Title: Sri Lanka Pearl of the Indian Ocean
1Sri Lanka Pearl of the Indian Ocean
- A Profile of Information Technology
2Group Members
- Ed Lavallee Background
- Amy Liang IT eCommerce
- XioFeng Zhang Investment Opportunity
3The Teardrop of India
4The People Ethnic Groups
- Population 20,222,240
- Ethnic groups
- Sinhalese 73.8, Sri Lankan Moors 7.2, Indian
Tamil 4.6, Sri Lankan Tamil 3.9, other 0.5,
unspecified 10 - Religions
- Buddhist 69.1, Muslim 7.6, Hindu 7.1,
Christian 6.2, unspecified 10 - Languages
- Sinhala (official and national language) 74,
Tamil (national language) 18, other 8 - English is commonly used in government and is
spoken competently by about 10 of the population
- Literacy definition age 15 and over can read
and write - total population 92.3
- male 94.8 female 90 (2003 est.)
Source CIA The World Factbook
(https//www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geo
s/ce.html)
5Geography Climate
- Geography
- Slightly Larger than West Virginia
- 65,610 square kilometers
- 1,340 kilometers of coastline
- Mostly low, flat to rolling plains, mountains in
south-central interior - Strategic location near major Indian Ocean sea
lanes - Climate
- Monsoon seasons - Dec-Mar Jun-Oct
- In late December 2004, a major tsunami took about
31,000 lives, left more than 6,300 missing and
443,000 displaced, and destroyed an estimated
1.5 billion worth of property
Source CIA The World Factbook
(https//www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geo
s/ce.html)
6Short History
- Originally settled by Sinhalese from Northern
India - 14th Century, a south Indian dynasty established
Tamil kingdom in the north - Occupied by Portuguese in the 16th century and
Dutch in the 17th century - Island was ceded to the British in 1796 and
remained a British colony until 1948 - Ceylon declared its independence in 1948 and
became Sri Lanka in 1972 - Ethnic unrest erupted in 1983 between the
Sinhalese majority and the Tamil separatists - Formal cease fire in 2002
- Recent terrorist attacks threaten stability of
the country
Source CIA The World Factbook
(https//www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geo
s/ce.html)
7Government
- Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka
- Government Type Republic
- Capital Colombo
- Three branches of government
- Executive President (6 year term)
- Legislative One Parliament (225 seats 6 year
term) - Judicial Supreme Court, Court of Appeals
(Judges are appointed by President) - 8 provinces Central, North Central, North
Eastern, North Western, Sabaragamuwa, Southern,
Uva, Western
Source CIA The World Factbook
(https//www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geo
s/ce.html)
8Challenges
- Civil Unrest Tamil Tigers
- 2002 cease-fire agreement between Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) and the Sri Lankan
government has recently been violated by actions
on both sides - Bomb blast on SLN vehicles, 70 killed (OCT 16
Link) - Rebels launch suicide attack on Sri Lanka naval
base in south, 1 sailor killed (OCT 18 Link) - Tigers ready for talks, Colombo should end
offensives, air-strikes - Thamilchelvan (OCT 19
Link) - New peace talks scheduled at the end of October
in Geneva
9Economy
- Currency Sri Lankan Rupee (1US 105.85 LKR)
- Gross Domestic Product
- GDP (purchasing power parity) 85.34 billion
(2005 est.) - Per Capita GDP 4,300 (2005 est.)
- GDP Composition by sector
- agriculture 17.8 industry 27.6 services
54.5 (2005 est.) - Public Debt 92.8 of GDP
- External debt 11.05 billion
- Economic Aid 577 million
- Gini index 34.4 (1995)
Source CIA The World Factbook
(https//www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geo
s/ce.html)
10Economy
- Industries
- Processing of rubber, tea, coconuts, tobacco and
other agricultural commodities
telecommunications, insurance, banking clothing,
textiles cement, petroleum refining - Exports
- Products textiles and apparel, tea and spices
gemstones coconut products, rubber manufactures,
fish - US 30.9, UK 11.6, India 7.3, Belgium 4.8,
Germany 4.5 (2005) - Labor force 8.08 million
- Occupational Breakdown
- agriculture 38 industry 17 services 45
(1998 est.) - Unemployment 7.7 (2005 est.)
Source CIA The World Factbook
(https//www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geo
s/ce.html)
11Hofstedes Cultural Dimensions
Source http//www.u.arizona.edu/nichalin/myfiles
/SouthAsia-Final.ppt
12IT Telephones Broadcast
- Telephones
- Main lines in use 1,130,923
- Mobile Cellular 3,084,845
- Inadequate domestic service, particularly in the
rural areas. - Likely to improve with privatization
encouragement of private investment - Broadcast stations
- Radio AM 26, FM 45 Shortwave 1
- Television 21
Source CIA The World Factbook
(https//www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geo
s/ce.html)
13IT-Computer Literacy
- Government sponsored survey of household members
in the age group of 5 69 years of
scientifically selected 11,500 households - Definition of literacy was being able to do
something with the computer - Most literate were located in urban areas
- Overall .7 of households in nation have internet
capability, however 20 of households with
computers have internet access
Source Computer Literacy of Sri Lanka
Department of Census Statistics Sri Lanka
http//www.statistics.gov.lk/cls2004/index.htm
14Geographic Map of Computer Literacy
Source Computer Literacy of Sri Lanka
Department of Census Statistics Sri Lanka
http//www.statistics.gov.lk/cls2004/index.htm
15e-Sri Lanka Initiative
- Purpose is to use Information and Communication
Technologies (ICT) to develop the economy,
reduce poverty and improve the quality of life
of the people. - ICT Agencys core mandate
- Create a national ICT Plan
- Encourage mainstream adoption of ICT in public
and private sectors - The Agencys program areas are given below
- Build the implementation capacity
- Build an information infrastructure and an
enabling environment, - Developing ICT human resources
- Modernizing government and delivering citizen
services - Leveraging ICT for economic and social
development, through public-private partnerships
Source Information and Communication Technology
Agency of Sri Lanka (ICTA) http//www.icta.lk/ins
idepages/e-srilanka/e-srilanka.asp
16Infrastructure
- Today, Sri Lanka's infrastructure ranks as the
best available in South Asia. - Private and public investment programs have been
implemented to improve the country's basic
infrastructure facilities. - Currently there are private investment projects
in power, ports, water sanitation, transportation
(highways and rail) and IT. - Telecommunications
- Operations by multiple public and private
telephone service providers, including three
basic, four cellular and six payphone services,
making the industry one of the most competitive
in Asia. - Deregulation has resulted in the country's
largest ever privatization initiative, with NTT
of Japan purchasing 35 of Sri Lanka Telecom for
US 225 million. - Roads
- The construction of 4 major expressways will
improve the existing road network.
Source Board of Investment of Sri Lanka
http//www.boi.lk/BOI2005/content.asp?contentwhyi
nvest8SubMenuID8
17E-Commerce Implementation
- Survey by Sri Lanka Business Development Center
- 80 Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs)
Source http//www.asiafoundation.org/pdf/SMEsurve
y_srilanka.pdf
18E-Commerce Implementation
19E-Commerce Implementation
20E-Commerce Implementation
100 uses internet for trade research.
21E-Commerce Implementation
- Web Sites Maintenance
- Driving forces for establish web sites global
exposure and direct interface with the
customers - Primary purpose of the site is to promote sales
- Majority of the SMEs agree that the Web sites are
important to improve business exposure. - The web hosting companies developed most of the
sites while in-house development came second.
22E-Commerce Implementation
Web Sites Location and Development Cost
Rs.USD 1001
23E-Commerce Implementation
- E-Commerce Penetration
- Web based selling is not well established in Sri
Lanka. - Sales volumes were at the low end for the few who
used web based selling. - Everybody is positive about the sales to increase
in the coming months. - The portals do not provide enough sales
information at present. - Web based buying is limited to a few types of
items. - No local establishments have B2B transactions.
- Buying frequency varied. 37 declared the they
buy very rarely. - Purchase volumes over the Internet are very low.
- Bottleneck to purchase goods over the Internet
Payment method. - Using web portals for business propagation is not
widespread among SMEs.
24E-Commerce Implementation
- Banking Sector Applications
- The main reason for non-usage is the security
concern. - I-banking may sure catch up similar to the ATM
cards since most of the banking operations
except cash could be carried out from home.
25E-Commerce Implementation
- Non Internet or E-Commerce Users
- Worries about the cost
- Lack of staff with adequate knowledge to run an
internet based application - Infrastructural facilities (such as insufficient
telephone connections) - The managements perceived lack of knowledge on
the benefits of e-commerce
Prospective Users
26Investment Opportunities and Challenges
- Investing in manufacturing semiconductor in Sri
Lanka -
- How it works?
- Private investor in the U.S. establishes joint
venture with Sri Lanka government or local
private businesses -
- U.S. investor contributing technology and more
than 50 of the capital - Use local labor force for manufacturing and
local management -
- Set up production shops on the southwest coast,
close to Colombo or Galle - Ship in raw materials from Asia, and ship out
the finished products back to Asia market
(China, India, Japan etc) -
27Why semiconductor?
Semiconductor A solid whose electrical
conductivity can be controlled over a wide
range, either permanently or dynamically
Essential materials in all modern electrical
devices, from computers to cellular phones to
digital audio players Source
http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semiconductor
28Why semiconductor?
29Why semiconductor?
30Why manufacturing in Sri Lanka?
- Cheap Labor Population (1)
- The latest destination for British companies
outsourcing their operations overseas. - Sourace http//news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/busines
s/3891023.stm - Labor costs are lower in Sri Lanka than India
Costs in Sri Lanka are 20 to 40 lower than in
India (- Virtusa, a provider of IT and BPO
services.) - Sri Lanka has the lowest labor cost per worker
in manufacturing - (World Bank Development Indicators 2000)
-
Source http//knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/100902_
ss5.htm
http//www.boi.lk/InvestorSite/content.asp?content
whyinvest4SubMenuID4
31Why manufacturing in Sri Lanka?
Labor cost monthly (US)
Sourcehttp//www.boi.lk
32Why manufacturing in Sri Lanka?
- 92 high literacy (2)
- Easy to train and manage
- Good health (life longevity longer than India)
(3) - Ideal for physical and assembly line work
- Educated, English-speaking professionals (4)
- Local university educated, English-speaking
professionals - can be used as local managers to build the bridge
with local community - managing the local facilities and dealing with
govt and local businesses.
33Why manufacturing in Sri Lanka?
- Favorable governmental policies (5)
- Constitutional Guarantee for Foreign Investments
- Bilateral investment agreements are valid for 10
years - extended automatically unless terminated by
either party - If the agreement is terminated, investments
already made are protected for another 10 year - Free remittance of earnings, capital and business
fees - Settlement of disputes under the International
Convention for the Settlement of Investment
Disputes (ICSID)
Source Board of Investment of Sri Lanka
34Why manufacturing in Sri Lanka?
- Strategic location (6)
- Regional trading hub and short shipping distance
to 4 continents -
- - 16 airports and 2 seaports
- Colombo Port
- No. 01 port of South Asia and the 26th in the
World - Transshipment cargo accounts for 72 of
throughput - Computerized and linked to all major freight
stations - Fast turnaround and round the clock service
- EDI facilities with two modern container terminals
Source Board of Investment of Sri Lanka
35Why manufacturing in Sri Lanka?
- Bandaranaike International Airport (BIA)
- 1 regional hub of air transportation in South
Asia - Frequent flights to Europe, Middle East, Far
East, Australia, and the - Indian Sub Continent
- Passenger movement increased from 2,234,962 in
1995 to 2,880,387 in - 2000, a 29 increase
- The cargo movements at BIA has increased from
76,312 tons in 1995 - to 127,116 tons in 2000 respectively, a
marked 76 increase - The aircraft movement in the same period has
increased from 16,543 - to 21,058, a 27 increase
Source Board of Investment of Sri Lanka
36Why manufacturing in Sri Lanka?
- Indo Lanka FTA (7)
-
- Easy to expand into Indian market in the future
if needed - With its 1 billion population, India is a big
market. Should the investor(s) contemplates - Moving into that market to establish production
facilities or just to sell, FTA between the two
nations would serve a favorable channel for the
both options.
37Why manufacturing in Sri Lanka?
- Ease of doing business (Total 175) (8)
Source World Bank 2006 study
38Why manufacturing in Sri Lanka?
- Peace through development (9)
- Civil conflict is an economical issue
- Fight for interest. Once interest met, peace
becomes possible - Development ? Opportunities ? Peace
- Canada model, still fight?
39Why manufacturing in Sri Lanka?
- The worst waste in business is not money, but
opportunity anonymous (10) - Sri Lanka a virgin territory for investment
- Opportunity lies under risk
- - Tamil not averse to foreigners
- - Produce in the peaceful region (west coast)
40Why manufacturing in Sri Lanka?
- Quality life for expatriates (11)
- Beautiful beaches and resort for foreigners
- Exotic tropical fruits
- Industry park
- International Schools
41Why manufacturing in Sri Lanka?
http//www.srilanka.com/photogallery/gallery.php
42Why manufacturing in Sri Lanka?
http//images.google.com
43Why manufacturing in Sri Lanka?
http//www.srilanka.com/photogallery/gallery.php
44Why manufacturing in Sri Lanka?
http//images.google.com
45Why manufacturing in Sri Lanka?
http//www.srilanka.com/photogallery/gallery.php
46Some Sri Lanka Websites
- Board of Investment Sri Lanka
- GOSL (Government of Sri Lanka)
- LankaNewspapers.com Sri Lanka news
- eSriLanka in English in Sinhala in Tamil