An empty beach seen in front of Pearl Divers, a diving school, at Unawatuna beach in Galle (REUTERS Photo)
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(Unawatuna/Galle) REUTERS: Pearl Divers, a diving school on one of Sri Lankaâs most popular southern beaches, shut shop for two months after suicide bombers attacked churches and hotels on the island on Easter Sunday, killing about 250 people. It had no customers as tourists cancelled holidays and its manager Nuwan Harshana says he took two months leave and a
pay cut.
Last week, he dusted off the diving equipment and boats, used to carry scuba enthusiasts off the shore of Unawatuna beach, in the hope that foreigners will start to trickle into the country again and the shop can slowly build back to the US $ 800 a day in revenue it made before the attacks.
But there is no sign of any quick upturn in his fortunes.
âEverything was good before April. Now that situation is finished ⦠there are no customers,â said Harshana, who said he is worried about earning enough to look after his wife and two children, while also meeting his monthly loan payments.
The economy of Sri Lanka, a sun-drenched island in the Indian Ocean, depends heavily on the US $ 4.4 billion tourism industry. Small businesses like Pearl Divers have been on the rise since the nationâs civil war ended in 2009 and tourists poured in.
But after the bombings in April, tourist arrivals slumped 70 percent in May and 57 percent in June from a year earlier. Many small businesses, that employ thousands, are now either forced to lay off staff or have them work for minimal pay.This is already having a domino effect on the economy, further hitting consumer demand.
The government has introduced a series of measures to boost tourism, including lowering airport charges, cutting taxes on jet fuel and pushing hotels to offer discounts. It is planning to relax visa rules for residents of a number of countries.
It has also asked banks to lower lending rates and give loan moratoriums. But the relief is yet to reach many small businesses that make up the backbone of the economy.
âClearly it took banks a bit of time to gear up for it ⦠As they had to work out the decision-making process,â Central Bank Governor Dr. Indrajit Coomaraswamy said on Thursday. Dilum Ranjana, who owns a foot spa in the fort city of Galle in the south, said he had to fire three of seven employees and postpone plans to open a second branch because he was getting hardly any income in the past couple of months.
âIt is not easy to get a loan; there is a lot of paperwork and bureaucracy,â said Ranjana, who has monthly expenses of US $ 2,300 in rent, bills and salaries. He said he has so far made US $ 570 in July, a tenth of what he did last year.
âAll my plans are lost, they are ruined,â he said.
Rising bad loansÂ
Tourism was the third largest and fastest growing source of foreign currency for Sri Lanka last year and accounted for 4.9 percent of the countryâs gross domestic product (GDP) in 2018. The government expects a shortfall of US $ 800-900 million in tourism revenue this year, which will widen its current account deficit to 3 percent of GDP from the 2.3 percent it had earlier expected, a top Central Bank official told Reuters.
The Central Bank has also slashed its growth forecast for the year to 3 percent, from 4 percent earlier.
âThe main concern is rising non-performing loans due to the sluggish economic growth after the attacks,â the official said. When the diving business was booming, Harshana said he took a loan of US $ 57,000 in 2017 to convert an old house into a no-frills hostel, which earned him US $ 114 a night from tourists in the peak season. It is currently closed because he has no bookings.
After letting him postpone the loan payments of US $ 630 for both May and June, the bank is giving no such concession for July, he said.
âI have to manage with my savings but I donât have much. People like us, we rise slowly but the fall is sudden,â he said.
They bombed us
The island received 2.5 million foreign tourists last year and with the Lonely Planet magazine endorsing it as 2019âs top destination, the government was hoping to draw in more than three million this year.
It now hopes to get around two million tourists, said Sri Lanka Tourism Development Authority Chairman Johanne Jayaratne.
Airlines cancelled 41 weekly flights after the attacks and while carriers like Emirates have resumed their schedule, China Eastern, for instance, is still operating only four flights a week â half of what it used to.
G.W. Ramyasiri, a 57-year-old fisherman who poses for tourists while propped up on a pole in Kogalla lake near Galle, says the government is not providing enough help.
He says he used to make up to US $ 20 in tips from tourists every day before the attacks, now he barely makes a dollar.
He said he has sold the family gold and may not be able to send his younger daughter to university.
âWe need money, not loans. If tourists donât come back, how will I repay the loan?â asked Ramyasiri.
âThey have actually bombed us and our livelihoods.â
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