The Manila Times

Sri Lanka financial crisis easing

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COLOMBO: Cash-strapped Sri Lanka is “gradually” emerging from its worst economic crisis after the austerity of an IMF bailout, the president said Sunday in a speech to mark independen­ce day.

Recalling the “indignity of being labelled a financiall­y bankrupt country,” President Ranil Wickremesi­nghe dispensed with the customary annual address in favor of a brief statement.

The island nation defaulted on its $46 billion foreign debt in 2022 after a foreign exchange wipeout left it unable to import food, fuel and other essentials.

Sri Lanka saw months of civil unrest at the peak of the economic crisis, culminatin­g in the ouster of then-president Gotabaya Rajapaksa when thousands of protesters stormed his home.

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund released the first tranche of a $2.9 billion four-year bailout loan to Sri Lanka in March last year under a reform program that saw taxes raised and prices sharply increased.

“Throughout this journey, challenges will gradually dissipate, life’s burdens will lighten, the economy will fortify,” Wickremesi­nghe said.

Prices spiked more than 6 percent last month after the government hiked taxes in line with IMF conditions to maintain the bailout loan, according to Central Bank of Sri Lanka data.

The 6.4 percent reading was well up from the 4.0 percent seen in December, according to the bank.

However, it is still less than a tenth of the levels seen at the height of the island’s financial crisis in 2022, when inflation peaked at nearly 70 percent.

“It is imperative that we obtain insights from past mistakes and avoid their repetition,” Wickremesi­nghe said.

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