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Sri Lanka: Need to Restrain the Power of Shadow Finance

Image: The CID has taken into the custody of Ms Thilini Priyamali, who had been running a luxury business at the World Trade Centre under Thico Group Pvt Ltd, for alleged financial fraud.

Charles Ponzi left his name, creating a legacy for one of the most common financial
frauds repeated throughout history. Human weakness of greed has been tapped and
trapped by tricksters promising extraordinary returns in the quickest time to investors
who ultimately become victims. Ponzi schemes are named after Charles Ponzi, who
cheated investors of around US$ 20 million in early as 1920 in Boston. He paid earlier
investors by using the money of the later investors, which is now known as a pyramid
scheme. He was brought to justice and deported by 1934. A similar case was seen
again during the financial crisis in the USA in 2007-08. Bernard Madoff cheated rich and
famous Americans, including a few multinational banks, with the same mode of
Operandi. Bernard, one-time Chairman of NASDAQ, had a portfolio of US$ 65 billion of
his business, assumed to have cheated US$ 20 billion of investors' money. Justice was delivered, and he was sentenced to 150 years in prison on 29 June 2009. Finally, he
died at the age of 82 in 2021 in prison.

The two case studies mentioned above happened on the eve of propelling an
impending financial crisis in the USA. In 1929 the great stock market crashed in the
USA, and 2007-08 the financial crisis in North America and Europe. The lesson to be
learnt is the inaction to proactively restrain and regulate the power of shadow finance to
avert instability in the financial markets. That also happened in developed, heavily
regulated financial centres worldwide. Ponzi and pyramid schemes will never die if
human greed dictates the individual needs aligned with speculations anticipating fake
prosperity.

The world economy is still grappling with the consequences of the financial crisis of
2007-08. The unconventional monetary policies introduced to calm the markets were
known as quantitative easing – glorified terminology for printing money. Economic
policies with zero or negative interest rates stimulated the markets over a decade. And
now the economies have run out of steam to curb the inflationary trends resulting from
the excessive speculation backed with cheap money. During the crisis in 2008, the
governments threw lifeboats to rescue the ailing and failing financial companies with
taxpayers' money. They closed their eyes and offered subsidies to those companies to
keep them afloat, against the principles of free market economics. Nevertheless, even
then and now, the respective governments were not keen to offer life jackets to the
sinking citizens and instead imposed austerities on them. And in many representative
democracies, electoral verdicts may become bitter medicine to swallow.

With the advent of the financial crisis, the estimated amount of money printed and in
circulation is around US$ 30 trillion—a substantial volume of money chasing behind
goods and services not produced in the global economy. On top of that, the COVID-19
pandemic-related economic meltdowns, climate-related disasters, global warming, and energy crisis, plus the war between Russia and Ukraine, send shock waves to
policymakers. Regulatory inaction of the concerned authorities was the causal factor
contributing to the financial crisis in 2007-08. The unrestrained inflationary trends
emerging in many economies are owing to ill-conceived policies with a short-term focus.
With the rising energy and food prices across the regions, many are to suffer and lose
the gains of quality of life achieved in the past few decades.

Similar patterns and trends could also be unearthed, applying the same analogy to the
Sri Lankan context. Unfortunately, the rule of law and the justice system appears weak
and ineffective on the island. As a result, building up investor confidence and public
trust in the financial system and widening trust deficiencies between the policymakers
(all politicians and their political parties) and the citizens complicate the situation further.
The pioneering fraudster who cheated innocent depositors begins with the collapse of
the “Pramuka Bank”;(2002). Have the regulators and judiciary brought justice to the victims? The perpetrator brainchild criminal is still running Scot-free. The court has not
sufficiently challenged regulatory laps leading to this debacle. How did the regulators
and monetary authorities grant a banking license to a person with questionable
integrity? Since then, numerous cases in Sri Lanka, private finance companies, and
infamous Sakvithi and Danduwam operations have scammed millions of rupees.
" If you do not know how to fix the problems, please don't break the system any further" the clarion call of the millennials and the young generation of Sri Lankans.

They have fully realized the impending dangers of the fragile socio, economic and
political system in the country. This author salutes and commends those who joined the
“Aragalaya” for a system change in Sri Lanka. Their struggle on the streets since April 2022, and outcomes have reversed the lopsided popular mandate stolen during the
2019 Presidential election and 2020 General election. The resignation of the Prime
Minister on 9 May and the running away of the elected executive President on 9 July
itself indicates that no government is currently in charge of representing the people's
mandate.

The whole world, donor community, UN agencies, and IFI are aware of this situation,
except for a few bankrupt politicians who lack the originality of thought to address the
grappling issues, trying to balance power in an illegitimate governance structure.
In such a political vacuum, the civil servants, judiciary, and regulators must take the
lead to arrest any further deterioration of the unfortunate situations until a legitimate
government with a legitimate mandate is elected. When politicians and their
accomplices interfere and challenge the independent judgements of professionals, they
cannot remain silent, blaming politicians for all sins and witnessing the downturn of our
economy.

Also, Sri Lanka practised unconventional monetary policy tools in the past by
maintaining lower interest and exchange rates. Artificially lower rates enabled highly
connected personalities to emerge as shrewd businessmen and women to appear to
offer extraordinary returns to the public for their deposits. The CID has taken into the
custody of Ms Thilini Priyamali, who had been running a luxury business at the World
Trade Centre under Thico Group Pvt Ltd, for alleged financial fraud. It appears she has
cheated high net worth persons, including politicians with ill-gotten wealth.
Hype activities of shadow finance are an indication that may pave the way for some
form of financial instability to unfold in Sri Lanka. At the same time, Ceylon Bank
Employees' Union has launched a campaign to oust the Chairman of the Bank of
Ceylon and insisting on a forensic audit for alleged corrupt deals carried out with the
connivance of the policymakers.

When there is a weaker administration and no governance, such uncertainties may
erode public confidence in the entire financial system, as many of these high-volume
transactions are interconnected. Many of the listed companies in the Colombo Stock
Exchange also run businesses with some access to accept public deposits. Innocent
depositors are deceived by the name fame of these entrepreneurs close to their political
masters for insulation and refuge. It is not a secret that many of them supported the
election of President Gotabhaya Rajapakse with an ulterior motive of state capture.
Accordingly, they, too, got the lifeboats to their rescue and millions of vulnerable
populations to abject poverty, and no one was there to offer them life jackets.
Regulators must take proactive measures to analyze the viability of the business
models of those accepting deposits from the public. They should investigate the links
between the businesses and the various cash flows generated to serve the public,
averting possibilities of hidden Ponzi/Pyramid schemes. Many conglomerates are into a
multitude of companies, such as running supermarkets and real estate with easy access
to cash flows. Some of them also own banks.

Sri Lankans depend on professionals and their independent judgement while serving
the public for stable economic and social conditions. Failure to highlight the irregularities
and regularise them timely will undoubtedly spoil the chances of various IFIs coming to
our rescue. At present, politicians are praying for IMF assistance. They have no other
alternatives, at least to offer some direct cash benefits to the vulnerable communities
who are finding to survive without sufficient food.

We all must be hard on the problem and soft on those people who are contributing to
the mess. The final point is not to underestimate the power of the shadow finance
industry; it can create havoc, impacting financial stability at a crucial time and a critical
juncture. But justice, the rule of law and fair play must be reinstated for social order. The
absence of an independent judiciary will undoubtedly discourage any foreign investor
from thinking of Sri Lanka; institutionalizing a new social contract is a priority.
Let those money launderers -fake investors-forewarned that blockchain technology in
the pipeline would make life challenging to speculate for quick returns. Digital currencies
are coming up; central banks are keen to introduce digital currencies with government-
back guarantees, and NEO banks' alternative finance are preparing to bridge the trust
deficiencies in uncertain markets. Hiding wealth and avoiding tax payments have to be
arrested for mitigating the growing social disorder due to widening income, wealth,
education and health inequalities.

In conclusion, let me quote a phrase from the famous Philadelphia declaration (1944):
“poverty anywhere is a danger to prosperity everywhere”

Jayasri Priyalal
07 November 2022
(The writer is the Regional Director for Finance Sector; Professionals & Manager Group
working with UNI Global Union Asia & Pacific Regional Organization in Singapore.)

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