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Susanthika’s condition improves

Susanthika Jayasinghe, who made the dream of an Olympic medal for Sri Lanka a reality and was known as the Black Mare of Asia, was admitted to the Intensive Care Unit of the Base Hospital in Diyatalawa with dengue. It is said that her condition is improving.

However, Medical Superintendent Ranjith Amarakone said that she will have to remain in the ICU for another five days or so, since there is no possibility of transferring her to a general ward.
She had been suffering from fever while in Colombo but had arrived in Diyatalawa for coaching when her condition had worsened and she had to be hospitalized, the Medical Superintendent told

We will support UNP to form a Govt: Ganeshan

National Co-existence Dialogue and Official Languages Minister Mano Ganesan yesterday said that his party will extend support to the UNP to form a government if the SLFP is going to form a government as claimed by State Minister Dilan Perera.

Minister Ganesan while refuting allegations that the UNP had a secret deal with   former Economic Development Minister Basil Rajapaksa said that the UNP has had no deal with anyone but the people of this country.

He said that key national issues can be addressed only through the national government.

Addressing the media at the Upcountry New Villages, Estate Infrastructure and Community Development Ministry yesterday, the minister emphasised that leaders of the Tamil Progress Alliance (TPA) support the national government and added that this government is a stable one and will last until 2020.

He said several people falsely allege that the government’s constitutional reform can divide the country.

“MP Wimal Weerawansa, MP Udaya Gammanpila, MP Dilan Perera and Ven. Gnasara Thera are very well aware that the proposed constitution is not going to divide the country. But, it is their personal agendas and politics that drive them to make these false allegations,” he said.

Minister Ganesan said that the recent remarks made by MP Dilan Perera are very disappointing.

“Now, the government is comprised of both the SLFP and UNP. Therefore, solutions to the prevailing national issues can be arrived only by the national government,” he said.

The minister said when the 1987 Provincial Councils Act was brought, the SLFP was against it. They used the same slogan that the government was planning to divide the country. However, today seven of the nine provinces are led by SLFP leaders.

Referring to MP Dilan Perera’s statement that the SLFP will form a new government; Minister Ganesan said if such a situation arises the Tamil Progress Alliance (TPA) will extend its support to the UNP to form a separate government.

He noted that ther Tamil Progress Alliance supported the President during the 2015 election and a majority of the Tamil votes were cast in favour of him.

“Therefore, there are possibilities to form a separate UNP government,” Ganeshan said.

Responding to a question raised by a Journalist about MP Dilan Perera’s statement that the UNP has a deal with Basil Rajapaksa, Minister Ganesan said it is MP Perera who often speaks about deals and he is very well known as “Deal Dilan”.

“Basil Rajapaksa has no deal with UNP but I think MP Dilan Perera has a deal with Basil Rajapaksa”, he said. Responding to another question by a journalist about the stance of President Maithripala Sirisena on this issue as MP Perera is the SLFP Media Spokesperson; the minister said that MP Perera does not represent the views of the SLFP or the President.

“We will be talking to the President on this issue very soon”, he said.

Cheap drugs vanish from market with price controls

Low price pharmaceuticals were no longer available in the market following a government intervention to reduce drug prices, health sources told yesterday.

Citing an example, a senior psychiatrist told The Island that ‘Imipramine’ a drug used to treat patients suffering from depression has not been available in the market for two months.

He said the antidepressant drug which was also on the list of essential drugs, but patients now had to buy another drug at a higher price.

The senior doctor said a patient had earlier spent only Rs. 250 on ‘Imipramine’ a month, but now that patient had to spend more than Rs. 750 on the alternative per month.

He alleged that some companies did not import low price drugs.

"These drugs are not available even in State Pharmaceuticals Corporation (SPC) outlets," he said.

Chairman of the SPC Sarath Liyanage, contacted for comment, said his outfit would not allow drug shortages to be created.

He however said if a quality failure had been identified in some drug, it was removed from the market.

Liyanage said he would immediately look into the matter. "If ‘Imipramine’ has been unavailable in the market for two weeks, we will immediately import it," he said.

JVP Parliamentarian Dr Nalinda Jayatissa said it was normal for such a situation to arise when authorities forcibly reduced the prices of drugs.

He said the situation would worsen in the future and there was a danger of low quality drugs entering the market after remaining stocks were exhausted.

"We are still dependent imported drugs without taking any action to increase our production," Dr. Jayatissa said, adding that the drug companies would import low quality drugs.

He said a way out was to give a subsidy for pharmaceutical companies to sell their drugs at low prices.

"The government spends massive amounts on publicity stunts and if it cuts down on waste it would be able to solve most of its problems easily," Dr. Jayatissa said.

Former Premier's family declines days of mourning

The Home Affairs Ministry yesterday announced that there would be no days of national mourning on Dec 30 and 31 on the account of the demise of former Prime Minister Ratnasiri Wickremanayake as announced by the government earlier.

The decision to declare a day of national mourning had been changed following a request made by the family members of the former prime minister, the ministry said.

The family members have requested the government not to declare the last two days of the year as a period of mourning since it would inconvenience the public. The family members had written to the Director General of Information that the decision should be reversed, the ministry sources said.

No National Day of Mourning for late premier

The Home Affairs Ministry today confirmed that the government will not declare December 30 as a national day of mourning for former Prime Minister Ratnasiri Wickremanayake.

The government previously declared December 31 and then December 30, as a national day of mourning as a mark of respect for the late premier who passed away yesterday at a private hospital in Colombo.

Ministry spokesman Asanga Jayalath said that plans were underway to present a cabinet paper declaring a day of mourning but the decision was later suspended.

However, President Maithripala Sirisena has instructed that the funeral to be held under state sponsorship.

The funeral of the former premier is scheduled to be held in Horana on December 31.(Darshana Sanjeewa)

Minister’s brother questioned over illegal land grabs

The CID has launched an investigation into an incident where the brother of Minister Rishad Bathiudeen allegedly acquired 600 acres of land in Mannar recently.

Police interrogated the Minister’s brother over the incident on the Christmas eve.

According to the CID, the suspect has acquired the lands by promising to pay their owners, but so far he has not honoured his promise.

The police said they had acted on a complaint and a few more persons would have to be questioned.

A former Pradeshiya Sabha member, the suspect had been charged with attacking the Mannar Courts complex and grabbing land from the Wilpattu Sanctuary, according to police.

Cancer is becoming the Number 1 killer

Cancer will soon become the most threatening Non Communicable Disease (NCD) affecting Sri Lankans, Health Minister Rajitha Senaratne says.

Addressing the function at the launch of the hotline to support cancer patients, Senaratne said heart disease was at the top of NCDs in Sri Lanka with cancer set to surpass it very soon.

Senaratne noted that the World Health Organization (WHO) in Sri Lanka has said that nearly 70% of deaths in Sri Lanka was caused by NCDs.

"NCDs is a global issue. In Sri Lanka cancer is becoming a huge concern. I took steps to remove threshold imposed on spending per cancer patient. Earlier the threshold was Rs 1.5 million. Sometimes, the treatment for cancer cost more than Rs 10 million. Therefore, removing the threshold was necessary," he said, adding that the only cancer treatment that is not available in Sri Lanka is borne marrow transplants, and that too will be introduced to the health system very soon.

According to WHO estimates, 138,000 people have died of cancer to date with breast cancer, liver cancer, mouth and Females oropharynx cancer and cervical cancer being amongst the more common forms of the killer disease.

Trump’s impact on 2017 World Economy

The year 2017 is viewed with some fear by people because they think the long period of peace the world has enjoyed is too good to last much longer with new players on the world scene. The USA has elected a new President who has promised major changes in US foreign policy and has already made some dangerous statements. Three hundred and seventy prominent economists are warning that a Trump presidency would be "dangerous, destructive" for the national and the world economy.
Sri Lanka of course is dependent on the world economy and world free trade. We are an export-import economy and our welfare depends on the prospects for the world economy. We prosper if the world economy grows at the same rate or better.

The new US President Donald Trump who will assume office in January has promised to shift the US economy from its post-financial crisis stagnation by cutting taxes and increasing spending, running a larger budget deficit and reducing interest rates. But there is the risk of higher inflation by his doing so. Such policies have been tried before but without success to promote higher growth without inflation. Ronald Reagan said his tax cuts and extra spending for the Pentagon –the US Defence Establishment, would generate higher revenues and also balance the budget despite such higher spending. It didn't happen.

Instead the Tax breaks went for the rich and military Keynesianism (spending money on Defence to boost effective demand in the economy) sent the fiscal deficit rocketing. So the risk of higher inflation through larger budget deficits cannot be ruled out. World inflation is now under control and has been so for some years without the usual boom and bust cycle. But undue deliberate expansionary policies in USA could rekindle inflation and cause larger deficits in the balance of payments with other countries and also cause imbalances in other countries since the US economy plays a key role in the world economy.

The Guardian's economics editor Larry Elliott says Americans have gambled on Trump's promise that he can shift the US out of its present low growth even though they run the risk of higher inflation and a bigger budget deficit. Businessmen in Wall Street of course see bigger profits through higher economic growth . Higher growth will mean bigger corporate profits and higher share prices. But the issue is whether such higher corporate profits are sustainable or merely lead to intractable imbalances in the economy. It is no easy task to maintain the delicate balance between growth and inflation. Unbalanced growth creates unsustainable imbalances which then mean a return to the previous boom and bust phenomenon.

Some think President-elect Donald Trump lacks experience in macro-economic management, a task that is delicate and can be acquired only on the job. But don't panic, too much says Berenberg, the Bank of America's chief. America's economist Mickey Levy in a note to clients says :

Trump will learn quickly that international affairs are very complex and he will quickly come to rely on the various government agencies and experts that understand and influence the US' approaches on international affairs. This will serve to soften some of his brash statements during the campaign. Trump made some outrageous statements during the campaign. For example he promised to build a wall with Mexico to restore better balance with her payments. He also promised to tear up global trade agreements. He expressed similar sentiments with respect to China, one of USA's important trading partners with whom the US runs a large deficit in its balance of payments.

Trump's economic advisers accused Janet Yellen, the chairperson of the Federal Reserve (the Central Bank of USA) of creating a "false economy" by keeping interest rates artificially low to help President Obama and his Democratic opponent Hillary Clinton.
Trump has attacked Yellen throughout his campaign. In September he said Yellen "should be ashamed of herself. I used to hope that the Fed was independent," he said in an interview with CNBC. "And the Fed is obviously not independent. It's obviously not even close to being independent. It is important that the Fed - the Central Bank in USA - is independent and unconstrained by fiscal considerations.

His proposals to raise trade tariffs – pledging, among other things, a 45 per cent tax on Chinese imports – are a big worry to those who believe in Free Trade. The world has seen a period of free trade which has contributed to the growth of the world economy.

"His denouncing of China as a currency manipulator could also invite retaliation from the world's second biggest economy. At a time when global trade appears to be experiencing a structural decline, Trump's stance casts a shadow over the world's economic prospects," say some economists. Others say Trump constitutes perhaps the biggest threat to both world growth and financial markets.

We as a small country depend on the world economy for our growth and development. So in case the world turns protectionist we may have to look out and strengthen our bilateral economic relations with countries like China and India.
As for the USA, China and Mexico are two of its largest trading partners. Neither wants to enter into a trade war with the US, and neither can afford to do so. The US relies heavily on imports from those partners since they offer lower priced imports which contribute to the present level of price stability. So it is unlikely that Trump could erect any major trade barriers against China or Mexico who are important trading partners of the USA. Just hours after Trump's election, Judy Shelton, his only female economist adviser, told the FT that Trump wanted to have a new chair of the Fed. She said:

"He has made it a very strong point of his campaign that he thinks that the Federal Reserve's intervention and elongated accommodative monetary policy has created a false economy. People who have worked all their lives have been penalized by these low rates". The Fed last increased the benchmark federal funds rate to between 0.25-0.5% in December 2015, and has held it there since, due to various national and global uncertainties. Trump has however repeatedly criticized Yellen for not raising interest rates fast enough.

Trump "no friend of trade" warned that he wants to introduce protectionism to correct the US trade imbalances . Trump has suggested building a wall around the US borders. But this attitude of his will have an adverse effect on the US economy and thereby the world economy which is driven by the US. He may want to help US businesses but the repercussions may not be what he hopes for.

But economists ascribe Trump's comments to a lack of experience and do not expect him to follow through on his comments. Of course they are likely to cause short term volatility in the weeks ahead. But many Economists think the current concerns about major trade barriers being erected are perhaps over stated and not realistic . One writer, Levy, said Trump's often outrageous campaign pledges "will fade, with no material follow through or implementation" and "no wall will be built between Mexico and the US. Despite such talk by Trump. Trump will have to temper his global antagonism, economists say.
What about Trumps interest rate policy?

The market expected the Fed to raise rates in December but it failed to materialize. Trump has repeatedly said he is unlikely to nominate Yellen to continue as Fed chief when her term expires in early 2018. He wants to replace her with a Republican who follows his economic thinking.

Don't panic, too much says Berenberg bank's chief America's economist Mickey Levy in a note to clients:
'Trump will learn quickly that international affairs are very complex and he will quickly come to rely on the various government agencies and experts that understand and influence the US' approaches on international affairs. This will serve to soften some of his brash statements during the campaign.

Levy said Trump's often outrageous campaign pledges to build a wall with Mexico and tear up global trade agreements "will fade, with no material follow through or implementation" and "no wall will be built between Mexico and the US".

China and Mexico are two of the US' largest trading partners. Neither wants to enter a trade war with the US, and neither can afford to do so. The US relies heavily on imports from those partners because they are comparatively cheaper and hence the US cannot afford to block them without raising the US cost structures and the cost of living. His proposals to raise trade tariffs – pledging, among other things, to levy a 45 per cent tax on Chinese imports – are a worry. His denouncement of China as a currency manipulator could also invite retaliation from the world's second biggest economy.

At a time when global trade appears to be experiencing a structural decline, Trump's stance casts a shadow over the world's economic prospects. But several economists say that current concerns about major trade barriers being erected are overstated and not realistic. Will he do so? Not likely according to several economists. So we could be happy that there will be no dramatic changes in the world economy.