Abstract:
Sri Lanka had a rural sector dominated economy before the socioeconomic transformation
under the British rule. It mainly rotated around the subsistence economy consisting of rice
cultivation, home gardening and shifting agriculture (Chena cultivation) and the village
was the social grouping in this setup. The prominent place that the rural sector had
retained for centuries began to decline along with the booming plantation culture although
the overwhelming majority of the natives used to live in this sector even well into the
political independence. The centuries old economic system that the country had inherited
was renamed as domestic or traditional sector to distinguish it from the newly introduced
colonial plantation culture in the economic literature.
Rural sector has been considered as the development trump card of the country during the
most part of post independent period, especially up to the economic liberalization of
1977. Services and export promotion industrialization elements were markedly introduced
to the development equation of the post liberalization period although traditional rhetoric
on domestic agriculture and the rural sector did not disappeared at all instantly.
The rural economy has traditionally been rotated around the domestic agriculture.
Availability of sufficient lands for agriculture and related activities and utilization of such
resources on sustainable manner are pre requisites to maintain the centuries old
socioeconomic and environmental equilibrium in the sector. On going economic practices
in rural Sri Lanka is checking the long-term sustainability of the sector. Now a crisis
situation is looming in the near horizon of the rural sector and it is originating from
different corners of the economy and society.
Horizontal expansion of unplanned housing settlements and related facilities such as
roads, water, electricity and other common amenities are swallowing up lands meant for
rural agriculture and related activities. Similarly, authorized and unauthorized filling up of
paddy fields, clearance of forest lands, garbage disposable problems, water logging and
other environmental problems have become part and parcel of this practice. This trend is
directly attacking to the very foundation of the rural sector and it is quite visible in the fast
growing western province and adjoining provinces although other provinces are not totally
immune to this practice. In certain localities where the gravity of the practice is so high,
lands are available only for settlements and not for the domestic agriculture and related
activities. There is a clear tend of the disappearing of the centuries old rural economy in
fast growing areas of the country.
Unchecked land fragmentation is also going on all over the country adding more lands into
uneconomical farm-size category. It is emanating mainly from two sources as commercial
land sales for housing purpose and the division of ancestral lands among family members.
The situation is aggravated slowly but surely; as a result of the population growth in the
country and lack of national policy on land partition. The apparent outcome will be the
accumulation of fallow lands, especially in the rice sector. The trend is further
strengthened by the opening up of new income avenues in the industrial and service
sectors in more developed areas of the country. Poverty is the obvious result in areas
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where such alternative income sources are not available and village community engage in
economic activities in economically unsustainable small plots of lands.
The contours of traditional rural sector are also disappearing now. All village lands
including the catchment areas of irrigation tanks, reservation lands, village forests and
common areas are been encroached and used for housing settlements and other purposes.
The village identity and centuries old socioeconomic and environmental equilibrium is
gradually disappearing.
As a result of the ongoing transformation process, the rural areas of the economy are
turning into semi urban areas yet without basic urban facilities. This unplanned and
uninterrupted process is going on making devastative socioeconomic and environmental
issues in rural Sri Lanka. In the near future this will reach to a crisis and unmanageable
point once the transformation process envelops many rural areas of the country.
Information for the proposed article is mainly collected from secondary sources. In
addition that, complementary information is collected from the field observation,
interviewing of informed individuals, public officials and the focus groups in the society
and public officials.