have contributed to the present macroeconomic problems facing the country. The state has to make good on these losses, increasing public deficits that have to be financed by borrowing from the Central Bank, has exacerbated this issue further, which has brought high inflationary pressures into the economy. Losses of these enterprises contribute to macroeconomic instability given the perilous state of our overall finances. The Ceylon Petroleum Corporation, Ceylon Electricity Board and SriLankan Airlines need immediate reform or sale to a private party to arrest the growing magnitude of this problem. Previous attempts to address this problem have attracted controversy. Our general population is not prepared to allow disposal of enterprises despite their record of making large losses year after year. Apart from the macroeconomic problem, the country has a large productivity and efficiency problem that requires more resources to keep growing even at the same rate given that productivity and efficiency issues have not been addressed adequately.

Advocata's 2022 Report "State of State Owned Enterprises 2022 " is a deep dive on the impact of State Owned Enterprises, on Sri Lanka's economy.