Micro-Financed Suicides


Suicide is not something new and the causes of suicide are also complex. However, widespread debt driven suicides are relatively new and a product of financialized economies. This is an inconvenient truth that promoters of globalization and free market economics are not willing to concede. Yet, it is an ugly fact arising from the failure of the much touted trickle down benefits of free market competition, which in the name of economic rationalism is allowed to operate without any ethical and moral constraints. Sri Lanka after decades of welfarism and market regulation was dragged with vengeance into the free market swirl in 1977, and with frequent environmental disasters and a costly civil war, has now become a victim of free market capitalism. Rising suicide rate is one of the negative sides of market propelled economic growth. Unregulated markets breed widening inequality, inequality breeds poverty, and poverty causes suicides. They are all systemic.
One of the most momentous transformations witnessed globally since the 1980s is the increasing financialization of economies. Aided by revolutionary changes in transport and communication technologies, which broke down geographical barriers and squeezed the world into a global village, the financial sector, which until then played a subsidiary role as facilitator to the real economy overturned the structural hierarchy and usurped the role of the leading sector. The wealthy and their institutional financial care takers saw in this new world attractive and novel opportunities to earn higher rates of return by investing in financial products rather than in the real economy. Without getting into any extended explanation of this transformation one consequence of it should be pointed out that is relevant to Sri Lanka, i.e., the growth of finance companies that deal in financial products. According to one study an estimated 14,000 finance companies are providing microcredit in the country. Globally, microfinance is a growth industry that lends small amounts of credit to an estimated world population of nearly 2.5 billion who have no access to or the literacy required to deal with conventional banking. The Grameen Bank in Bangladesh founded by the Nobel laureate, Professor Yunus, was a microfinance and community development institution which greatly helped women in that country by providing an opportunity to get out of grinding poverty. No doubt, the idea of microfinancing is an applaudable invention but the way it operates in many places is utterly deplorable.
Desperate families are enticed with charming offers and soothing words to fall into a debt trap, which instead of ameliorating their poverty often worsens it and becomes lethal. One needs only to fail one instalment of repayment to the company to realise how viciously the debt burden mounts. Incidents of suicide is an open manifestation of this insidious financing mechanism. The cure for this problem lies not in fine tuning regulations that govern lending institutions, which are the products of the financialised economic system, but to attack the system itself that creates poverty on one side while providing a remedy on the other which kills the patient. This is not to argue that Sri Lanka should give up the market and revert to dirigisme. There are economic areas where the markets can perform better and areas where the state can deliver a better and cheaper product or service. Ultimately however, even the market must be shaped to operate with a human face. In the context of Sri Lanka, we may call for a Buddhist compassionate face.