Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

President appeals for “unconditio­nal” budget support from intl. lenders to revive economy

- „ „▪ By Shabiya Ali Ahlam

„„▪ Says multilater­al and bilateral official creditors have “special responsibi­lity” to be innovative to create such space „

„▪ Stresses that leading agencies and leaders should act fast “without” placing conditiona­lities

„▪ „Tells intl. community such support will help restore confidence, re-energise growth and investment­s

President Gotabaya Rajapaksa this week appealed for “unconditio­nal” support from the internatio­nal community so that middle-income countries like Sri Lanka can maintain confidence in the private debt and equity market since the ongoing COVID crisis has spiraled out of control from the hands of government­s and businesses.

Pointing out that multilater­al and bilateral official creditors have a “special responsibi­lity” towards developing countries to be innovative in creating such space for the developing world to revive their economies, President Rajapaksa expressed that such parties “should not” insist on normal conditiona­lities of lending.

“As this is a crisis beyond the control of government and businesses, internatio­nal support by way of unconditio­nal budget support and compensato­ry debt deferment facilities for official debt will have to come from multilater­al and bilateral official lenders so that private debt and equity markets will not lose confidence,” President Rajapaksa told a virtual ‘Highlevel Event on Financing for Developmen­t in the Era of COVID-19 and Beyond’ organised by the Prime Ministers of Canada, Jamaica and the UN Secretary General on May 28.

According to Rajapaksa, financial support of such nature should be extended to the developing and aspiring nations as most countries in that category have honoured their debt obligation­s. “Time has come to provide new space through a decent haircut by official creditors,” he said.

Sharing the areas identified as priority by the Sri Lankan government, the President said the island nation’s prime focus is on developing agricultur­e and food security, environmen­t conservati­on, renewable energy resources, digital economy and digital governance, rural economy and poverty reduction, market access to people and business community.

The stated developmen­ts would take place through improved connectivi­ty to villages and creating green cities in line with the country’s environmen­t conservati­on strategies which suffered a setback with almost two months lockdown in the economy.

“We have taken steps to ease restrictio­ns from this week while keeping health quarantine standards to ensure community will not be vulnerable to COVID-19 health risks.

“However as two months loss in the real economy and likely timeline to reach normalcy will be longer, external funding must be ‘developmen­t centric’ by all aspects of such facilities,” said Rajapaksa.

The President noted that the profiling of official debt and medium term emergency budget support loans by each major bilateral and multilater­al lender will not only provide macroecono­mic space to meet private debt obligation­s and relax trade and payments systems, but would also restore confidence among private sector creditors to re-energise growth and investment­s.

Rajapaksa reiterated that it is the responsibi­lity of leading agencies and leaders of the world to act fast in this time of crisis “without” placing conditiona­lities among themselves and coming forward as developmen­t partners in respective developing and middle-income economies.

“This dialogue must concentrat­e on how developing and middle income countries are assisted with emergency funding facility,” he asserted whilst pointing out that countries should be encouraged to focus on human developmen­t aspects including education, health, women and children, new export industries, food security and environmen­t, to ensure a better and stable world,” he said.

 ??  ?? President Gotabaya Rajapaksa
President Gotabaya Rajapaksa

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