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farmers in Sri Lanka
Sri Lanka’s economic downturn has left several staple foods in short supply, along with petrol and medicines, and rampant inflation is ravaging household budgets. Photograph: Ishara S Kodikara/AFP/Getty Images
Sri Lanka’s economic downturn has left several staple foods in short supply, along with petrol and medicines, and rampant inflation is ravaging household budgets. Photograph: Ishara S Kodikara/AFP/Getty Images

Sri Lanka government workers get Fridays off to grow food ahead of shortages

This article is more than 1 year old

Public sector employees also encouraged to find work overseas and send money home amid unprecedented economic crisis

Sri Lanka is asking government workers to take an extra day off each week to grow crops in their back yards in a bid to forestall a looming food shortage.

An unprecedented economic downturn has left several staple foods in short supply, along with petrol and medicines, and high inflation is ravaging household budgets.

“It seems appropriate to grant government officials leave for one working day of the week and provide them with the necessary facilities to engage in agricultural activities in their backyards,” said a cabinet statement.

The extra day off would be a “solution to the food shortage that is expected to occur in the future”, the statement read, adding that cutting down on civil servant commutes would also help reduce fuel consumption.

The United Nations has warned that Sri Lanka faces a “dire humanitarian crisis”, and said four out of five people in the country of 22 million were forced to skip meals.

Motorists, meanwhile, have suffered through months of petrol and diesel shortages, and long queues of vehicles outside filling stations are a regular sight.

Public employees will have every Friday off for the next three months without a pay cut, according to the cabinet decision, but the arrangement will not apply to essential services staff.

The government said any of its 1.5 million public sector workers who wanted to travel abroad to find work would be given up to five years of unpaid leave without affecting their seniority or pension.

The move is aimed at encouraging more people to get foreign jobs and send money back to the island, which is labouring under a critical shortage of foreign currency to buy imports.

Sri Lanka has defaulted on its $51bn foreign debt and is in talks with the International Monetary Fund for a bailout.

Public protests have demanded the resignation of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa over mismanagement of the economy and the severe hardships people face.

Rajapaksa introduced sweeping tax cuts soon after coming to power in November that have been blamed for leaving the island without the means to pay for essential imports.

The cash shortfall was worsened by the Covid-19 pandemic, which savaged the tourism industry and cut remittances from Sri Lankans working abroad.

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