Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Govt. asks IMF for 1-yr loan extension, relax tight spending targets

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Loan crucial as SL plans to raise US $ 3bn via bond sales as early as next week

Govt. requests IMF to push back deficit target of 3.5% of GDP agreed earlier Amendments to IMFbacked new Inland Revenue Act urged Govt.’s talks with visiting IMF team to end tomorrow (Colombo) REUTERS: Sri Lanka has asked the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) to extend a US $1.5 billion loan by another year and relax its tight spending targets ahead of key elections, two government sources close t o t he negotiatio­ns t old Reuters yesterday. The loan is crucial for Sri Lanka, which plans to sell up to US $3 billion bonds as early as next week and needs the IMF programme to continue to ensure more attractive borrowing terms. The global lender delayed discussion­s on the sixth tranche of a three-year loan in November after a political crisis that has led to a slump in economic growth on the island. At the time, the IMF said it had suspended the programme until it had more clarity on the political situation, after President Maithripal­a Sirisena abruptly sacked his prime minister i n a move t hat was later ruled unconstitu­tional. The government has requested the IMF push back its deficit target of 3.5 percent of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) agreed under the loan programme to 2021 from 2020, a senior government official familiar with the discussion­s t old Reuters. “The discussion­s were focused on budget deficit and expenditur­e numbers,” the source said. “We will not deviate from the fiscal consolidat­ion path. But expenditur­e cannot be drasticall­y curtailed this year, given it is an election year. We hope there could be a compromise.” A second official said Colombo had t old t he lender that an Imf-backed revenue act, which was a condition for granting the loan, also needs amendments. Officials from the IMF were not immediatel­y available for comment. The talks will end t o m o r r o w.

The IMF has disbursed over US $1 billion of the US $1.5 billion loan agreed in 2016. It was designed to avert a financial crisis and support the economic reform agenda of President Maithripal­a Sirisena’s coalition government.

Sri Lanka is due to hold a presidenti­al election this year and parliament­ary polls in 2020.

Junior Finance Minister Eran Wickremera­tne told Reuters that the government will move ahead with a plan to sell sovereign bonds after the IMF discussion­s conclude.

Sri Lanka is struggling to repay its foreign loans, with a record US $5.9 billion due this year, including US $2.6 billion in the first three months. It used its reserves to repay a US $1 billion sovereign bond loan in January.

The South Asian island nation failed to finalise financing it had planned in the first quarter, including a US $300 million loan from Bank of China and a US $400 million swap from Reserve Bank of India.

Sirisena’s abrupt change of prime minister and decision to dissolve parliament created panic and uncertaint­y among investors, who dumped Sri Lankan government bonds and other assets, sending the rupee currency to record lows.

The move was later ruled unconstitu­tional and Ranil Wickremesi­nghe was reinstated as Prime Minister after 51 days.

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