Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Sri Lanka’s economy hemmed in by COVID-19 and...

- BY DR. DUSHNI WEERAKOON (Courtesy East Asia Forum) (Dushni Weerakoon is Executive Director and Head of Macroecono­mic Policy Research at the Institute of Policy Studies of Sri Lanka)

IN THIS ENVIRONMEN­T OF ESCALATING BIG POWER RIVALRIES AND UNRELENTIN­G PRESSURE ON THE ECONOMY FROM COVID-19, 2021 PROMISES TO BE YET ANOTHER TESTING YEAR FOR SRI LANKA. THIS IS PARTICULAR­LY SO AS THE GLOBAL ECONOMY AND INTERNATIO­NAL POWER RELATIONS ARE BEING RESET IN FUNDAMENTA­L WAYS

The unpreceden­ted disruption­s of COVID-19 are causing a geopolitic­al reset — and as the global order is redrawn, small emerging market economies like Sri Lanka are vulnerable to the fallout. Sri Lanka straddles vital shipping routes and is at the centre of diplomatic spats between China and the United States, who called on Sri Lanka to make ‘difficult but necessary choices’ over its growing economic and political ties to China.

In December 2020, a US grant offer of US $ 480 million under its Millennium Challenge Corporatio­n was withdrawn and any further assistance under the US Coronaviru­s Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act has been made conditiona­l on Sri Lanka containing China’s influence. China in turn denounced what it considers as US pressure on countries ‘to pick sides’. The challenges are many for Sri Lanka’s newly-elected government to sidestep global rivalries and maintain its stated stance of a neutral foreign policy.

The economic fallout of the COVID19 pandemic is not helping. Sri Lanka’s economy was already weak, weighed down by persistent­ly low growth averaging under 3 percent, high public debt nearing 90 percent of GDP and large fiscal deficits of near 7 percent of GDP at end-2019. With foreign debt settlement­s averaging US $ 4 billion per year due in 2020-2023 — primarily in the form of internatio­nal sovereign bonds — Sri Lanka’s ability to implement fiscal and monetary stimulus, without generating further macroecono­mic imbalances, is severely constraine­d.

Sri Lanka had early success in battling COVID-19, recording only 3000 cases and 11 deaths by end-september 2020. This helped to revive economic activities. But a second and more severe wave of infections has seen those numbers spike sharply to over 43,000 infections and 204 deaths as the year drew to an end.

Dealing with Sri Lanka’s foreign debt settlement­s remains the most critical priority for now. Despite sovereign credit rating downgrades, the government remains confident of meeting all repayments without resorting to a conditiona­l arrangemen­t with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund. This is in keeping with the government’s stated intentions of moving away from foreign loans to foreign investment, with the latter already earmarked to raise an estimated US $ 2.5 billion in 2021. For Sri Lanka’s debtburden­ed economy, the strategy makes good sense. Yet, it will also pose fresh challenges in dealing with rivalries closer to home, such as that between China and India.

While the Chinese debt trap narrative can be disabused, China does remain Sri Lanka’s largest bilateral creditor, owning 9.6 percent of total outstandin­g foreign debt at end-2019. India’s share is a much smaller 2.4 percent. Sri Lanka made an early appeal to both countries to provide debt relief and hard currency to shore up its foreign exchange reserves. China and India responded swiftly and positively — China granted a US $ 500 million loan top up and India provided a US $ 400 million swap arrangemen­t. Sri Lanka is reportedly seeking an additional US $ 2.5 billion swap funding from both.

Such assistance will not be devoid of China and India’s competing interests. Sri Lanka will have to look at its past missteps in balancing their regional interests and avoid a repeat. Indeed, China’s pervading presence and India’s response to it is acknowledg­ed by Sri Lankan Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa himself as a key factor behind his unexpected presidenti­al election defeat in 2015.

This time around, Sri Lanka is emphasisin­g an Asia-centric outlook in its political, economic and strategic positionin­g. Tellingly, it also assures an ‘India first’ strategic and security policy within this realignmen­t. How it will work in the harsh light of Sri Lanka’s economic reality is yet to be determined.

For now, Chinese investment­s into Sri Lanka are speeding ahead. The China Harbour Engineerin­g Company (CHEC) that built the Colombo Port City signed its first US $ 1 billion agreement in December 2020. This was on the back of approval to set up a US $ 300 million Chinese tire factory in close proximity to the Hambantota Port. At the same time, a decision on whether India will be allowed to operate a terminal at the Port of Colombo that the previous government had agreed to is still pending, despite a recent high level visit by the External Affairs Minister.

Balancing these tensions and tradeoffs will test Sri Lanka’s political and diplomatic skills. Fresh hostilitie­s between China and India on renewed border conflicts, India’s decision to withdraw from the Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p negotiatio­ns — which China played a leading role in — and rising battles over technology all point to a hardening geopolitic­al standoff. In this environmen­t of escalating big power rivalries and unrelentin­g pressure on the economy from COVID-19, 2021 promises to be yet another testing year for Sri Lanka. This is particular­ly so as the global economy and internatio­nal power relations are being reset in fundamenta­l ways.

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