Another Dimension Of Corruption
By Hema Senanayake –January 1, 2015


This is why I always insist to appoint a professionally qualified person as the Minister of Finance.
It appears that the economy is a physical system; it produces, it distributes and it innovates –And all these activities are tangible. But amazingly this whole system is purely depended upon on a hypothetical system created by human imagination –And that hypothetical system is known as monetary system. The monetary system is not real or physical phenomena. In fact I do not know any large physical system that truly depends upon a hypothetical system than ECONOMY.
Corruptions exist in such a system. It is a reality. Corruptions increase the cost of doing businesses. It distorts the distribution of consumable output. Once, a Cabinet Minister asked me to explain the economic impacts of corruptions. I told him that, “Up to a certain level the corruption is a moral issue, but beyond that it becomes an economic problem.” This means that corruptions at any level is a morale issue hence must be stopped; but it also intimates that corruptions are not always an economic issue that prevents economic development.