Government’s economic plan for pandemic is ‘weak’, say industry leaders

Loan scheme equals less than 0.1% of GDP, compared to nearly 10% in neighbouring countries

Factory workers strike over benefits and layoffs at the Grand Enterprises Garment factory in the East Dagon industrial zone on March 26, 2020. (Photo- Sai Zaw/ Myanmar Now)

Government efforts to lessen the economic damage of the Covid-19 pandemic are too weak, experts and business owners have told Myanmar Now.

Myanmar’s central bank has so far lowered interest rates by three percentage points, from 10% before the pandemic to 7% as of April 27, and announced plans to increase business lending for three key industries.

The government on March 18 also postponed income, commercial and export tax deadlines until the end of the fiscal year, in September.

But many say these efforts are underfunded and too narrowly targeted, and that they lack a vision for a post-pandemic recovery.

The Asian Development Bank (ADB) announced in early April that the Covid-19 outbreak could slow Myanmar’s economic growth by more than two percentage points, from 6.8% last year to about 4.2% this year.

 

 

The government plans a 100bn kyat (about $70m) loan scheme for three key sectors it says are particularly hard-hit by the pandemic: manufacturing, hotels and tourism and small- and medium-sized businesses. It will charge 1% interest on the one-year loans.

But several business leaders are calling the plan inadequate.

 

 

“A100bn kyat budget seems like a lot, but it’s nothing compared to the country’s GDP,” Union of Myanmar Travel Association chairman Naung Naung Han told Myanmar Now.

The figure is slightly less than 0.1% of the country’s GDP, which was just over $71bn in 2018, according to the World Bank.

In comparison, the US is spending $2.3tn, or about 10% of the country’s GDP, while Thailand is spending 1.5tn bhat, or about 8.9% of its GDP, and Singapore is spending SGD$6bn, or 8% of its GDP, according to an International Monetary Fund report on global Covid-19 responses.

“This is not enough,” Naung Naung Han said. “The country needs to be spending trillions (of kyat) in this situation... not billions.”

So far over 6bn kyat in loans have been approved for 88 businesses in Myanmar, and the government is still accepting applications, according to Aung Naing Oo, the secretary of a committee focused on helping businesses survive the pandemic.

The Union of Myanmar Travel Association told Myanmar Now it will take about 200bn kyat to keep the hotels and tourism industry solvent through the next three months, while virtually the entire industry is shut down.

“Neighbouring countries with large tourism industries like Thailand, Malaysia and Singapore will compete to regain market share (after the pandemic). They’ll reduce prices and offer attractive packages, and we need to be able to compete with that,” said Naung Naung Han. “If we can’t... it will be very difficult for us in the long term.”

With the industry now shut down for at least a quarter of the year, a one-year loan is not enough, said Myanmar Tourism Federation vice chairman Khin Aung Tun.

Dr Zaw Oo, executive director of the Centre for Economic and Social Development, said economic development grants that other countries have used offer a more effective long-term solution.

“It’s not about just lending money. There has to be a strategy for after all of this,” he said.

He said the government’s focus on just three sectors is too narrow to help stabilise the broader economy.

“It’s not enough just to focus on tourism and small- and medium-sized businesses. Covid-19 affects the whole economy,” he said.

He also described the current approach as short-sighted.

“Other countries have follow-up strategies for after grants and loans are given. I think we should have this too,” he said.

‘I don’t want to let any staff go’

Others, though, are grateful for the loans.

Myo Thant Swe, owner of the Mandalay-based tea seller "U Kar Ka, Daw Sein" said a government loan would be a lifesaver for him. He applied for one in early April and is still waiting for his application to be reviewed.

In March he was forced to stop exporting dried tea leaves to the US, Australia, the Czech Republic and several other western countries because of the pandemic.

Now he’s worried if he’ll be able to pay his staff.

“Trading has ceased almost completely. I don’t want to let any employees go - we’ve built this business together - but now I’m struggling to pay them,” he told Myanmar Now.

He said his more than 200 employees are still receiving their full salaries for the time being, and no one’s been let go yet, but it’s becoming more and more difficult. March is usually the peak of his sales season.

During Thingyan, with factories closed and everyone urged to stay home, the government sent out basic food items like rice, oil, salt and onions to help the poorest families, and it made the first 150 units of electricity free for every home and apartment.

Zaw Oo called this a “short-term solution” and called for a longer-term plan to ensure job and food security for the poor.

More than 1m tonnes of rice have been exported this year, with the country aiming to export 3m tonnes by December 31, according to the Myanmar Rice Federation.

On April 7 the commerce ministry’s trade department ordered rice exporters to sell 10% of their stock to a government-held national reserve, to ensure food security and price stability during the pandemic.

But economist Aung Ko Ko called for more, telling Myanmar Now the government should only export a few thousand tonnes for the time being, to keep prices and supplies stable domestically.

He also stressed the need for new jobs programs. “New investment is needed,” he said.

Early in April the Myanmar Investment Commission said it had granted 11 construction, manufacturing and service sector businesses licenses to begin operating in the midst of the pandemic, creating more than 3,200 new jobs.

International lenders

The Asian Development Bank is offering loans of up to $20bn to bolster national economies in the Asia-Pacific region, including Myanmar’s, bank president Masa Asakawa announced early this month.

That’s triple the bank’s pre-pandemic lending for the region of about $6.5m.

It is unclear how much of the new loan money will be available specifically for Myanmar, but the World Bank announced last week a $50m ‘emergency’ loan for the country in response to the pandemic.

Lawmakers will discuss how to spend the loan when parliament meets next.

“We have to buy masks, reagents and other equipment, and we’ll need to buy these supplies as long as we are testing for Covid-19. The more money we have the easier this will be,” said MP Dr San Shwe Win, chairman of the health and sports committee.

This article was updated to clarify that the $50m emergency loan is from the World Bank​​​​​​.

Kirin’s operating profits for Myanmar Brewery—which it jointly owns with military conglomerate MEHL—fell by nearly half in the first quarter of 2021 compared to the same period in 2020

Published on May 12, 2021

Revenue and profits from Myanmar Beer are down by nearly 50 percent, according to Japanese parent company Kirin’s first quarterly report for 2021, released on Wednesday.

In a statement published on the same day, activist group Justice for Myanmar celebrated the shift as “clear evidence that the mass boycott of military products by the people of Myanmar is working.”

The popular boycott of Myanmar Brewery—a joint venture between Kirin and the military-owned Myanmar Economic Holdings, Ltd (MEHL)—gained momentum following the February 1 military coup in Myanmar.

In early February, a public campaign emerged to “stop buying junta business.” Photos spread on social media of people destroying Mytel signs and sim cards, Ruby cigarettes, and emptying bottles of Myanmar, Mandalay and Dagon beers—all products under military ownership.

Myanmar Brewery, along with Mandalay Brewery, once dominated the country’s market and produced around 80 percent of the beer sold in Myanmar.

“I used to sell Myanmar Beer as one of the main drinks at my restaurant,” Aung Hlaing Tun, a restaurant owner in Yangon’s Kyauktada Township told Myanmar Now, adding that he has since closed his business in protest of the coup. “Even when I open my restaurant again after the revolution succeeds, I won’t sell Myanmar Beer. I am determined not to buy any of the military’s products,” he explained. 

Kirin reported that Myanmar Brewery’s operating profit from January-March 2021 fell 49.6 percent compared to the same period in 2020, or by 2.5 billion yen (nearly US$23 million). Revenue was also down by 46.7 percent, or 5 billion yen (nearly $46 million).

Kirin’s report stated that Myanmar Brewery’s “sales volume declined significantly due to the impact of COVID-19, political upheaval, etc.”

However, another restaurant owner in Dawei told Myanmar Now that even though his business remains open, there has been “no demand” for Myanmar Beer from customers for around two months.

“We can’t sell it anymore because no one asks for it,” he said. 

Justice for Myanmar also dismissed Kirin’s claim that the drop was due to the pandemic and political instability.

“We know that it is evidence of a mass rejection of their abhorrent business model in Myanmar, which finances these killers,” the group’s spokesperson Yadanar Maung said in Wednesday’s statement.

At the time of reporting, more than 780 people had been murdered by the junta’s armed forces since the coup, and nearly 5,000 arrested.

On February 5, four days after the military ousted Myanmar’s elected government, Kirin announced that they planned to end their partnership with MEHL, but at the time of reporting it was not known what—if any—further action had been taken toward terminating the partnership.

“We call on Kirin to disclose the steps they are taking to end their relationship with the Myanmar military and their timeframe,” Justice for Myanmar wrote.

In its own call to boycott Kirin in August 2020, Burma Campaign UK described Myanmar and Brewery and Mandalay Brewery as “earning the Burmese military tens of millions of dollars in revenue every year.”

In August 2019, a UN fact-finding mission said business partnerships with MEHL had helped finance the military’s ongoing “war crimes and crimes against humanity.” 

 

Myanmar Now is an independent news service providing free, accurate and unbiased news to the people of Myanmar in Burmese and English.

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‘They were opening fire right in front of me so I had to run for my life,’ a protester who managed to evade arrest said

  

Published on May 12, 2021
Demonstrators march during an anti-coup protest in Mandalay on May 10 (EPA-EFE) 

Police and soldiers broke up an anti-dictatorship march in Mandalay’s Pyigyidagun Township on Wednesday, arresting at least 30 people just as they had started to rally, according to protesters who were at the scene. 

Despite continued crackdowns by the junta’s armed forces, residents of Mandalay have gathered every morning for around three months to protest the February 1 military coup that ousted Myanmar’s elected government. 

Driving motorbikes and unmarked vans, troops broke up Wednesday’s rally at 118th St, near the intersection of 72nd and 73rd streets, protesters who managed to flee the assault told Myanmar Now. 

“They were opening fire right in front of me so I had to run for my life,” one protester said on the condition of anonymity. “I was able to escape but my new motorbike was taken [by the soldiers],” the individual added. 

The armed forces seized an estimated 60 motorbikes or more, including those parked at a market near the protest site, hauling them off in five trucks, the protester said. 

“They even stole motorcycles in the market from people who weren’t even protesters. They blocked the entire ward and they’re checking everywhere. There’s a lot of them,” the protester told Myanmar Now. 

Some teachers participating in the rally were beaten and among those arrested on Wednesday, according to Pyigyidagun residents.

Eyewitnesses speculated that at least some of those arrested had been wounded in the crackdown, but Myanmar Now was unable to verify this information. 

On May 2, protesters in Mandalay’s Mya Taung protest column were forcibly dispersed by troops as they were about to start a march. They arrested four civilians and stole seven motorbikes in that crackdown.

Participants in the main anti-coup rally held daily in Mandalay include the All Burma Federation of Student Unions, as well as teachers, labourers, farmers, students from Mandalay University, high school students and alumni, and residents from the city’s Sein Pan ward. 

 

Myanmar Now is an independent news service providing free, accurate and unbiased news to the people of Myanmar in Burmese and English.

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At least one soldier was killed during the latest attempt to enter a village in Mandalay Region’s Myingyan Township on Tuesday

Published on May 12, 2021
Locals from Myoma, a village in Mandalay Region’s Myingyan Township, carry non-combat weapons to defend themselves from attack by regime forces. (Supplied) 

Residents of a village in Mandalay Region’s Myingyan Township successfully held off an attempted raid by regime forces on Tuesday, killing one soldier and injuring two, according to local sources.

The locals, armed only with homemade rifles, successfully repelled around 150 heavily armed troops who tried to enter the village of Myoma on Tuesday afternoon, the sources said.

“The villagers kept them at bay by firing warning shots, even though the soldiers were shooting at them non-stop. There was a steady stream of gunfire. We also heard hundreds of individual shots,” said a local who asked to remain anonymous.

Two civilians were shot in the arm and are receiving medical treatment in the village, another resident of the area told Myanmar Now.

“The people have a stronghold in the middle of a field. There are no trees or bushes to hide behind. They [the soldiers] don't dare go near it, because it’s like entering a killing field,” he said.

Myoma is located in the Talokemyo village tract, which consists of four villages with a combined population of around 10,000 people.

While all the women, children and elderly people living in Myoma have fled the village, every male inhabitant between the ages of 18 and 50 has stayed behind to defend it from attack, sources said.

The assault on Tuesday was the third attempt by the junta’s forces to take control of the village since last month, they added.

“They haven’t managed to get into the village. We don’t know what will happen once they do. For now they are just shooting and waiting. They are threatening it from all sides,” said a villager, describing the situation as of 4pm Tuesday.

There are concerns that the regime may deploy more troops to the area to end the standoff, as it has done in parts of Sagaing and Mandalay regions and Chin State where locals have defended their villages with homemade firearms.

The military has conducted house raids throughout the area to confiscate hunting rifles, axes, and anything else that can be used as a weapon, residents said.

They have also arrested and tortured suspected “rioters” and stolen valuables, including livestock, cash and gold, they added.

 

Myanmar Now is an independent news service providing free, accurate and unbiased news to the people of Myanmar in Burmese and English.

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