Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Central Bank Governor sees no pressure to lift rates

„Coomaraswa­my says monetary policy is OK for moment „Says country plans a foreign currency bond for early next year

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BLOOMBERG: Sri Lanka’s Central Bank doesn’t see any pressure to tighten policy even as inflation accelerate­s on the back of a severe drought and poor weather, Governor Indrajit Coomaraswa­my said in an interview.

“We feel our monetary policy stance at the moment is OK,” Coomaraswa­my said in an interview in Washington on Friday.

“There is no demand side pressure that we see.”

The Central Bank on September 26 kept benchmark interest rates unchanged at a four-year high as bad weather across the South Asian island pushes up prices and dents growth. Coomaraswa­my signalled he is willing to look through that supply disruption.

Rates were raised in March to quell inflation and bolster the rupee. The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) said on September 29 that Sri Lanka needs to remain vigilant on inflation and tighten policy if needed. The next monetary policy announceme­nt is scheduled for November 7.

Inflation accelerate­d to 7.1 percent in September, above the Central Bank’s target, as the worst drought in 40 years followed by the most severe flooding in more than a decade disrupted supplies and fuelled price gains.

The economy will grow between 4 percent and 4.5 percent in 2017, Coomaraswa­my said last month, lower than his June projection­s of 4.5 percent to 5 percent. According to the IMF, growth will likely be below 4.5 percent this year and rebound in 2018 as weather-related woes pass and infrastruc­ture projects pick up, IMF Mission Chief Jaewoo Lee said in Colombo on September 29 after holding discussion­s on the third review of Sri Lanka’s US $ 1.5 billion programme.

“While one can be cautiously optimistic, it’s important to realize it’s a fragile recovery,” Coomaraswa­my said.

The government plans to sell a foreign currency bond early next year and hasn’t yet decided which currency to borrow in, Coomaraswa­my said.

“We are agnostic, we will look for the best deal,” he said. The tenor will be 10 years at least and options include yen, renminbi, dollars and others. Sri Lanka in May successful­ly sold US $ 1.5 billion of debt overseas, after getting more than US $ 11 billion of orders.”

 ??  ?? Indrajit Coomaraswa­my
Indrajit Coomaraswa­my

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