Country yearning for positive approach to challenges
THE full text of the Speech by Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapakse at
the 'Business Today Top 10 Awards Ceremony' at the Colombo Hilton on
Friday, August 26.
I AM happy to be able to participate in an event such as this, at a
time when we will soon be asked to evaluate and choose the leadership of
our country for the next six years.
This is the time to reflect, - the time to pause and think about a
direction for the future. This is the time to ask ourselves some
questions. What do our people say? What do our people want?
What do the different sectors of our society want us to help them to
achieve? Let me be frank and honest with you. The recent history of our
country has been one of turmoil, of missed opportunities, of uncertain
initiatives, and of policies whose fruits we have hardly enjoyed.
In the course of my political career which spans 35 years, it has
become more and more clear to me that our country is yearning for a more
positive, - a more practical - approach to the challenges of our times.
What our country needs is a new approach, - a New Beginning. All
sectors of our society are sick and tired of theories and verbose
statements: sick of seeing the 'vision statements' of our leaders, which
have been largely confined to words, and words alone.
Like you, the captains of business, I too am impatient with words.
And like you, the captains of business, I too want action first, action
second, and action all the way.
Take the corporate sector as an example. Every successive Government
has gone on repeating that over-used mantra, - "The Private Sector is
the Engine of Growth", - and quietly abdicated much of the Government's
own responsibility for enabling economic growth in our country.
Growth should be a joint effort of the Government and the private
sector. In this partnership, the role of the Government should be to
create an enabling environment for commercial growth.
But what is the ground reality? Government policies that are friendly
towards the private sector, are often found to be in place.
But public sector institutions on the one side, and the country's
public service on the other, have not been reformed or re-structured to
facilitate the implementation of the private sector-friendly policies of
the Government.
You know this better than me. Instead of enjoying the facility of an
enabling environment, the private sector is still hemmed in, to a large
extent, by an environment that is restrictive and frustrating.
This must be transformed. And to achieve this objective, you - the
captains of business - must guide me. I don't for a moment claim to have
all the answers to all the problems of our country.
I am not a person who knows it all. Hence I will depend on the
corporate sector on the one side, and the professional communities of
our country on the other, to guide me in crafting solutions to the
problems of growth and development. Please reach out to me, - the doors
of my house will be always open to you.
I also count on you, the big players of the corporate sector, to help
and guide the small and medium scale businesses of our country, to grow
and become, - some day - as important as you.
As a part of our 'New Beginning', I would also like to invite you to
join me in an effort to evolve a new political culture in our country:
One in which the public service is free of politics: And one in which a
consensus is reached across the lines of party politics, on specific
matters of national importance.
For instance, all political parties must agree on a consistent set of
policies for the private sector.
A change of Government should not result in a change of policy where
the business sector is concerned. We must respect the fact that good
business practice requires planning on a long term time horizon.
Let us invite the 'National Business Team', - the 'B. T. Top Ten
Award Winners of 2004' to take the lead in joining us in this 'New
Beginning'.
While we congratulate you, - the 'Top Ten Business Champions' of
2004, - on the awards that you have won, let us also remind you that
with your achievement you also undertake certain responsibilities for
your country.
We endorse you today, as the country's unofficial ambassadors to the
outside world of business.
You represent the business potential of our country. To the outside
world, you represent what a business can achieve in the Sri Lankan
business environment. You are a proxy for our country's business
environment.
Other investors, both foreign and local, will be convinced that if
you can achieve success in the way you have, they too can succeed if
they invest in our country.
In conclusion, therefore, we thank 'Business Today' for providing an
institutional platform for recognising the 'Ten Business Champions' of
our country.
The success of the champion team will attract more investment to our
country. Your event today is therefore a very important one, where our
country is concerned.
We encourage and commend the tireless efforts of 'Business Today' to
organise a national event of this magnitude. I thank you once again for
inviting me. Thank you. |