List of Issues (LOI) deliberations – Sri Lanka.

27 February 2023 

List of Issues (LOI) deliberations – Sri Lanka 

Submitted by Kumudini Samuel on behalf of The Women and Media Collective and the Centre  for Poverty Analysis, Sri Lanka.

 

Thank you, Madam Chair and Working Group. Good Afternoon! 

The issues raised here were not included in the State Party’s submission to CEDAW in April 2022. However they are of critical importance in the context of the unprecedented ongoing financial,  debt and economic crisis in the country.  

Background  

In 2022 Sri Lanka’s economy contracted by 10% resulting in unparalleled loss of incomes and  livelihoods, scarcity in essential goods and medicines and significant food insecurity.  

Extreme poverty has doubled from 13.1 to 25% ($3.65 per capita)3in just one year and an  estimated 42% of households are now in poverty. Food inflation has increased to 60% and real incomes have declined by 15%.5 Crippling austerity  measures, (electricity tariffs were increased by 66% this month, February, adding to a major increase in August 2022), compound hardships. Inflation and falling incomes of households  indicate that an estimated 6.3 million persons (3 in 10 persons) are food insecure and child  malnutrition in Sri Lanka ranks 7th in the world.  

Adverse effects of the crisis go well beyond its immediate impact and households sliding into  poverty can remain there for generations. This situation needs immediate and urgent redress  through careful policy interventions.

Impact on Women  

This rapid and unforeseen contraction of economic growth has resulted in diminishing quality of  life with disproportionately gendered and grave repercussions for women, adding to the hardships  resulting from the Covid-19 pandemic.  

Regressive increases in VAT, coupled with austerity, inflation, falling incomes and loss of  livelihoods have constrained the economic security of thousands of households, directly affecting  women who are tasked with ensuring the welfare of their families. The sharp increase in consumer  products, shortages of essentials such as fuel, domestic gas, rice and other food items have been  further compounded by lack of access to adequate incomes, rising unemployment and poverty  experienced by women as income earners and as unpaid care workers. 

In August 2022, UNFPA appealed for USD10.7 million to urgently meet the sexual and  reproductive health needs, and protection needs, of women and girls including for life saving  medicines, equipment, services and supplies including for the clinical management of rape and  domestic violence survivors. 

We therefore urge the Committee to ask the State party how it proposes to expand its social  protection coverage to: 

  • 1. meet the gendered needs of women; 2. ensure a special targeting of women in the context of the triple burden they must bear to deal with the impact of the financial crisis; 3. catch new categories of women falling into poverty; 4. expand social provisioning as a percentage of public  spending and drastically reduce its inflated defence budget.  
  • Ask the State party how it will meaningfully strengthen its Samurdhi8livelihoods programme to catch the poorest women (for instance not just encouraging women into unproductive income generation programmes, set up for failure, but give them productive assets);  
  • Ask the State party how it will improve the targeting and delivery of child nutrition programmes, (including the supply of proteins and vegetable instead of just rice and pulses)  and what attention it is paying to meet the special nutritional needs of girls;
  • Ask the State party how it will reduce and restrict consumption based indirect tax and desist  from using regressive taxation as a tool for domestic resource mobilization and instead how  it proposes to increase progressive tax on investment, wealth and capital; 
  • Ask the State party to assess the impacts of austerity measures on women’s access to adequate, and  affordable health care, including sexual and reproductive health; and how it proposes to collect sex  disaggregated data on access to healthcare facilities, particularly by women; and what immediate  measures it will introduce to mitigate and remedy such impact on women and girls.  

Thank you!

To access the Full Sri Lanka Shadow Report presented at the 86th  CEDAW Pre Session, Please click here.