Lesson Objectives
v To survey the economic, social and political landscape of Ceylon in 1948.
v To surface comparable data for 1956.
v To identify and analyse the factors which contributed to changing
the situation between 1948 and 1956.
Lesson Structure
v Why Colonial Economy?
v 1948 – 1956 Landmarks:
Ø General Election of September 1947.
Ø Birth of Independent Ceylon
on the 4th of
February 1948 .
Ø 1949 – Introduction of the Rice Subsidy.
Ø 1950 – Admission of Denominational of Schools into the Free Education Scheme.
Ø 1950 - Introduction of the GPS Scheme for Paddy.
Ø 1951 – Resignation of Mr. S.W.R.D. Bandaranaike from the U N P and the
formation of the S L F P
Ø 1952 - 21st
March - Death of Prime Minister D.S. Senanayake
Ø 1952 - 26th March – Appointment of Dudley Senanayake as
Prime Minister.
Ø 1952 - June – First General Election of Independent Ceylon
Ø 1951 - Commissioning of the first Hydro-power project and the
commencement of the rural
Electrification Scheme.
Ø 1952 - Commencement of the Base Hospitals Programme.
Ø 1953 - S W R D Bandaranaike
changes “Sinhala and Tamil in 24 hours” to “Sinhala only in 24 hours.”
Ø 1953 - 12th August
- Hartal
Ø 1954 - 11th October – Resignation of Dudley Senanayake as
Prime Minister.
Ø 1955 - 4th February – Release of the Buddhist Commission
Report.
Ø 1956 - February – U N P adopts Sinhala only Policy.
Ø 1956 – General Elections.
Ø Dissolution of Parliament (due to end in June 1957 only)
1948 – Salient Features
v Economy
Ø Duality
Ø Continuity of the features of a colonial economy.
Ø Non national dominance over the Plantation Sector.
Ø Trading Partners
Ø Trading Basket.
Ø Fiscal Policy used only as a means of revenue.
Ø Predominance of Agriculture in the GDP.
v Society
Ø Was there a duality?
Ø Social mobility resulting from the spread of Education.
Ø Social impact of the growth of an urban working class
Ø Lack of attempts at diversifying the economy.
v Political Scene
Ø Demise of the Ceylon National Congress – Birth of UNP
- Birth of Sinhala Mahajana Sabha and its amalgamation with the UNP.
Ø The Political significance of the 1953 Hartal.
Ø The Language Issue.
Ø What caused the UNP rout and the MEP landslide win at the 1956 General Elections?
v Conclusion
Ø The Political Leadership of Ceylon, no sooner it received political
authority, opted for Free Education. It was to be foreseen that Free Education
would throw up an educated young population. The reluctance of educated youth
to participate in traditional Agriculture should have been foreseen.
Ø The leaders chose to keep Sri Lanka a
predominantly agricultural country. 1952
World Bank Report. How do you explain the lukewarm attitude of the leadership
to industrialization when the country had sufficient resources to move into a major industrialization
programme as India
did ?
Ø What, in hindsight, are the consequences of the failure to
industrialize? Economic ? Socio-political ?
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