March 26, 2023, Colombo: The State need not engage in business as its mandate is to provide services such as education and maintain law and order, President Ranil Wickremesinghe said Thursday, defending plans to divest government-held shares of seven state-owned enterprises (SOEs).
At a discussion at the presidential secretariat on Thursday morning, Wickremesinghe responding to a question about the decision, said that Sri Lanka must no longer hold on to corporations and enterprises owned by the government.
He said Sri Lanka had spent more on the state-run Ceylon Electricity Board (CEB) and the Ceylon Petroleum Corporation (CPC) than education. The following seven SOEs will undergo the divestment of state-held shares: Sri Lankan Airlines Ltd, including Sri Lankan Catering Ltd, Sri Lanka Telecom PLC, Sri Lanka Insurance Corporation Ltd,
Canwill Holdings Pvt. Ltd. (Grand Hyatt Hotel), Hotel Developers Lanka Ltd. (Hilton Hotel Colombo), Litro Gas Lanka Ltd., including Litro Gas Terminals (Pvt) Ltd., (LPG retailing), and Lanka Hospital Corporation PLC. A statement said the State-Owned Enterprises Restructuring Unit of the Ministry of Finance, Economic Stabilisation and National Policies would oversee the process.
“Not all of them are loss-making. But we do have to repay debt. You can’t keep these and pay back loans. “If we can’t pay off our loans, we might have to sell something in the house and pay it,” said Wickremesinghe.
Asked why Sri Lanka should sell SOEs that aren’t making losses, he responded: “Why is the state engaged in business? That’s not our mandate. The state has no business engaging in business.”
“In what country is there a law that these (businesses) should be (held by the state)?” he added. Noting that the crisis-hit nation is trying to embark on a path of recovery and rapid development, the president said Sri Lanka must follow India’s example.
“India is selling their airports, profit-making ones. India has come to that stage. We have to go there too.”