{"id":133704,"date":"2023-04-12T14:04:41","date_gmt":"2023-04-12T21:04:41","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/?p=133704"},"modified":"2023-04-12T14:04:41","modified_gmt":"2023-04-12T21:04:41","slug":"consumers-be-vigilant-during-the-festive-period","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/2023\/04\/12\/consumers-be-vigilant-during-the-festive-period\/","title":{"rendered":"\u201cConsumers! Be Vigilant during the Festive Period\u201d"},"content":{"rendered":"<h2><span style=\"color: #0000ff;\"><em>Sarath Wijesinghe<\/em><\/span><\/h2>\n\n\n<p>(Sarath Wijesinghe President\u2019s Counsel (LLM International Law (UCL)), former Ambassador to<br>UAE and Israel, President Ambassador\u2019s Forum, Former Chairman of The Consumer Affairs<br>Authority, Solicitor England and Wales and former Secretary General Bar Association of Sri<br>Lanka (LLM (UCL), assisted by Suchithra Withanage (LLM (UK) (LLM (UK|Reading) LLB (Hons)<br>(UK))<br>The Season of Celebration and Consumerism<br>As the festive season draws nigh, the citizens of Sri Lanka yet again take to the streets<br>and vibrant communal hubs in order to exercise their power of purchase and get<br>involved in merrymaking. As consumers, they would, in theory, be entitled to a wide and<br>meticulously drafted set of rights and statutory safeguards pertaining to their purchases.<br>As one of the most powerful forces in the world, the consumer is expected to be entitled<br>to a certain standard of commerce and life. However, the unfortunate reality of Sri<br>Lankan consumerism is that a stereotype of chaotic disorganisation has been<br>perpetuated over the years by an amalgam of negligence and unawareness of legal<br>rights that are available to the public as potential users of goods and services made<br>available in exchange for consideration by any trader or manufacturer (as per<br>s75 of the Consumer Affairs Authority Act 2003).<br>Due to the existing state of affairs where the consumer is non-conversant with their<br>legal rights and contemporary knowledge of consumerism, they have become an easy<br>demographic to prey upon by unprincipled traders and exploiters of the social system.<br>Adding to the mix the rise of crime, gangs and pickpockets in the public streets and<br>transport services, the state of consumerism in Sri Lanka is in pressing need for<br>modernisation as well as optimisation. As the protector of the rights of its citizens, it is<br>the responsibility of the State to provide an adequate and holistic system of regulatory<br>protection which would shield the latter from unfair and\/or unscrupulous trade practices<br>which would be hazardous to their lives, property and their right of access to goods.<br>Moreover, the State must ensure that a comprehensive process of legal redress is<br>made readily available to its citizens who have been rendered victims of such unfair<br>trade practices, as was elucidated in s7 of the Act. Regulators such as the Consumer<br>Affairs Authority (CAA), the Ministry of Trade, and Local Authorities face various<br>hardships in their duties due to being pressed for time and an overload of political<br>turmoil anchoring down the current state of affairs, but they are by no means<br>unequipped to do as the required facilities and funding are provided for by the<br>government.<br>A Quest for a Kaleidoscopic Perspective<br>The famous maxim, &#8216;the consumer is king&#8217; comes to mind when contemplating the<br>status quo of consumerism in general. Alas, the practicality of the notion has faded into<br>obscurity over the decades in Sri Lanka due to the medley of disorganisation and chaos<br>that follows in the all-too-familiar bedlam which ensues each year during the high points<br>of our traditional festivities. The consumers must be educated on their rights and<br>obligations so that they possess the acumen to demand and examine receipts, check<br>standards, read directions fluently on hire\/purchase agreements etc. In light of the<br>World Consumer day (15th of March), the World Consumer Federation has initiated a<br>worldwide agitation in order for the legitimate share for consumers to be claimed. The<br>sentiment bears weight, particularly in retrospect of late US President John F.<br>Kennedy&#8217;s statement in 1962, &#8220;Consumers, by definition, include us all. They are the<br>largest economic group in the economy, affecting and affected by almost every public<br>and private economic decision.&#8221;<br>In more developed parts of the world, consumer rights are a nigh sacrosanct concept<br>where the &#8216;unfairness&#8217; of trade practices are subject to strict restrictions by governments<br>and are augmented by the lobbying efforts of powerful organisations to maintain quality,<br>standards, costs and the right to return goods, as well as the maintenance of standards<br>by traders and manufacturers. Our own country however, contains an unfortunate<br>abundance of adulterated and poisonous food chains, as well as a diverse variety of<br>other genres of substandard goods available for consumption of citizens which are not<br>subject to restrictive conditions. Our citizens face an unfortunate state where performing<br>their traditional and familial obligations during the Sinhalese and Tamil New Year period<br>has become an uphill battle. Hitherto, there is no adequate control dynamic in place to<br>control and regulate the quality and price of items available to consumers which are<br>expected to be monitored by the main regulator, the Consumer Affairs Authority.<br>The Consumer Affairs Authority has been established in lieu of the Fair Trading<br>Consumer Act No. 1 of 1987, as well as the Price Control Act No. 1 of 1987 for the<br>promotion of effective competition and legal protection of the consumer. As a blend of<br>UK, Australian as other Western modelled concepts, it aims to establish a primary<br>regulator to standardise and supervise trade under s9 of the Act. With wide-ranging<br>powers to undertake research, issue directions, restrict selling above the established<br>market prices, determine industry standards, conduct inquiries into consumer<br>complaints, enter agreements, deal with offences such as refusal to sell\/hoarding of<br>goods, investigate publications and preventing misleading or deceptive practices etc.,<br>the Authority is well placed to ensure an all-encompassing dynamic of consumer<br>protection in Sri Lanka.<br>Nevertheless, due to the abolition of the price control as per the Price Control Act, the<br>new status quo was introduced where the onus was placed upon traders to exhibit the<br>price mark and maintain standards of consumables (s29). Thus, it has fallen to the<br>consumer to judge the efficacy of the enforcement mechanism in the preservation of the<br>aforesaid standards, a task that ought not, necessarily, rest upon their shoulders due to<br>a prevalent lack of awareness and expertise in such materialistic endeavours. The<br>question of whether the CAA is a competent organisation capable of upholding the<br>sanctity of the legal regulation of consumerism which it was created to protect, or a<br>mere paper tiger thus falls to the consumer himself to decide based upon the efficacy<br>and vigour of its performance.<br>Mistaking Cause for Cure? The Sri Lankan Dilemma in Perspective<br>Tragically, the rapidly rising and increasingly unbearable cost of living is not a concept<br>that requires any further explanation to any Sri Lankan citizen. The cost of living is<br>generally a relative phrase, dependent upon the conditions, environments and<br>jurisdiction in question. It is a consistently rare occurrence for prices of consumer<br>articles to recede in value, even though the basic income of citizens has seen gradual<br>increments over time, albeit arguably at a snail\u2019s-pace. The price of bread, for instance,<br>is not an established static but through necessity, the consumer has acclimatised to the<br>price fluctuations over the years. In Western countries, a significant portion of one&#8217;s<br>income is allocated towards accommodation, whereas items such as food are much<br>more affordable. On the other hand, Sri Lankan citizens toil and languish under<br>arguably superfluous adversities in life as the basic income of the average citizen can<br>be considered insufficient. Nevertheless, the discussion may arise that through astute<br>and careful consumer practices, it is possible to beat the cost of living provided that the<br>prices of items such as mobile phones, tuition and vanity based extravagances are<br>restricted. In a nutshell, one must familiarise oneself with the essentials of (1) when to<br>buy, (2) where to buy, (3) how to buy and (4) what to buy.<br>In England, an apple which is available for purchase at Selfridges, one of the most<br>expensive department store chains in the UK, can be bought at the street market for<br>mere fraction of the cost. Likewise, in Sri Lanka, street markers are plentiful and<br>consumables purchased there can be carefully stored and used. While being the most<br>economically viable option for consumers, such a commercial dynamic will promote<br>local small businesses and budding entrepreneurship which Sri Lanka is in dire need of,<br>particularly in light of the recent economic crisis which even as of writing, continues to<br>hold the country in thrall. Consumers make the persistent blunder of prioritising<br>unhealthy and largely commercialised food chains containing unhealthy ingredients and<br>unwholesome soda drinks which unwittingly invites a plethora of long term health<br>conditions and serious comorbidities, thereby increasing the financial strain on<br>themselves as well as the public healthcare systems of the country. Consumers must<br>therefore exercise diligence and prudence in selecting the most practical and viable<br>options for consumables when exercising their rights of purchase.<br>Due to the unawareness\/inability\/reluctance on part of traders and industrialists<br>themselves who are an essential component of society and the economy at large, the<br>confidence of the citizens in the economic system of the country has deteriorated as<br>well. The regulations established by the Consumer Affairs Act are quite comprehensive<br>in terms of setting out implied and express terms of merchantable quality standards, but<br>the fact that sellers are bound by both written and unwritten rules, regulations,<br>conventions and norms which are little\/not known to them as well as consumers and<br>even regulators, paints a bleak picture for the future of consumerism in Sri Lanka. \u2018SeriVanija\u2019 is a Jataka story in which a just trader identified a gold bowl and paid the<br>equitable price for it, despite the poverty-stricken citizen seller not being aware of it<br>himself, whereas an errant trader who rejected it under malicious pretenses died of a<br>stroke from hearing of the transaction that he unwittingly missed out upon. the former<br>should be the shining example which ought to guide the flow of commerce in Sri Lanka,<br>but has little effect in the current social and commercial climate. The availability of<br>modern shopping via the internet and the availability of smart phones to access massive<br>online marketplaces on the go such as Ebay, Alibaba, Amazon etc., which are seeing a<br>correlation in growth with the recent decline of public trust in domestic traders, is of<br>significant importance. This is due to the resulting exacerbation of cash flows out of the<br>country in a nation crippled by debt and financial distress. 40% of UK shopping is<br>online, which according to them, is safe trading and consumerism with included checks<br>and balances with the involvement of the Department of Trade and Commerce whereas<br>the CAA, its Sri Lankan counterpart, is now relatively inert, ineffective and inefficient at<br>times.<br>Catalysing a Change in the Status-Quo<br>It must also be said that it is a civic duty of all citizens to contribute to the noble task of<br>the CAA in identifying problematic commercial practices. The CAA is expected to be<br>available to entertain complaints of citizens via phone, internet and a constant presence<br>throughout the country, a service which encompasses both goods and services. In<br>many other nations, this system is quite evolved and the citizens are so well versed with<br>the process that traders are under the control of the common consumer and therefore<br>perform to satisfactory standards. The media is an integral component of nurturing this<br>paradigm of productivity as well. The example of the UK scandal of the Cola company<br>drawing water from the River Thames to use in production springs to mind, where it was<br>the media which uncovered the matter. The Bopal case of India is another well-known<br>example where the media came forward to educate multinational companies on the<br>subject of unfair trade. The CAA of Sri Lanka is also expected to organise a consumer<br>federation with the intent of providing assistance to the consumer. The argument can be<br>made that it is the duty of the NGOs within the country to take up the mantle and<br>catalyse progress the area rather than be dependent on human rights conditions on Sri<br>Lanka to reach expected standards in parallel to them. The time is also ripe for citizens<br>to work hard and achieve a greater semblance of order within the chaos, in order to<br>combat the rising tide of living costs and nurture a careful and systematic<br>exemplification of organised, self-sufficient society.<br>Finally, the rapid escalation of illegal activities during the festive season must be<br>addressed. It is against the law to perform bogus sales and maliciously overprice goods<br>and services in order to take undue advantage of the needs of citizens during festivities.<br>While consumers do not have the right to demand price reductions from service<br>providers, they are quite entitled to the right to purchase quality goods which adhere to<br>established health and safety standards. The &#8216;1919&#8217; service, CAA and the Board of<br>Standards for quality and price of consumer items must stand ready to receive<br>legitimate complaints by citizens and provide systematic and adequate resolutions to<br>their concerns.<br>The way forward involves a symbiotic dynamic of development between the<br>rights of the citizens, the constructive involvement of the media and the<br>responsibility of the state in order to ensure the availability of quality items at a<br>reasonable price for consumption. The United Nations too has given a high level<br>of recognition to the right to satisfaction and ensuring fundamental needs, safety,<br>information, the opportunity to be heard, redress, consumer education and a<br>healthy environment to be facilitated and provided to the citizen by the State. The<br>Government must separate the CAA to exist as an independent body led by a<br>non-political qualified person with a legal background appointed by the<br>constitutional council preferably with a legal background. A joint exercise must<br>be spearheaded as a matter of statutory duty by the CAA, which is the primary<br>regulator, in order to organise traders, manufacturers, industrialists and citizens<br>as integral cogs in a well-oiled machine in order to achieve the desired paradigm<br>of a competitive and friendly social environment where the costs of living can be<br>beaten and where quality, as well as healthy consumer items can become the<br>norm rather than the exception. The consumer must be vigilant and intelligent,<br>the trader should be fair and reasonable, and the State must uphold the<br>sacrosanct duty of cultivating a standard of life for its citizens\/consumers that<br>has the potential to be the envy of the world. We pray and wish the consumer<br>success and prosperity during the festive season!<br>Writer can be reached on 0094777880166|0094766280166<br>|sarath7@hotmailco.uk | sarathdw28@gm<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Sarath Wijesinghe (Sarath Wijesinghe President\u2019s Counsel (LLM International Law (UCL)), former Ambassador toUAE and Israel, President Ambassador\u2019s Forum, Former Chairman of The Consumer AffairsAuthority, Solicitor England and Wales and former Secretary General Bar Association of SriLanka (LLM (UCL), assisted by Suchithra Withanage (LLM (UK) (LLM (UK|Reading) LLB (Hons)(UK))The Season of Celebration and ConsumerismAs the festive [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"","sticky":true,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[77],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-133704","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-sarath-wijesinghe"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/133704","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=133704"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/133704\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=133704"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=133704"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.lankaweb.com\/news\/items\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=133704"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}