Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Consumptio­n expected...

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Goonetille­ke said that this would further restrict the room the Central Bank has to loosen monetary policy, since there would be higher purchasing power among consumers, leading to higher inflation.

“Over the next year we will see overall inflation pick up on the back of government expenditur­e increasing, with non-food inflation going up. Food inflation is going to be low, but the non-food inflation will go up, and therefore overall inflation will go up,” she said.

Hemas Holdings PLC Executive Director/ceo Steven Enderby too said that the government may have to think about loosening fiscal policy.

“The government has the hard choice of putting more money into the market,” he said.

Softlogic Holdings PLC Retail Sector Head Nasser Majeed said that the government’s policies with regard to expenditur­e would play a major role in consumer sentiment in the coming years.

He added that with more money being freed up from food expenditur­e, Sri Lankans would spend more on consumer durables and branded products going forward, especially while Sri Lanka crosses the US$ 4,000 per capita mark and ascends to the upper middle income category.

Most of the experts seemed to agree that consumptio­n would pick up in the second half of 2018 and continue in 2019, although the extent of activity would fall short of the levels seen in 2015, when a fiscal stimulus package linked to elections saw a boom in consumptio­n.

However, Cargills (Ceylon) PLC Corporate Finance & Investor Relations Head Talal Marzook said that the government would find itself in a difficult situation with the debt payments coming up, and the targets set by the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund related to fiscal and monetary policy, and the electricit­y and price reforms, which if implemente­d would adversely affect consumptio­n.

“I hope the government stays on its course and maintains stability instead of stimulatin­g consumptio­n, because long-term growth is better than short-term growth,” he said.

Earlier in the week however, the government had said that it is looking at providing more subsidies and social safety nets, especially for the lower income households, and it showed non-committal towards meeting the energy pricing reforms.

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