Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

CB Chief says no dire need for emergency funding

But says government may decide to make “some sort of” fund arrangemen­t with IMF Says foreign reserves at comfortabl­e levels Debt repayments at US $ 4.3bn next year Looking for IMF and WB funding for swap rollover Economy grows 5.2% in first 9 months Fisca

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The country has no need to raise emergency funds, though the government may decide to make a formal request to the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) for “some sort of arrangemen­t” between Sri Lanka and the multilater­al lender, Central Bank Governor Arjuna Mahendran said.

“The government at the moment is in informal consultati­on (with IMF). As part of that consultati­on, the government may decide to make a formal request for some sort of arrangemen­t between the IMF and Sri Lanka. But it is at a very early stage, nothing has been decided so far,” Mahendran said.

Sri Lanka is still a beneficiar­y of an IMF stand-by-facility obtained in 2009, and as a result, IMF sends teams twice a year. A team from IMF is due in February this year.

According to Governor Mahendran, the country’s foreign reserves are at comfortabl­e levels—4.5 months worth of imports—though he admitted that some of that were borrowed.

“But the country is in no dire need of any emergency funding of any sort and therefore may be there’s no need to speculate that the IMF is coming for the rescue of Sri Lanka.”

Deputy Governor Nandalal Weerasingh­e said Sri Lanka total debt payments inclusive of interest and IMF payments in the next 12 months stand around US $ 2.3 billion.

He also said that there is US $ 2 billion worth of long term swap obligation which would be rolled over at current market rates as per the agreements.

“Swaps are rolled over every year at current market rates, those moneys are not going out,” he noted.

Governor Mahendran said one of the reasons Sri Lanka is talking to the IMF and the World Bank was to refinance these swaps, obtained through state banks such as the Bank of Ceylon, at concession­al rates.

“There is absolutely no cause for alarm,” he asserted.

Sri Lanka’s economy grew 5.2 percent in the first 9 months of 2015 against 2.4 percent in the correspond­ing period of the previous year.

The fiscal deficit in the first 9 months is estimated at 5.1 percent up from 4.8 percent in the same period of the previous year. Sri Lanka targets a 5.9 percent budget deficit for 2015.

 ??  ?? From left: Deputy Governor P. Samarasiri, Governor Arjuna Mahendran, Deputy Governor Dr.nandalal Weerasingh­e and Economic Research Department Director Mahinda Siriwardan­a
Pic by Pradeep Pathirana
From left: Deputy Governor P. Samarasiri, Governor Arjuna Mahendran, Deputy Governor Dr.nandalal Weerasingh­e and Economic Research Department Director Mahinda Siriwardan­a Pic by Pradeep Pathirana

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