Employing graduates

Saturday, 28 April 2018 00:14 -     - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}

As elections creep nearer and the Government steps up recruitment a prominent Sinhala daily newspaper on Friday carried a photograph of a bride participating in an interview decked out in her homecoming garb, showing the keen interest the public still has to catch public service jobs. 

It is in some ways astounding that Sri Lanka, despite being a middle-income country, would still have this level of obsession for obtaining public service jobs. The very fact that a graduate felt the need to come for the interview on her way to her homecoming accompanied by her newly-wedded husband is staggering. Yet when looking at the established social ideals it is quite understandable.   

Many graduates are gripped with getting employment from the Government, partly because of the security it provides and because in rural areas private companies providing lucrative jobs are few and far between. The public service also provides many perks such as duty free vehicles permits and a non-contributory pension, which is funded by tax payers. Collective bargaining entrenched within the public service also means that regular pay hikes and promotions are possible without high levels of productivity. All this makes the government empower of choice.    

According to data released last year Sri Lanka’s State and State-Owned Enterprise workers, excluding the military, grew a whopping 30% to 1.1 million from 2006 to 2016. The survey done by the Census and Statistics Department included the Central Government, Provincial Government, statutory bodies and State enterprises, showed that not only is the public sector inflated, but it often made recruitments to areas of little use to the people. 

Finance Ministry data showed that 88,000 so-called ‘Development Officers’ had been recruited to the state service between 2005 and 2015 but only managed 11,000 medical officers, 33,000 nurses and 3,579 midwives. There are also gaps in technical areas that has left the Government weak in when negotiating agreements and fast tracking economic reforms. 

Politically-driven recruitment is clearly a major problem within the public service and continues to be a fiscal liability, especially since each year around 30,000 workers become pensioners. According to Finance Ministry data, the number of pensioners grew from 430,153 in 2006 to 564,472 in 2015, increasing the burden on workers.  

 It also means that the burden on the taxpayer to fund these jobs is exponential. But graduates who seek private sector employment also do not have an easy time.   

Many employers say today’s university graduates don’t quite measure up. In survey after survey, they rate young applicants as deficient in such key workplace skills as written and oral communication, critical thinking and analytical reasoning. As the job market gradually improves, businesses say they aren’t finding enough savvy graduates who can start contributing from day one on the job. This has created a difficult labour provision gap in Sri Lanka where labour is hampered from freely moving up the value chain. 

Other countries have addressed similar situations by reforming their education sector and establishing policies that address their labour market in a holistic manner. Some introduce flexible retirement benefits that can be shifted from the public sector to the private sector to encourage movement away from the public sector. But it is questionable whether Sri Lanka would ever have the political will to meaningfully effect change to give labour its true value.

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