Citation:Colombage, S. R. N., Barua, S., Nanayakkara, M., & Colombage, U. N. (2022, July 27). COVID-19 Effects on Public Finance and SDG Priorities in Developing Countries: Comparative Evidence from Bangladesh and Sri Lanka. The European Journal of Development Research. https://doi.org/10.1057/s41287-022-00558-6
Date:2022
Abstract:
The COVID-19 pandemic, an unprecedented global health crisis, rapidly transferred
into a global economic and social crisis. The pandemic has threatened the world’s
commitment to achieve Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by 2030 as governments
in developing countries have shifted their priorities from attaining SDGs, to
providing urgent financial needs to save lives and prevent recession in hopes for a
rapid economic recovery. The rerouting of public funding priorities has undermined
the progress and achievement of SDGs. We employed a mixed-method and carried
out a comparative study using pre- and post-public financial data of two developing
countries in South Asia; Bangladesh and Sri Lanka. A threefold analysis was
conducted to investigate the evolution of the COVID-19 pandemic in two countries,
the impact of the pandemic on external and internal public finance and the effect of
the pandemic in shifting the policy priorities from SDGs to economic survival. This
study found that both countries are highly vulnerable to the COVID-19 pandemic
and are suffering from the lack of financing from external sources through the private
sector as well as an increasing foreign debt. There is mounting pressure on the
fiscal balance in both countries.