Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Glimpses of the real university crisis

, The Island

article_image
Professor G. H. Peiris

Three months of agonising wait is finally over for tens of thousands of youth in the higher strata of our educational system, now that the so-called ‘university crisis’ is deemed to have ended, and our dons have decided to resume their routine duties. Many among them would like us to know that had it not been for their patriotic zeal they would have left Sri Lanka to sell their brains in far more lucrative markets. Mighty decent of them.

In fairness to this fraternity I should say that it has seldom resorted to politically confrontational trade union action, and, until a few weeks back, never took to the streets to win their demands. This time around, they mobilised considerable public support for their cause, mainly by misrepresenting their case and camouflaging their objective. They appear to have been so persuasive that even some of the sternest critics of higher education including those of the media did not (as far as I am aware) really challenge the legitimacy of the FUTA agitation for higher salaries, leave alone its other demands and claims relating to imperilled free education, inadequacy of government spending on education, university autonomy, and the brain-drain.

The FUTA strike, however, did produce a vibrant public discussion that extended over some of these demands and claims. Among the contributions by the university staff to the discussion (some of which vividly but unintentionally illustrated the crux of the real crisis in higher education) there were the attempts to present the university teachers’ perspectives on issues such as the loss of scholarly talents due to low salaries, how enhanced university grants could be used for elevating the quality of higher education (Jayadeva Uyangoda in The Island of 3 October 2012), and why politicians should not interfere in university affairs. There were, in addition, the more focused inputs by intellectuals outside the university system which undoubtedly enriched the quality of the discussion. Those among them that were particularly useful were the commentary on the ‘Trade Union Action by FUTA’ by Jayantha Dhanapala and Savitri Goonesekere (The Island, 8 October 2012), and Usvatte-aratchi’s clarification titled ‘Expenditure on Education’ (Sunday Island, 14 October 2010). The frequent references by the FUTA to large numbers of unfilled cadre vacancies in the universities, presumably as evidence of the inability of the universities to attract suitably qualified persons to their staff, were placed in proper perspective by Rajiva Wijesinha (The Island, 10 October 2012) whose data indicated that, at least in some of the faculties and departments of study he has specifically referred to, the need of the hour is retrenchment rather than recruitment. And, had the FUTA heeded the advice given by Erik de Silva fairly early in the proceedings (The Island of 13 September 2012) it could have avoided persisting with the blunder of demanding an increase of government expenditure on education to 6% of the GDP.

It is in the hope that this discussion will continue and reach greater depths, as it surely must, and also be free of personalised vested interests including those of electoral politics, that the present paper is being written. I am conscious of the possibility that its contents will not please my former colleagues some of whom I hold in high esteem. I fully agree with Rajiva Wijesinha’s demonstration (referred to above) that, in most matters, it would be unfair to generalise on the university teaching community. Since I expect to venture into some of the less well known features of our university system, I should, in addition, make it clear that the paper is based very largely on my intimate association with the University of Peradeniya for well over half a century. My interactions with the other universities in Sri Lanka have been confined throughout to informal contact with a few members of their staff and a few of their graduates – mostly those in the Social Sciences.

Government Funding of Education

It is, indeed, quite amazing that spokespersons of the community representing the highest levels of educational attainment in Sri Lanka in which graduates in Economics probably outnumber those with advanced qualifications in any other academic discipline have continued to persist with the patently absurd demand that the government should allocate 6% of the Gross Domestic Product – note that the phrase "equivalent to 6% of the GDP" was never used by the FUTA leaders in their oral or written representations. Certain persons outside the university system, extending qualified sympathy to the FUTA cause (‘Arthika Vishleshaka’ of The Nation of 14 October 2012 comes to mind as an example), with intentions, no doubt, of protecting the university teachers from public ridicule, have explained to us that what is really being demanded is a much needed change in the government spending priorities which should involve, among other things, a higher level of resource allocation to education. In yet another display of ingenuity, the Editor of The Nation suggested that the "6%" is a brilliantly conceived slogan – symbolically, a resounding ‘No’ to the rampant corruption and lawlessness in the ranks of the government. And then, there was this fig-leaf titled ‘Six percent of GDP on education: From fantasy to reality’ (The Island of 17 October 2012) by Sumanasiri Liyanage according to whose rationalisation, FUTA’s demand could be considered meaningful "if it is linked with such far-reaching changes in the prevailing economic system" – that is to say, a socialist revolution, he being a Marxist and that kind of thing. In the picture adorning this article (obviously not Liyanage’s) we see this delightful little kid leading the procession of the "Saviours of State Education" from Moratuwa, carrying the "6%" banner, and wearing a red T-shirt embellished with yet another banner, the ‘Stars and Stripes’. It seemed as if the picture was depicting unseen things that were really happening? I now prefer to think of it as one of many displays of insensitivity – like the salary demand.

The plain fact is that the "6% demand" was nothing other than a blunder kept alive through cupidity by those of the university community who should have known better (I am glad that Liyanage has exonerated a small group of Economists of the University of Colombo from this charge). This is not to deny that it attracted support ? it did, from a whole array of disparate forces that see the university system as the Achilles Heel of this powerful regime.

It was finally left for Usvatte-aratchi, our expert on Public Finance and aficionado of Education, to educate the public on the difference between the GDP and Government Expenditure, and to show that the latter was equivalent to only about 21 % of the former in 2011, an year during which the government expenditure on various fields of formal education was about 9% of its total expenditure (1.8% of the GDP). In simple arithmetic based on 2011 values, in order to ensure an educational expenditure equivalent to 6% of the GDP (without an increase in private expenditure on education) it would have been necessary for the government to raise its financial input to education from 9% to about 29%. Such a scenario would have meant a drastic curtailments of expenditure on other things the government is required to do such as debt servicing, payment of salaries to its employees, and capital expenditure (which, in 2011, accounted for 25%, 17% and 48%, respectively, of the total government expenditure).

Milton Rajaratne, the ‘Management’ expert from Peradeniya, attempted (Sunday Times, 7 October 2012) to show how the government, with sound management of the economy, could meet the "6% demand". Having prefaced his thesis with an unfortunate falsehood that the allocation of "6% of GDP for Education was advocated by the government itself", he argued in more reasonable vein that what the government needs to do in order to meet this demand is to: (a) eliminate waste, (b) re-prioritise expenditure, and (c) improve tax collection. Yes, there could be no serious disagreement on these necessities.

There is, in fact, a great deal of almost criminal waste associated, not so much with incompetence, but with the "boast of heraldry and pomp of power" which we see at all levels of government activity including the universities. Here is a little story to illustrate what I say. A few years ago the authorities of the University of Peradeniya, acting on instructions of the UGC, set about the task of formulating a long-term plan for its development. Having gathered information for this purpose from various sections of the university (but not, apparently, setting plan targets), what do they do? They (a fairly large group consisting mostly of academic staff) shifted their planning venue to luxury hotels ? over a spell at Ahungalle, and thereafter at Kandalama. Is this the way to set about planning for a university which cramps 4 students to a room in its Halls of Residence? Is this not the same mindset that makes the President of the country take an entourage of some 160 (the number reported in the media) to New York in order to address the UN General Assembly which, as everyone knows, is a massive yawn of a ceremony? The world over, it is not only the kings and queens who squander tax-payers’ money for personal joy and splendour. That apart, it is also relevant to note that even if all our leaders were to suddenly embrace a Gandhian way of life, the resulting saving will make up only a tiny fraction of the "6%" the FUTA demands. There are ways in which far more substantial savings – not only of money but far more important things ? could be achieved, the most urgently necessary among which is the abrogation of the Provincial Council system foisted on us whimsically by the government of India to cater to its own needs. It didn’t solve any, but created many problems. But that is a different subject.

There could, I think, be no serious dispute on the need advocated by Rajaratne for certain changes in the government’s spending priorities, although the view that the prevailing focus on socio-economic infrastructure represents a misplaced priority is debatable. What I think Prof. Rajaratne has meant when he says "reprioritise expenditure" is merely that government should spend more than it does on Education. OK, we agree.

Improving tax collection? The ‘Rajaratne formula’ could be summarised as follows. The 2011 "tax revenue" (not confined to income tax) was 12.4% of the GDP. If it could be raised to 16.9% of the GDP, the government will (he says) have at its disposal an additional Rs. 272 billion which, if spent on Education, will make the total educational expenditure of the government approximate 6% of the GDP. It requires expertise (which I do not possess) to consider whether the Rajaratne proposal is feasible. No expert, as far as I am aware, has hitherto commented on it. But assuming it is worthy of serious consideration, I have a better idea. Why not introduce into our system of taxation an ‘Educational Tax’(involving, inter alia, the extraction of a flat 10% of income from those with annual incomes of over Rs. 600,000, without any exemption from the usual income tax, but with a P.A.Y.E. system designed to minimise evasion), the entire revenue from which would be channelled to educational development. Needless to stress, the university teachers, all of whom are within the highest 10% of income-earners of the country even now, and are so totally committed to educational development, will gladly contribute to this tax.

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Cartoon of the day , Dailymirror



UGC probes shirking dons on COPE directions

FUTA chief says uni. administrators should inquire into it

, The Island

by Dasun Edirisinghe

 The University Grants Commission (UGC) has started investigations into lecture hours and time tables of the university lecturers as requested by the Parliamentary watchdog Committee on Public Enterprises (COPE).

UGC Chairman Prof. Gamini Samaranayake told The Island the UGC had already instructed the heads of countrywide universities to provide relevant details.

COPE interim report presented to Parliament last week has noted that there are serious lapses on the part of university administrators. According to details provided by the UGC on the number of lecture hours conducted by each lecturer in the year 2010, there were 117 lecturers whose number of lecture hours conducted for the entire year had been less fewer than ten. The watchdog committee has strongly criticised the relevant authorities for turning a blind eye to such grave shortcomings.

Prof. Samaranayake said that the UGC had submitted the details given by respective universities according to the time tables of lecturers.

"We have been asked to conduct a further investigation on the issue by the COPE," he said, adding it would be a deep study.

The COPE report had said that the committee was of the view that the university education in Sri Lanka requires some drastic changes for its qualitative development. The curricula have not been changed for years in step with the changes taking place in the relevant fields over the past few decades.

When contacted by The Island for comments, President of the Federation of University Teachers’ Associations (FUTA), the main trade union of university teachers, Dr. Nirmal Ranjith Devasiri said lecture hours varied from junior lecturers to professors.

He said that according to university rules, normally a lecturer would have to complete nine hours of lectures per week.

"Our records are submitted to the Vice Chancellor via heads of department annually," Dr. Devasiri said, adding if a lecturer did not complete required number of hours the university administrators should inquire into it.

Accepting the claim that some lecturers had not completed the required lecture hours, the FUTA chief said, action should be taken against them according to university regulations.

 

Monday, October 29, 2012

The Myth of Free Education

Monday, 22 October 2012 00:00, Dailymirror
By Muttukrishna Sarvananthan
The Federation of University Teachers’ Association (FUTA) and the Inter University Students’ Federation (IUSF) in Sri Lanka have been on a long campaign to “protect free education”. I will be dealing with both the semantics and substance of “free education” in Sri Lanka in this think piece.

The fundamental truth is that NOTHING IS FREE IN THE WORLD of human beings. Every single citizen of Sri Lanka pays several taxes to the government for the provision of public goods (for e.g.infrastructure) and services (for e.g. education, health). Since between 70-75% of the total revenue of the government accrues from indirect (consumption) taxes every single citizen pays various taxes to the government daily during their entire lifetime. Therefore, every household pays for the education of their children albeit indirectly through the payment of direct (income) and indirect taxes to the government.
Besides, there is rampant corruption in admissions to popular schools throughout Sri Lanka which makes a mockery of the free education system because of payment of bribe to secure admission. In addition, almost all the parents pay to send their children to private tutories from grade one onwards because most schools in the country hardly teach anything worthwhile despite being nominally free-of-cost.

According to the latest Household Income and Expenditure Survey (HIES) 2009/10, out of the total non-food expenditure of the households, the average monthly household expenditure on education amounts to 5.6% of the total (following personal care & health expenses 41.5%, housing 19.1%, transport 12.8%, and fuel & light 7.1%). The average monthly household expenditure on education is higher than on clothing, textiles & footwear (5.0%) and Communication (4.2%), for example. With expenditures on education and health consuming 47% of the total household expenditures, how legitimate is the claim of “free” education and health in Sri Lanka?

The public-funded universities and other public-funded tertiary educational institutions produce mostly UNEMPLOYABLE graduates. Barring Engineering and Medical degrees, most degrees awarded by the fifteen universities in Sri Lanka are not worthy of recognition. Public universities in Sri Lanka are infested with under-qualified and abysmal quality teachers; especially in the arts, humanities, and social sciences, disciplines which together accommodate more than two-third of the total university student population in the country. The fact that many university teachers in Sri Lanka send their children abroad for higher education is a testimony to the abysmal quality of university education in Sri Lanka.

According to the HIES 2009/10, only 14.7% of the population has passed the G.C.E. O/L examination and another 11.2% has passed the G.C.E. A/L examination or beyond, out of which little over 1% have an undergraduate degree or above. Hence, in total only 26% of the population has passed the G.C.E. O/L or beyond in the country. In other words, the eulogised free education in Sri Lanka has failed three-quarters of the population. The fact that many members of parliament (from all political parties) send their children to the fee-levying private ‘international schools’ is a testimony to the abysmal quality of school education (private and public) in the country.

" Almost all the parents pay to send their children to private tutories from grade one onwards because most schools in the country hardly teach anything worthwhile "

According to a Ministry of Education source, even the foregoing pass rates are achieved by lowering the pass mark at the G.C.E. O/L examination to 30 in the past five-years or so from the historic pass mark of 40 in order to fulfill a commitment made in the “Mahinda Chinthana”. Such fudging of numbers as a way of attaining policy goals and targets has become a hallmark of the Rajapaksa regime and perhaps their policy instrument to make Sri Lanka a “knowledge hub” in Asia. Besides, a significant part of the 1% of the population with degrees is unemployed or under-employed because of the poor quality of their degree. Is this the result envisioned by the champion of free education Mr. C.W.W. Kannangara when he introduced free education in 1945?
The FUTA and IUSF may contend that the foregoing pathetic results of our free education system are due to under-funding. However, I would contend that with similar or lesser amount of public funding many other developing countries have achieved much better results than Sri Lanka has. Money is a necessary but insufficient ingredient for attaining quality education both at the school and higher education levels.

It is high time for educationists to do soul-searching regarding the outcome of the sixty seven years (1945-2012) of free education. The entire education sector in Sri Lanka, from cradle to crematorium (lifelong learning), has been in crisis for a very long time. The low salaries of the school and university teachers and the declining share of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) devoted to the education sector are minor problems in my view. The major problems afflicting the education sector in my view are (a) dated and irrelevant curriculum (b) predominance of culture of teaching (spoon feeding) as opposed to culture of learning (c) lack of performance-based remuneration for teachers which has resulted in low-level of motivation (d) nepotism and favouritism in awarding scholarships for postgraduate study abroad to academics, and (e) ragging of students by students and sexual exploitation of female students by male teachers which are endemic in further and higher education institutions. The Universities’ Grants Commission (UGC) and individual universities have the legal right and responsibility to rectify the foregoing core problems (except the common salary scale) without government interference. What has FUTA done to address these problems?

In this ground reality, what is the logical, moral, or rational economic imperative for the demand to allocate 6% of the GDP for the education sector when only 1% of the population has earned a degree (that too of unemployable quality)? In my view, even if the government allocates 10% of the GDP for education, the quality of our university graduates and teachers will not improve unless and until the aforementioned core issues afflicting the education sector are corrected. Thus, any resolution of the salary issue should be tied to resolving severe qualitative problems highlighted above. Is the holy grail of “free education” in Sri Lanka worthy of protection?

Education will follow. Muttukrishna Sarvananthan Ph.D. (Wales), M.Sc. (Bristol), M.Sc. (Salford), B.A. (Hons) (Delhi) hails from Point Pedro, Northern Sri Lanka, and a Development Economist by profession and the Principal Researcher of the Point Pedro Institute of Development (PPID). He has been an Endeavour Research Fellow at the Monash University (Melbourne, Australia) and Fulbright Visiting Research Scholar at the George Washington University (Washington D.C, USA.) as well. sarvi@pointpedro.org

Sunday, October 28, 2012

பல்கலையை உலுப்பி எடுக்கும் அரசியல் தலையீடு,
 http://onlineuthayan.com/ news
யாழ்.பல்கலைக்கழகத்துக்கு கணினி பிரயோக உதவியாளர்கள் மற்றும் எழுதுவினைஞர்களை நியமிப்பதற்கான நடவடிக்கைகள் அரசியல் தலையீடு காரணமாக நேற்று மீண்டும் தடுத்து நிறுத்தப்பட்டன. இதனை எதிர்த்து பீடாதிபதிகள் கூட்டத்தில் இருந்து வெளிநடப்புச் செய்தனர்.
"தியேட்டரில் இருந்து காலையில் கிடைத்த உத்தர வுக்கு அமைய நியமனப்பட்டியல் பேரவைக் கூட்டத்தில் முன்வைக்கப்படாமல் தவிர்க்கப்பட்டது'' என்று நம்பகமான தகவல்கள் உதயனுக்குத் தெரிவித்தன.
இந்த விடயத்தில் தீர்மானகரமாக, தனது அதிகாரங்களைப் பயன்படுத்தி முடிவு எடுக்கக் கூடியவரான துணைவேந்தர் வசந்தி அரசரட்ணம் எதுவும் பேசாமல் வாளாவிருந்தார் என்றும் அந்தத் தகவல்கள் மேலும் கூறுகின்றன.
நேற்று நடைபெற்ற, பல் கலைக்கழகத்தின் மாதாந்தப் பேரவைக் கூட்டத்தில் இந்த விடயம் ஆராயப்படும் என்று தீவிரமாக எதிர்பார்க்கப்பட்டது. அதற்கான பத்திரங்களும் தயார் நிலையில் இருந்தன. ஆனால் கூட்டம் ஆரம்பமான பின்னரும் அது கூட்டத்தில் முன்வைக்கப்பட வில்லை. 
கல்விசாரா ஊழியர்களின் நியமனங்கள் குறித்த விடயம் கூட்டத்தில் விவாதத்துக்கு எடுக்கப்பட்ட போது, பீடாதிபதிகள் இந்த நியமனம் பற்றிக் கேள்வி எழுப்பினர். ஆனால் "காலையில் அமைச்சரிடமிருந்து வந்த உத்தரவை அடுத்து இந்த நியமனப் பட்டியல் பேரவையின் அங்கீகாரத்துக்காகச் சமர்ப்பிக்கப்படவில்லை'' என்று பல்கலைக்கழகப் பதிவாளர் வி.காண்டீபன் தெரிவித்தார்.
கூட்டத்துக்குத் தலைமை வகித்தவர் துணை வேந்தர் வசந்தி அரசரட்ணம். பதவி நிலை வழியாக அவரது செயலராகப் பதிவாளர் பணியாற்றுகிறார். இருப்பினும் இந்தக் கூட்டத்தில் நியமனப் பட்டியலை முன்வைக்கத் தான் அனுமதி வழங்கியிருந்தார் என்றும் அதற்கான ஆவணங்கள் தயார் நிலையில் வைக்கப்பட்டிருந்தன என்றும் துணைவேந்தர் தெரிவித்தார்.
இந்த விடயத்தை பேரவையின் முடிவுக்கு விட்டுவிடுவதாகவும் அவர், பந்தைத் தள்ளிவிட்டார். இதனை தொடர்ந்து காரசாரமான வாதங்கள் இடம்பெற்றன. பேரவையின் முடிவுக்கு விடுவதாகத் துணைவேந்தர் தனது பொறுப்பைத் தட்டிக் கழிக்கக்கூடாது என்று பீடாதிபதிகள் வாதிட்டனர்.
அதேநேரத்தில் பேரவைக் கூட்டத்தில் வாய் மொழி மூலமான உத்தரவுகளைச் செயற்படுத்த முடியாது என்று சுட்டிக்காட்டிய பீடாதிபதிகள், அமைச்சரின் உத்தரவு எழுத்தில் இருந்தால் அதனைக் காட்டுமாறு கோரினர். 
ஆனால், அத்தகைய உத்தரவுகள் எவையும் எழுத்து வடிவில் இல்லை என்றும் காலை 8 மணிக்கு தொலைபேசி வழியாகவே வழங்கப்பட்டது என்றும் பதிவாளர் பதிலிறுத்தார். 
அமைச்சரும் ஆளுநரும் இவ்வாறு வாய்மொழி உத்தரவுகள் பலவற்றையும் இடும் பழக்கத்தைக் கொண்டவர்கள் என்று தெரிவித்த, கூட்டத்திலிருந்த அரசியல் வழி நியமனங்களான பேரவை உறுப்பினர்கள் சிலர், அவ்வாறான வாய் மொழி உத்தரவுகளை ஏற்றுச் செயற்படுத்தலாம் என்று வக்காலத்துப் பாடினர். 
இதனைத் திட்டவட்டமாக மறுத்த பீடாதிபதிகள், பல்கலைக்கழக நிர்வாகம் என்பது சட்டங்களையும் அமைச்சின் சுற்றறிக்கைகளையும் மதித்தே நடத்தப்படுகின்றது; நடக்கின்றது என்று அழுத்திக் கூறியதுடன் வாய் மொழி மூலம் சொல்வதை ஏற்றுக் கொள்ள முடியாது என்று உறுதியாக நின்றனர். 
இதற்கு இணங்க மறுத்த, அரசியல் நியமன பேரவை உறுப்பினர்கள் அதனை ஏற்றுக்கொள்ளத்தான் வேண்டும் என்று வலியுறுத்தினர். இதனை அடுத்து பீடாதிபதிகள் கூட்டத்தில் இருந்து வெளிநடப்புச் செய்தனர். விஞ்ஞான பீடாதிபதி கே.கந்தசாமி மற்றும் கலைப் பீடாதிபதி வி.பி.சிவநாதன் ஆகியோர் முதலில் கூட்டத்தில் இருந்து வெளியேறினர். அவர்களைத் தொடர்ந்து ஏனைய பீடாதிபதிகளும் வெளியேறினர். 
ஆனால் அவர்கள் சமாளிக்கப்பட்டு மீண்டும் தமது ஆசனங்களுக்கு திருப்பப்பட்டனர். 
இன்னும் இரண்டு வாரங்களுக்குள் அமைச்சருடன் பேசி, இந்தப் பிரச்சினைக்கான தீர்வைப் பெற்றுத் தருவதாக பேரவை உறுப்பினரான முன்னாள் துணைவேந்தர் சமாளித்தார். 
இவர் கடந்த கூட்டத்தின் போதும் இப்படித்தான் தெரிவித்தார் என்று பேரவை உறுப்பினர்கள் சிலர் உதயனிடம் சுட்டிக்காட்டினர். "அமைச்சருக்கு நெருக்கமான  புலிகளின் ஆதரவாளர்களால் வடமராட்சி சுடலை ஒன்றில் வைத்து நையப்புடைக்கப்பட்ட அதிபர் ஒருவரின் புதல்விக்கு இந்தப் பட்டியலில் நியமனம் வழங்கப்படாததன் காரணத்தால்தான் இவை தடுத்து நிறுத்தப்படுகின்றன'' என்று பேரவை உறுப்பினர் ஒருவர் உதயனிடம் தெரிவித்தார். 
இருப்பினும் கடந்த மாத இறுதியில் தியேட்டருக்குச் சென்று அமைச்சரைச் சந்தித்துப் பேசிய பீடாதிபதிகள் இந்த விவகாரத்தை எடுத்து விளக்கியிருந்தனர். 
அதற்கு, தான் அதற்காக இந்தப் பிரச்சினையைக் கையில் எடுக்கவில்லை என்று பதிலளித்திருந்த அமைச்சர், தனது ஆதரவாளர்கள் பலருக்கு நியமனம் கிடைக்கவில்லை என்று அவர்கள் தெரிவித்த முறைப்பாட்டுக்கு அமைவாகவே தான் அதனைத் தடுத்து நிறுத்தியிருந்தார் எனச் சப்பைக் கட்டுக் கட்டியிருந்தார்.

CMU explains donation to support FUTA strike

, The Island

The Ceylon Mercantile, Industrial & General Workers’ Union (CMU) donated half a million rupees to The Federation of University Teachers’ Associations (FUTA) on 3rd October 2012, in support of the general strike of its affiliated unions in the fourteen State-funded universities in this country. The CMU donation received publicity and some comment in the media, after the FUTA President had received it at a media conference held at the CMU headquarters that day. The reasons why the donation was made are worthy of publicity, as it was made from funds conserved by the CMU over a period of nearly sixty-five years, from the contributions of workers who are paid much lower wages than the salaries of university teachers,

 It is necessary for us, in the first place, to make it clear to the public that the donation was not made in response to any solicitation from the FUTA leadership whatsoever. It was made mainly because of the importance of the FUTA demand for 6% of the GDP to be allocated by the State for Education at all levels, for millions of working men and women like most of the members of our union, who are constrained to bear considerable costs for the education of their children, due to inadequate funding for state schools,

 The FUTA general strike was in pursuance of the demand for the grant of pay increases for all grades of teachers in all the universities, which were said to have been promised to them; that demand, like the demand for a guarantee of university autonomy was no doubt of special importance for them, in their academic sphere, and worthy of support, too.

 As our Union has had considerable experience of prolonged strikes of workers, we could well guess that financial assistance might be needed by academics who might have been experiencing serious financial difficulties, without pay, as the strike dragged on in the absence of any positive indication from the Government and the State authorities responsible for Higher Education to settle the strike by direct discussion with the FUTA representatives. Before offering to make a financial contribution to FUTA in the circumstances, however, we consulted the President and the Treasurer of FUTA as to what financial assistance that they might have received for the strike. On the basis of the information they gave us in that respect, our Executive Committee decided to make the contribution of five hundred thousand rupees to the FUTA Activites and Welfare Fund on 3rd October.

 We learnt that representatives of FUTA had been invited for discussions with responsible representatives of the Government and the University Authorities, shortly thereafter, and that they had decided to suspend their strike, with a return to work by their members on 12th October 2012, on certain assurances they had received. One was for restoration of pay withheld during the strike.

 We were informed thereafter, by a letter from the President of FUTA on 21st October, "that the entirety of the donation made by the CMU will be used by FUTA for the purpose of conducting activities related to raising consciousness among the general public of the country on the issue of the need for protecting the state sector education from which families of members of the CMU also benefit".

 We think that the publication of the reasons why our Union made its donation to FUTA. and the FUTA decision as to its future utilization, would be of public interest.



Issued on behalf of

The Ceylon Mercantile, Industrial & General Workers’ Union

Saturday, October 27, 2012

COPE guns for shirking dons

, The Island

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The Parliamentary watchdog committee on Public Enterprises (COPE) has observed that there were serious lapses on the university administrators.

"According to details provided by the University Grants Commission on the number of lecture hours conducted by each lecturer in the year 2010, there were 117 lecturers whose number of lecture hours conducted for the entire year had been less than ten," COPE’s interim report for the period from 01.01.2012 to 30.09.2012, submitted to Parliament by its Chairman Senior Minister DEW Gunasekera on Thursday, said.

The report said: "The Committee is of the view that the university education in Sri Lanka requires some drastic changes for its qualitative development. The curricula have not been changed for years with the changes taking place in the relevant fields over the past few decades. Most of the graduates who pass out from the universities do not possess a satisfactory competency in the English language and the common grievance with regard to most of the degree courses is that they are not job oriented. The sharp decline in the number of students who offer Economics, as a discipline, is a matter of concern.

"The Committee also observed some serious lapses with regard to the administration of certain universities. It came to light that the commitment of certain lecturers with regard to betterment of the academic performance is not up to the required level. The committee strongly criticizes the relevant authorities for turning a blind eye towards this matter."

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

UGC’s failure to withdraw circulars irks FUTA



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by Dasun Edirisinghe, The Island

The Federation of University Teachers’ Associations (FUTA) yesterday accused the University Grants Commission (UGC) of failing to withdraw several controversial circulars issued during its 99-day strike, though Economic Development Minister Basil Rajapaksa had promised to have them withdrawn immediately. The FUTA suspended its strike on Oct. 11.

FUTA President Dr. Nirmal Ranjith Dewasiri told The Island that in line with the agreement between FUTA and Minister Rajapaksa, all circulars, which interfered with the normal functioning of universities, would be withdrawn.

Dr. Dewasiri alleged that UGC was trying to delay the process by appointing a committee to go through the circulars.

The academic said FUTA executive committee would evaluate the progress of the implementation of its agreement with Minister Rajapaksa this week.

"Our executive committee is not happy with the progress of implementing the promises and we will decide on our future course of action shortly," Dr. Dewasiri said.

When contacted by The Island, UGC Chairman Prof. Gamini Samaranayake said circulars could not be cancelled overnight that process took some time.

VCs get report on leadership programme



by Dasun Edirisinghe, The Island

The Higher Education Ministry has sent the entire detailed report on the leadership training programme for prospective university entrants to the Vice Chancellors of all universities for their comments in keeping with a government pledge to the Federation of University Teachers’ Associations (FUTA).

Additional Secretary of the Ministry P. G. Jayasinghe said that they had asked the Vice Chancellors to submit their opinions before Oct. 30.

The Ministry has planned to start the leadership training programme on Nov. 15 in three batches consisting of 9,000 students each.

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

University teachers join protest march of teachers & principals

The Federation of University Teachers Associations (FUTA) has decided to join the protest march organized by teachers’ and principals’ trade unions to be held on the 24th say reports.
It has been reported in the media that teachers’ and principals’ trade unions had decided to take several trade union actions to get solutions for 6 demands they have put forward.
Accordingly, the protest march with the support of university teachers will commence from Rajagiriya roundabout at 10.00 a.m. and march to Isurupaya.

Teachers led by ‘colonels’ to march on Edu. Ministry



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by Dasun Edirisinghe, The Island

Principals and teachers of the State-run schools are scheduled to march to the Education Ministry with several demands tomorrow, according to a JVP affiliated trade union.

The government recently enlisted 30 Class 1 Principals Brevet Colonels.

General Secretary of the Ceylon Teachers’ Service Union Mahinda Jayasinghe told The Island the protest march would start from the Ayurveda roundabout Rajagiriya and end with a demonstration opposite the Education Ministry, Isurupaya.

He said that they would hold the protest march and demonstration to force education authorities to grant their six demands.

"Our main demand is the implementation of the recommendations made by the Cabinet of ministers in 2008 to rectify the anomalies in salaries of principals and teachers," Jayasinghe said.

He said that they also demanded immediate solutions to problems as regards their promotions and salary arrears, implementation of the national teachers’ transfer policy, allocation of funds for disaster loans and property loans, allocation of 6 per cent of the GDP for education and an end to political interferences in the education field.

Jayasinghe said that they had held a meeting with Deputy Education Minister Vijithamuni Zoysa and two additional directors on Oct. 18, but it had ended inconclusively.

"We held another discussion with the Deputy Education Minister and Secretary of the Ministry yesterday," he said, adding it, too, had ended without a solution.

The Teachers’ and Principals’ Trade Union Joint Committee has organised the protest march. The TPTUJC includes Ceylon Teachers’ Union, Ceylon Teachers’ Service Union, Independent Teachers’ Union, All Ceylon United Teachers’ Union, National Education Employees Union, Common Education Professionals Union, All Ceylon Principals’ Union and Sri Lanka National Principals’ Union.

FUTA strike: Some issues



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By Eric J. de Silva, The Island

The university teachers’ strike that the government told us had been called off has only been suspended according to FUTA, with every prospect of being resumed - a temporary truce with all the forebodings it has for those who want the universities to function without disruption.

The FUTA strike, which began when negotiations with government for a salary increase for university teachers broke down, took a totally different turn when FUTA deftly tagged on a demand for a 6% allocation of GDP for education to obtain wider support for their struggle. This they succeeded in doing with teachers’ unions and other groups rallying round the 6% banner though many of them did not have a clue as to what it really meant in rupees and cents (if cents do matter)! The fact that the FUTA move paid ample dividends was seen in the haste in which not only mainstream political parties but also nondescript (no insult meant) politicians in search of an identity jumped the FUTA bandwagon as described in a piece I wrote to The Island on 4/10/12 (Jumping the FUTA bandwagon).

6% of GDP for education

Spokespersons for FUTA insisted that the target of ‘6% of GDP for education’ should be reached by 2015 as a Millennium Development Goal which Sri Lanka had subscribed to in 2000, as a member of the United Nations. However, neither the report prepared by the World Bank in 2005 titled ‘Attaining the Millennium Development Goals in Sri Lanka’ (a copy of which I found in my bookshelves) nor relevant websites I checked with gave any indication of there being a MDG to that effect. The Millennium Development Goals subscribed to by 193 member nations of UN and 23 international organizations in 2000 simply read as follows:

1. Eradicating extreme poverty and hunger

2. Achieving universal primary education

3. Promoting gender equality and empowering women

4. Reducing child mortality rates

5. Improving maternal health

6. Combating HIV/AIDS, malaria, and other diseases

7. Ensuring environmental sustainability, and

8. Developing a global partnership for development.

It will be observed that these goals are more oriented towards eradicating illiteracy, alleviating poverty, improving health, empowering women and protecting the environment. As far as education is concerned, only primary education receives specific mention – obviously as a means of eradicating illiteracy. A meeting held in September 2010 at UN Headquarters in New York had conducted a progress review and concluded with the adoption of a global action plan to achieve the above goals by 2015, the targeted year. Thus the FUTA claim does not hold water, unless they can produce documentary evidence to the effect that there is, in fact, a Millennium Development Goal requiring member counties to allocate 6% of GDP for education.

Much has been said about the remark made by the renowned Pakistani scientist, educator, policy maker and former Minister of Science and Technology Prof. Atta ur Rahman about being in a position to advise President Rajapakse as to how 6% of GDP could be allocated to education, if requested to do so. He made this remark in answer to a question posed to him after the excellent lecture he delivered at the SLAAS auditorium on 27th September while the FUTA march from Galle was wending its way to Colombo. There was thunderous applause when he said this, and I too joined in it due to the exhilarating effect his speech had on me! I was naturally curious to know how much Pakistan spends on education and, when I checked the figures later, I found that their expenditure had been 1.9% in 2001, 2.9% in 2009 and 2.4% in 2010. These figures are obviously higher than ours, but nowhere near the 6% mark which had by then virtually become the FUTA trade mark!

What most people forget is that, as Prof. Rahman himself was quick to point out, Pakistan has over the years given greater attention to the apex of the pyramid (higher education) rather than to the base (primary and secondary education). As a result, despite their advances in the area of science and technology which he so graphically described, Pakistan remains among the Low Human Development Countries in terms of the Human Development Index occupying the 145th place out of 187 countries (with 50% of the population deprived of basic necessities of education and health) while Sri Lanka is among the Medium Human Development Countries occupying the 97th place, clearly showing that we have chosen one path and they another!

Pakistan

In this connection, my memory takes me back to a visit I made to Pakistan in the mid eighties when I was invited to join a Sri Lankan delegation led by the then Education Minister with the Secretary of the Ministry and a couple of others in the team. (I was working then as head of a Unesco Project in Sri Lanka). At a brief meeting the delegation had with Prime Minister Junejo (General Zia ul Huq was President at the time) which was more in the nature of a courtesy call than a substantive discussion, he was full of praise for the high standards of literacy (87% in SL as against 30% in Pakistan in 1985) that we had achieved thanks to our school system, and said that Pakistan had a lot to learn from us. He, however, inquired whether we did not see a link between it and youth unrest and the insurrection that followed due to employment opportunities not keeping pace with rising expectations that education brings along with it. While agreeing that there certainly was, we also brought to his attention the benefits that a high rate of literacy had brought about in areas such as health, women’s empowerment and the spread of family planning.

Developments in Pakistan since then are too well-known to bear repetition here. Despite Pakistan’s significant achievements in the field of higher education, science and technology that Prof. Rahman referred to, Pakistan’s present literacy rate of 58% remains among the lowest in the world (while ours is around 94%), and keeping half the population illiterate has not helped to keep violence and terrorism out of the way. What we all know is that these have taken such a heavy toll on Pakistan that their cricket team has to go outside Pakistan’s national boundaries to Abu Dhabi or Dubai to play their matches against visiting teams following the violent attack mounted on our cricketers a few years back, showing that there is no relationship between literacy and insurgent activities.

Need for more funds

It is beyond question that our education sector needs more funds if we are to adequately meet present needs as well as challenges that lie ahead. But funds alone are not sufficient without a proper policy framework, well formulated projects, proper implementation strategies and a competent and professional administration capable of getting the job done, none of which we can claim to have today. Usvatte (The Island 22/8/12) has pointed out that we spend 121 billion rupees per year on education (equivalent to 2% of GDP) at present and that tripling this amount to reach the 6% target would mean an additional 242 billion rupees of government expenditure. Even if, by some miracle, the government is able to considerably increase the government budget for education annually so as to reach the 6% target by 2015, it is my contention that we will not be able to spend so much, unless ‘spending’ means running through the money on ill-conceived projects and hare-brained schemes providing, in the process, ample opportunity for predators of all sorts to line their pockets at public expense. This, surely, is not what we want!

Sunday, October 21, 2012

FUTA action ends to be resumed if promises not kept

View(s):

The 100-day long trade union action by university academics fizzled out on Friday amidst protests of section of the academics, but eventually bringing relief to students and parents.�There was disappointment among sections of the academics as they failed to gain clear commitments on the demands of the Federation of the University Teachers Association (FUTA).

The two news conferences held yesterday: One convened by the Govt. and the other by FUTA. Pix by Mangala Weerasekera
University of Moratuwa FUTA branch President Dr. Rangika Halwathura said that even though an agreement was made to halt the trade union action, the majority of the membership is disappointed in the obdurate stand of the Government on the demands.

“None of the universities frankly wanted to conclude their trade union action but now we have come to the distressing realization that nothing can be gained from this Government and since there is no point on carrying out trade union action on a lost cause, we are concluding it,” he said.

He that the majority at the executive committee meeting rejected the two letters given by Minister Basil Rajapaksa and Treasury Secretary P. B. Jayasundara regarding the solutions to the issues raised.

He said in one way FUTA has achieved victory as it has been able to create a dialogue in the country on the issues of education where 6 per cent of the GDP should be set apart for education became a common slogan among the general public.

He further added that the struggle to save State education will continue even though the trade union action was halted and the strike will be resumed again if the given promises are not kept.

The trade union action which was carried out by FUTA came to a conclusion of Friday as both FUTA and the Government came to a mutual agreement on the former’s demands.

The strike continued for almost 100 days since it began on July 4 crippling the functioning of 14 State universities island-wide.

After the consideration of six demands of FUTA which were categorized under enhancing recruitment and retention of highly qualified academics and safeguarding and uplifting State education, FUTA has been issued two letters with regards to salary increments and a promise to increase the budgetary allocation for education.

These letters were issued by Dr. Jayasundara and Minister Basil Rajapaksa respectively, said Dr. FUTA Secretary Terrance Madujith.

He added the academics were presented a proposal by which a medium term salary scheme is to be implemented with effect from the 2013 Budget through a period of five years. �He also said that in Minister Basil Rajapaksa’s letter, it is mentioned that the budgetary allocation on education will be increased but a time frame as to how it will be implemented has not been given by the Government.

However the Sunday Times learns the majority of the sister unions in FUTA believe these two letters are unacceptable but they are compelled to suspend trade union action due to financial difficulties undergone by the membership and inconveniences undergone by the students due to disrupted academic activities.
Meanwhile, FUTA President Dr. Nirmal Ranjith Dewasiri said on the plus side, the negotiations carried out prove that the struggle carried out by FUTA to save State education and the FUTA demands are justified.
He added there are unfinished discussions among the membership within FUTA on whether or not the documents issued by the Government are acceptable or whether to reconsider trade union action.
He also said it is a victory for FUTA that the association has been able to create a dialogue about these issues in society helping to bring the attention of the relevant authorities to these issues.

Adding that university academics will participate in paper marking of the Advanced Level examination scripts commencing from tomorrow, he said university dons will work hard to revive the university system.
Minister Basil Rajapaksa said the responsibility for the disruption caused by this issue to the proper functioning of the university has to be borne by all the stakeholders to the issue. He added the Government has agreed to increase the percentage of GDP allocation for education and pay the salary arrears to the academics.

Universities in race to catch up with missed lectures

Semester extended, extra classes held, new lecture rooms to accommodate more students



Extra classes and semester extensions are among the measures university authorities are adopting to overcome the backlog of academic activities – a result of the three-month-long academics’ strike which ended last week.�But, students said these moves had put them under pressure for no fault of theirs.
Back to university after three months: Kelaniya students share a light moment. Pix by Mangala Weerasekera
“Three months were an utter waste. We couldn’t join even a private course because we weren’t sure when the universities will be opened again. Now the administration has taken a decision to extend the semester by three months.
This means that the degree will be delivered with a three month’s delay,” said C. L. Edirisooriya, a science faculty student at the University of Kelaniya.
Endorsing his views, Thisarani Jayasinghe, another student from the same faculty, said it was the students who suffered the most from the dispute between the academics and the authorities. However, she said she was happy that the university system was back to normal with lectures being held without any disruptions.
Jayewardenepura University’s management faculty student Tharini de Silva said students were forced to learn six months of work in three months.�But vice chancellors said these new measures were being taken to ensure the smooth functioning of universities and they were careful not to cause hardship to the students.
Rajarata University Vice Chancellor K. A. Nandasena said lecturers from the four of the five faculties in his university joined the strike and at a meeting with the deans of all the faculties, a decision was taken to conduct extra classes to cover the missed lectures. He assured these extra classes would be held without harming the qualitative aspect of the course.
Prof. Nandasena said the strike started just prior to the management faculty examinations and moves were underway to conduct the exams as early as possible.
Covering the missed lectures is not the only problem the universities face. Adding to their problems is the extra intake of new students following the Supreme Court ruling in the case over Z-score disputes.�Prof. Nandasena said the extra intake of students meant extra expenditure for the universities. The university had worked out the extra costs and sought more funds from authorities.

Jayawardenapura University Vice Chancellor N. L. A. Karunaratna said his university would also conduct extra classes to cover the syllabus without burdening the students with extra work or adding to their pressure. Asked about the extra intake, he said his university was prepared to handle it as it was not the first time when universities had been asked to accommodate more students.
He said the request to take in more students was an opportunity for university authorities to show they were capable of facing challenges.�University officials said they were building temporary lecture rooms and renovating existing facilities to accommodate the extra students and Peradeniya University Vice Chancellor Athula Senarathne said that with the semester extended, academic were going on without any hindrance. He said some buildings and facilities were being renovated and extended to accommodate the extra students.

Saturday, October 20, 2012

FUTA to evaluate progress

Dailymirror

Federation of University Teachers Association (FUTA) today said a meeting to evaluate the progress of resolutions provided by the government will be held during the coming week.

FUTA General Secretary Dr. Terrance Madhujith speaking to Daily Mirror online said they are expecting the government to fulfill the promises made to the academics on policy related matters concerning education and the salary hike.

“The trade union action of 100 days was suspended based on three documents provided by the government – a cabinet paper issued with reference to the policy related matters on education, promise of the salary hike as well as the joint statement issued by the FUTA and the government. We are awaiting the implementation of these policy decisions,” he said.

However, he said certain decisions that were supposed to come into effect following the suspension of the trade union action are still in limbo. “We demanded the annulment of eight circulars, we believed posed a threat to university autonomy. They were supposed to be repealed by the University Grants Commission (UGC) following the suspension of our trade union action. But they are still in the process of implementing the decision,” he added. (Lakna Paranamanna)



Comrade Bala, CMU and FUTA

, The Island

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In early 1970s, I had the honour of serving as a general councillor, at Ceylon Mercantile Union, representing the staff at European managed multinational, Shaw Wallace & Hedges and learn the intricacies of industrial disputes and labour struggles, by closely following the quick-witted maestro, comrade Bala Tampoe. CMU was then an exclusively a white collar worker's union catering to the European managed sterling companies. The staunch Marxist-Troskyte Bala, was our General Secretary and undisputed leader. He broke his links with the LSSP, when the party stalwarts decided to align with what he termed a 'capitalist government' of Sirimavo in 1964, and since then remained unbound to any traditional political powers. While 'Bala' steadfastly remained faithful to his Troskyte leanings, he converted CMU into a unique entity, devoid of race, cast, religious, political thought, as its membership was a mixture of an equally proportioned different racial, religious and political groups, who were united under a common banner and cause, for the welfare of members through continuous struggle against a repressive management collectively acting through the powerful Employer's Federation of Ceylon.

I was highly disappointed reading your correspondent's interview with the FUTA spokesman, published on October 15, where I learnt they, what I would call, 'grabbed' half a million rupees from the veteran, nonagenarian trade unionist as a grant. (Was it his personal money or donation drawn out of CMU funds, was not clear).

Running its office in a rented space on the first floor of a Chatham Street building, the 88-year-old trade union pioneered by Labour leader A E Goonesinghe, came under young rebellious LSSP lawyer, Bala in 1948, who took over and remained as its general secretary to date.

Realising the importance of having its own premises, Bala, convinced the 32,000 strong membership in late 70's to contribute two rupees per month for two years towards a building fund. The sprawling three story building with a huge auditorium at 22nd lane Colpetty stands testimony to this man's farsighted visionary. (My total contribution was 48 Rupees, which spread over a period of 24 months, drawing an average monthly pay of 450 Rupees).

FUTA, instead of visiting him for funds, (perhaps an unconvincing attempt to counter the allegation of receiving NGO Dollars, made by the pro-government buffoons), after carrying millionaire political opportunists on their shoulders from Galle to Hyde park, the home ground for seven decades of our quick-witted national icon Bala; the 'Dons' should have sought his advise and blessings prior to launching their show. If they did, sure FUTA would have received wise, trusted guidance and advice from the skeptic man who possesses an ability to grasp difficult situations with his brilliant skills. The somewhat flimsy, 6% of the GDP, (just one among many 'mistakes' committed), could have been made on a more rational launching pad, thus avoiding the suspicious character of the demand, especially among the intelligent sectors.

However, let me say this please, dear learned academics, I have a right and an obligation to do so. The CMU unlike in our time today is open to minor grades of workers as well, a category, who's pathetic life styles, which your spokesman who proudly claimed at the interview as a 'social democrat', would understand better. They are the people who contribute to the coffers of the union. The struggle is either partially settled or that the authorities had 'pulled the wool over somebody's eyes', whichever the case and reality, now that you are entitled for full emoluments as back wages, a luxury we as CMU members never enjoyed in the late 60's in a 90-day strike, please do return the half a million rupees, but continue to visit the literate thinker, Bala before planning any future action, for thoughtful, sophisticated brilliant ideas.

K. K. S. Perera

Panadura

Friday, October 19, 2012

Can Central Bank salaries be compared with those of Universities ?

, The Island

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Economic Development Minister Basil Rajapaksa President of Federation and Federation of University Teachers’ Associations Dr. Nirmal Ranjith Dewasiri greeting each other prior to their successful talks recently. (File photo)

By Sunil Jayasinghe

In an article published in The Island on 2nd October 2012, Dr Usvatte-aratchi made an attempt to estimate wages of central bankers in order to make a case for higher wages for university dons. The purpose of this article is to show his analysis is not valid because it is like comparing apples with oranges.

Salaries of central bankers are usually linked to salaries of banking sector employees in Sri Lanka. This is a usual practice in many countries. It has also been a practice that wages and perks of banking sector employees are set at a higher level than those of public sector employees due to several reasons. This was perhaps one of the reasons why Dr Usvatte-aratchi also decided to join the Central Bank even in those olden days after earning a degree with a first class or second class upper division despite the Civil Service and the University being more attractive and respectable professions back then compared to these days. All of a sudden he seems to have forgotten his own reasons for joining the Central Bank in the first place and has decided that it was unfair that he was paid a higher salary than his colleagues in the university.

Wages of any sector depends on how funds flow into that sector to pay wages. For example, the banking sector makes profits and pays taxes to the government while using a part of their profits to pay wages. Therefore they have a little more discretion in deciding wages of their employees than the public sector when the salaries are paid out of tax payers’ money. This is one of the reasons why wages of various non-public sector institutions are different to that of public sector employees’ wages. For example, a graduate with a first class degree employed in telecom sector could be paid a higher salary than his counterpart in the electricity sector. This may be true even in state-owned public corporations because these corporations are supposed to operate on a commercial basis and earn their wages after paying taxes to the government. If Dr Usvatte-aratchi’s argument that university dons should be demanding more wages than their counterparts in other sectors is valid; professors in Ivy League universities such as Colombia and Yale must demand for their salaries to be on-par with those of their counterparts with similar qualifications working in nearby Wall Street firms. I am sure those professors are well aware that even their students working at the Wall Street firms earn multiple incomes compared to their salaries in those Ivy League universities. However, they have the common sense to understand that if they demand such salaries they will be kicked out of the job the next day irrespective of how academically qualified they are in their own fields. They are also well aware that even if they join Wall Street firms after quitting universities they will have to start at a much lower wage than their students there until such professors acquire the skills necessary to work in Wall Street firms. Therefore, Dr Usvatte-aratchi’s comparison of wages between bankers and university dons are invalid. This is why one can’t find comparison of wages between central bankers and university dons in any other country or any other literature even for academic purposes. In this regard, the medical doctors’ union made a valid point by objecting to the proposal to treat university dons separately for wage setting because all are paid by tax payers’ money. One should not be treated differently from another because they are doctors, judges, civil servants or any other public sector employee. If Dr Usvatte-aratchi’s argument is valid, judges, civil servants, doctors, accountants and all other such professionals in the public sector should be demanding higher wages than those earned by their counterparts with similar qualifications in the private sector and public corporations. It is an acceptable fact that public sector wages in any country are subject to budget constraints and depends on tax payers’ money. For example, since the Lehman Brother crisis, all public sector wages in the US were frozen irrespective of the profession whereas wages of similar professions in the private sector have varied depending on the profitability of each sector.

I am surprised that an analysis by an eminent economist like Dr Usvatte-aratchi didn’t find it useful to discuss issues and problems relating to why public sector professionals are paid lower than others. Even in this debate he has not expressed his views about whether the government can spend 6% of GDP for education now or in the future. Instead he has made an attempt to estimate an average salary of a Central Bank staff officer and failed miserably. I know for a fact that his estimated salary of a staff officer for the year 2011 is higher than even the salary of a Deputy Governor of the Central Bank who is supposed to be placed at the highest point in the Bank’s salary structure. Level of competence of an economist is usually measured by his or her ability to estimate or predict outcomes based on most accurate assumptions. Dr Usvatte-aratchi’s estimate reflects either his level of incompetence in estimating figures or his ignorance by intention to mislead the general public.

I am also surprised by the fact that Dr Usvatte-aratchi had the common sense to find out the salary of one of his friends in a university for his analysis but did not make any attempt to talk to many of his Central Bank colleagues and friends. He had been recruited to the Central Bank twice, firstly as a staff officer after his graduation in the early days and secondly as a consultant after his retirement from his UN job. His poor analysis suggests that he has compromised his intellectual capacity to hate Central Bankers perhaps because he was unceremoniously kicked out from his consultant position due to his failure to make a useful contribution as expected from an intellectual of his calibre, despite the fact that he was given perks and privileges similar to as a deputy governor when he was hired as a consultant.

Since the comparison is invalid, I will not waste my time to compare the other benefits and perks between bankers and academics. Those must be different due to vast difference between those two sectors. Due to recent trade union action, the general public has seen wages, perks and other benefits university dons enjoy compared to their responsibilities and workload. Fortunately for the country, we haven’t seen an analyst like Dr Usvatte-aratchi from other sectors making new demands for similar benefits as university dons. Perhaps the majority of analysts have a lot more common sense!

I also don’t agree with Dr Usvatte-aratchi on his argument that a bright academic with a good first degree and a PhD from a good faculty has every incentive to take the first plane out of Katunayake because they are paid a lower salary than a Central Banker. In an increasingly open and highly integrated global labour market, migration of labor searching for better opportunities is a common phenomena not only in many countries but also in many different sectors of any economy. This is not necessarily a bad thing in terms of economic benefits and it could happen both ways. For example, when management trainees are recruited to the Central Bank, positions are open to graduates from both local and foreign universities with equal qualifications through an open, transparent and highly competitive process. I understand that the last time more than 10,000 applicants sat the competitive exam conducted by the Examination Department. Candidates who obtained the highest marks were interviewed and selected on the basis of merit. There were several university dons that also applied through this process and some may have succeeded. Does it mean that those who did not succeed or perhaps the other 10,000 odd aspirants should also be offered the same salary in other sectors as a management trainee at the Central Bank? Does it mean that because the Central Bank recruited only 50-75 out of such a large pool of talent, the universities are deprived of attracting equally talented graduates?

In my view, the quality of university academic staff has been deteriorating mainly due to the non-transparent, non-competitive recruitment process. It is a well-known fact that to become a university don one has to be a buddy of a head of department or have some sort of influence within the university staff irrespective of talent, competence or skills. I have met several very talented graduates that have been deprived of opportunities to join the academic staff merely because they have not been favourites of heads of departments or professors. There are a lot of talented Sri Lankan graduates from foreign universities who are interested in joining local universities to pursue academic careers. When will they be given an opportunity to compete with local buddies on a level playing field for recruitment? It seems like our university dons are moving in an increasingly backward direction in this regard. This is why they demand more autonomy in the recruitment process. They don’t like giving up their authority to abuse their positions instead of recruiting the best available talents like the banking sector does. If we continue to move in this direction we are going to see further deterioration of the quality of the academic staff in universities and more politicized trade union activity in the future. So the solution lies more in the hands of university dons than the government. Matching salaries of university dons with all other sectors of the economy or raising expenditure in education to 6% of GDP wouldn’t solve inherent problems in the system.

(The writer is a former Central Banker currently working at a Wall Street firm. He can be reached at slmarketmonitor@gmail.com)

Thursday, October 18, 2012

Dons told not to fall prey to NGO agenda



by Dasun Edirisinghe, the island

The Patriotic University Teachers’ Alliance called upon academics not to fall prey to the agendas of several NGO-type university lecturers canvassing for the Oct. 18 Hyde Park rally of Gen. Sarath Fonseka.

Convener of the PUTA senior lecturer Nemsiri Jayathilake said that there were two groups of university dons in the recently suspended trade union action. There was a group of lecturers who were with the NGO clique during the war in support of the Tigers’ cause.

Their demand was to take the Federation of University Teachers’ Associations (FUTA) struggle to international level so that the countries which funded their NGOs to intervene in country’s internal matters, could capitalise on the problem, he said adding that this attempt was defeated and now they have ganged up to take to the stage with Gen. Fonseka on Oct. 18 at Hyde Park.

"Recently we saw FUTA spokesman Dr. Mahim Mendis calling upon academics to support Fonseka’s cause. We request academics not to join them against the motherland," he said.

Meanwhile, Higher Education Minister S. B. Dissanayake said that some university teachers who participated in the 100-day FUTA strike did so with a political agenda in mind.

When the government claimed that a political agenda was behind the FUTA strike, they vehemently denied it but now it has been proved by its spokesman’s invitation to join Sarath Fonseka’s rally, he said.

However, FUTA denied the claim.

FUTA President Dr. Nirmal Ranjith Dewasiri said that it was personal views of Dr. Mahim Mendis.

"Anyone has freedom to express their views," he said adding it was absolutely not the views of the FUTA.

FUTA unhappy with plan to begin leadership training on Nov. 15

, the island


by Dasun Edirisinghe

The Federation of University Teachers’ Associations (FUTA) is unhappy with the Higher Education Ministry’s decision to commence the leadership training programme, for university freshers, on Nov. 15 without consulting the faculty boards and the university senates.

FUTA President Dr. Nirmal Ranjith Dewasiri told The Island that according to the assurance given by the Economic Development Minister Basil Rajapaksa for them to end the recent strike, the higher education authorities would consult the university senates and faculty boards before commencing the next leadership training programme.

"The Higher Education Ministry has still not consulted the relevant university boards, but has decided on the date to commence the leadership training programme," he said.

The senior academic said that it was a violation of the agreement.

Dr. Dewasiri said that they would discuss it with the Higher Education Ministry in the next few days.

The higher education ministry has planned to start the leadership training programme on Nov. 15 in three batches. The Ministry will accommodate 9,000 students in each batch to be trained at the tri-forces and police establishments.

According to ministry sources, it had decided to obtain the opinion of the Attorney General’s Department prior to embarking on the latest exercise to avoid any future problems over the training programme.

When contacted by The Island for comments, Secretary to the Higher Education Ministry Dr. Sunil Jayantha Navaratne said the ministry was still planning the programme.

"We expect to have a discussion on the programme and later we would consult faculty boards and senates," Dr. Navaratne said.

UGC to discuss  cancellation of circulars



by Dasun Edirisinghe, the island

The University Grants Commission (UGC) would today (18) hold discussion on some of the earlier issued circulars, which Economic Development Minister Basil Rajapaksa had promised the Federation of University Teachers’ Associations (FUTA) would be cancelled.

UGC Chairman Prof. Gamini Samaranayake told The Island that the commission would meet today at the UGC boardroom to discuss the issue

Commenting on FUTA’s claim that although the secretary to the higher education ministry had sent a letter asking the UGC to cancel those circulars, the UGC was still delaying to do so, he said that he received the secretary’s letter regarding only on Tuesday evening.

"We cannot withdraw the circulars over night," Prof. Samaranayake said adding that it would have to go through the due process.

The UGC issued some circulars according to the government’s requirements, he said adding that those would be widely discussed.

The senior professor said that university academics must be considered on accountability not only the autonomy as they are paid from public funds.

Salaries for the last three months of university teachers would be paid by the relevant universities and it is not handled by the UGC, Prof. Samaranayake said.

FUTA President Dr. Nirmal Ranjith Dewasiri said that some universities, including the Colombo University, had paid only a Rs. 100,000 as a salary advance.

However, the full amount for last three months would be paid at the end of this month with the October salary, he said.

Dr. Dewasiri said that only the Sri Jayewardenepura University paid the salaries for last three months in full.

University teachers launched the strike on July 04 and it was ended on the assurance of Minister Rajapaksa on Oct. 11.

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Leadership training for new undergrads from Nov.15

, The Island

The leadership training programme for the next batch of university students will begin on November 15 in three batches, according to a decision of the Higher Education Ministry.

The Ministry plans to accommodate 9000 students in each batch to be trained at tri-forces and police camps.

In order to avoid any future problems over the training programme, it had decided to obtain the opinion of the Attorney General’s Department prior to embarking on the latest exercise, a senior official of the Ministry said.

Following the Z-score fiasco, the Supreme Court ordered the University Grants Commission to admit additional students to the universities with the next intake so that no student would be victimized by it and because of the additional students the Ministry has been forced to divide the training into three batches.

Six per cent GDP on education: From a fantasy to a real programme

, The Island

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By Sumanasiri Liyanage

Of the four trade union actions, the Federation of University Teachers’ Association (FUTA) has been so far engaged in, in its about three decades of history, the one that came to conclusion last week was the first that ended with no tangible material results. On the other hand, the last trade union action was of great significance for two reasons. First, it was the first strike action by the university teachers. FUTA had resorted to different kinds of protests, namely resigning from voluntary positions that the university teachers held in normal situation. Secondly, extending its 2011 strategy of taking the issue of education reforms beyond the boundaries of the university to the general masses, FUTA this time highlighted more general issues of education reforms than the specific demands of its members. Hence FUTA was able to generate a broader discussion on the educational reforms that the country is badly in need of. Ending a TU action with no concrete results is not an uncommon thing in the trade union history since the trade union action means a struggle between two opposite forces with substantially different interests. Just because the TU action failed to secure concrete and tangible gains, it does not necessarily mean that it was a failure. Similarly, even it is a failure, it is not a ground for a discontent or disappointment if the union membership and its leaders are able to decode the reasons of the failure and take necessary actions not to repeat them in future trade union actions. So it is imperative that FUTA have a critical reflection on the past union actions. Why did it fail to win its demands notwithstanding the fact that it was the trade union action which received the participation and the support of more than 90% of the university teachers and generated support of the significant layer of the society? Was it because that some of the FUTA demands are not achievable in the prevailing economic and social context without far reaching changes? Was there a basic flaw in the frame of struggle? Can the failure be attributed to the fact that although the FUTA was able to build pressure through mass action, FUTA negotiation team had failed at the negotiation table? In my opinion, these are the issues FUTA should discuss and reflect on if it wants to continue as a trade union? Although I have my own views on the above issues, I do not intend to discuss them in this article. My intention here is to redraw the boundaries of the discussion on FUTA demand on 6% of GDP on education.

Fantasies are of great importance and useful in building social movements. It is interesting to note that the FUTA was able to fantasize the demand of 6% of the GDP on education especially among the Sri Lankan internet community that is growing. Keeping the demand at the level of fantasy during the time of trade union action might also have facilitated the trade union action. Nonetheless, in the post-strike phase, it is imperative to reread the demand in the light of the ideas that were flagged in the discussion. There were two criticisms of FUTA demand to which I intend to turn shortly.

1. Critique of the Economists and the FUTA’s failure to respond: The economists reacted negatively to the demand for 6% of GDP on education focusing on the demand’s practicality. They correctly pointed out that the state’s contribution to the GDP had greatly reduced with the introduction of neo-liberal economic policies since 1977. The total government expenditure as a proportion of the GDP has come down to 22 per cent in recent years. So, spending 6 per cent out of this total government expenditure, according to them, is not practically possible. This may be the reason why many economists attached to the department of economics, University of Colombo refused take part in the trade union action. The answer to this criticism of the side of FUTA was not satisfactory. FUTA argued that 6% can be spent if the government was ready to reduce defence expenditure substantially and/or curtail corruption and waste. This argument does not hold water. The main portion of the current defence expenditure is of recurrent nature. If the proposal for substantial reduction of it is not linked with decommissioning with alternative employment, the implementation of such a proposal would create so many new problems. So, in order materialize FUTA’s demand for 6 percent of GDP on education, the demand should be linked with the expansion of the public economy. In other words, it means a reversal of the 1977 neo-liberal economic policies. Without moving towards an economy that is substantially dominated by the public sector, 6 per cent is just an empty signifier. Only such an economy can provide adequate expenditure on education, health, public transport etc. Not allowing room for misunderstanding let me explain what I meant by public economy that is qualitatively different from the statist economy and/ private economy. Services such as health, education, public transport should not be allowed to be controlled either by state bureaucracy or by surplus-seeking capital. Having based on the past experience, it is necessary t design a new system of management for these sectors. FUTA’s demand would be meaningful if and only if it is linked with such far-reaching changes in the prevailing economic system.

2. Teachers would have learned from the students: In the course of the FUTA struggle, a clear difference emerged between the position of FUTA and that of the Inter-University Students Federation (IUSF). While FUTA stood for the defence of ‘state education’, IUSF had the slogan of defending ‘free education’. Is this mere a semantic difference? In my view, two demands are qualitatively different. FUTA’s position implies that it has no objection for the presence of private sector education controlled by the logic of surplus-seeking capital with the state education. Secondly, it also means the continuance of the present system as a system controlled by the state bureaucracy especially in school education. On the other hand, IUSF wanted to continue the free education system originally initiated by C. W. W. Kannangara. In Sri Lankan education discourse, the term widely used to denote public education system has been free education. Why did FUTA change it? No explanation was given. Although IUSF demand is not clear about the system of management of free education system or how the free education system should be freed from the state bureaucracy and put under a democratic control of the educationists, its demand at least emphasize the need of inversing the changes that are now clearly visible in the education system.

What I have said above on public education system can be equally applicable to other sectors like health that need to be freed from two dominant control mechanisms, namely, capitalist and statist. Humankind has come to a stage where it should discover new mechanisms to govern their lives.

The writer is a co-coordinator of the Marx School, Colombo, Kandy and Negombo.

The Brahmins and the springs



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By Nalin de Silva, The Island

A reader commenting on my statement at a public meeting that I would be against a decision by the government to increase the salaries of academics had asked why need enemies when there are friends like me. Probably, the reader thought that I was a friend of the trade union struggle of FUTA that ended on last Thursday after hundred days. The strike by the academics that began on July 04 ended on Oct. 11, after long marches, public rallies, exhibition of T-shirts with the symbol 6% printed on them, and more than anything else statements by various fora, that constitute fifteen to twenty people well known especially among the English educated public, and various trade unions supporting the strike. I was never a friend of this particular trade union struggle that began more than two years ago with token strikes, resignation of heads of departments etc. The struggle culminated in, or rather began to decline with, a continuous strike. The Brahmins supported the strike probably dreaming of Springs. However, when they awoke temporarily from their deep slumber they had a nightmare experience of a fall and a winter. They think that they are active but they act only in their dreams. As far as the general non-Brahmin public is concerned they are far away from the people. With respect to the non Brahmin public the Brahmins are in a deep slumber. The particular reader has to be excused as the public had been given the impression by the FUTA leadership that the strike would be over after a couple of discussions with Minister Basil Rajapaksa. The reader must have thought that I was obstructing the Minister and the leadership of FUTA coming to an amicable solution probably with a salary increase with my statement. The government had an understanding of the Brahmins and their Springs, and it was clear to non-Brahmin public that FUTA was not going to get anything as a result of the strike.

I find Dr. Mahim Mendis making the following statement to The Island. "The IUSF (The Inter University Student Federation) was not physically with us but IUSF was with us spiritually. And there was no party which was not with us. It is no exaggeration. Except SB Dissanayake and few fellows, some cronies - people like Nalin De Silva — all the people were with us." This implies that even the SLFP was with the FUTA! Dr. Mendis may think that I am a crony of the minister S. B. Dissanayake. However, it has to be placed on record that the Minister and the Ministry was against giving me an extension when a request to that effect was made to him by the University of Kelaniya. I opposed the FUTA trade union struggle while the ministry was opposing my extension in 2010. For, I could see the Brahmins were up to various schemes. I do not have to go into details as these have been discussed by me and others in newspapers including The Island and at various discussions over the electronic media in the last few months. In any event with all that support FUTA had from the political parties, trade unions, various fora, IUSF and others why did the strike fail to achieve anything other than a letter from Dr. P B Jayasundera that did not promise anything effectively. If all the people other than a few of us were with the FUTA an Arab spring would have been there for the asking as they say. In Arab countries the westerners were able to topple the governments that they did not like with so called uprisings as there were enough and more disgruntled people opposed to the incumbent governments. The trouble with some of the academics and other Brahmins is that they think that their acquaintances constitute the people.

There is a caste system in Sri Lanka that pervades ethnic, religious and the usual Govigama, Karawa, Salagama, Durawa, Vellala cast systems. It is a caste system that depends on the western education that has been with us for the last two hundred years or so. The Brahmin cast spreads from those who have had an education up to the GCE A/L to those with degrees and professional qualifications. The Brahmin class in general has two layers. The Upper Brahmins are usually English educated and are professionals university lecturers etc. Some of them have worked for foreign institutes including the UN and are looked up to by the lower Brahmins who are usually Sinhala or Tamil educated and have had a western education in universities and schools including the so-called Buddhist schools, at least up to the GCE A/L. The Brahmins try to maintain their social status above the others and in general do not support the SLFP. The upper Brahmins in general support the UNP while the lower Brahmins in general support the leftist political parties. The upper Brahmins, and the lower Brahmins who do not support the leftist parties in the government, in general oppose the UPFA. The upper Brahmins who tolerate all the undemocratic acts of the UNP governments are up in arms against the SLFP-led governments with their usual slogans on good governance, freedom of speech, independence of judiciary etc. These concepts have been created within the western modernistic hegemony, and again in general the western educated elite are trapped in these concepts. It is not wrong to say that those who receive a western education are consciously or subconsciously used by the west to maintain the western hegemony. They cannot think outside the framework given by their education and are manipulated by the west through agents and/or education to achieve what the latter wants.

The Arab Spring was not merely an uprising by the people in the relevant countries. It is very clear that the West wanted to replace the governments that they did not like with their puppet governments. The so-called mass uprisings were manipulated for that purpose whether finally the west achieved what they wanted or not. In Sri Lanka, it is obvious that the West does not like the faces of two Rajapaksas. Though there may be a number of Rajapaksa associated with the government, including provincial councils, only Mahinda Rajapaksa and Gotabhaya Rajapaksa have incurred the wrath of the west. The politics in Sri Lanka, as far as the West is concerned is all about removing these two Rajapaksas from office. In this connection, various fora sponsored by some western embassies are being used to create a so-called educated opinion against the government. The FUTA trade union struggle that commenced over a mere salary issue, which was all about the take home pay was converted into a fight for a hike in the basic salary which no government is in a position to grant, with a view to creating instability in the country so that a wave of strikes would sweep across the country. However, the leadership of FUTA could not justify the demand for a pay hike and soon the so-called 6% demand was introduced. The Brahmins, both upper and lower, gave a push to this demand with rhetoric on freedom of education university autonomy etc. It is interesting to note how some of the former vice chancellors who project themselves as saints once went behind presidents and other powerful politicians in order to be appointed to their posts. The university autonomy has remained the same during the last thirty five years and these elites did not find anything wrong with system when they were going behind politicians.

The FUTA was being used by the anti-government Brahmins to make the government unstable and very soon the government realized what was happening. The academics are the highest paid in the public and corporate sector excluding those institutes that generate income, and enjoy much more freedom at the work place than any other employees in the public sector. It is clear that the government has not promised any salary increase to the academics and they would have to be satisfied with what Dr. P. B. Jayasundera has called a middle term solution, which is nothing but allowances given to the public sector in the annual budget of the government. The Arab Spring has failed miserably for the Brahmins and their mentors in the west, and now they are looking forward for a Pakistan type spring by promoting a crisis in the relationship between executive and the judicial. However, the majority of the non-Brahmins are with the government and this spring will also fall through like the other Springs.