Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

No painless path for SL to come out of crisis : Dr. Coomaraswa­my

„Says govt. must choose least painful path for people „Insists on greater independen­ce for CB to conduct its core functions „Urges govt. to seek IMF programme with debt restructur­ing programme embedded

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While stressing on the need for greater independen­ce of the Central Bank (CB) to conduct its core functions, instead of becoming the banker for the government, former CB Governor Dr. Indrajit Coomaraswa­my urged the government to choose the least painful path, with a mediumterm approach, to emerge out of the current external sector crisis, as there is no painless path.

Speaking at Sri Lanka Economic Summit 2021, held in Colombo yesterday, Dr. Coomaraswa­my outlined that the external sector crisis is the most immediate crisis that needs to be addressed, as the country’s gross official foreign reserves have plummeted to a historical low of US $ 1.5 billion while the estimated net drain on foreign exchange reserves estimated to be at US $ 7 billion over the next 12 months.

“This external financing gap needs to be filled. The CB in its roadmap set out a number of sources of financing that could be tapped to fill this external financing gap. And if we are able to materialis­e sufficient financing through these channels, that’s fine.

However, not only do we need to mobilise sufficient external financing to fill the gap but also we have an onerous debt service of US $ 4 billion plus over the next four or five years. So, we need to have a solution, a medium-term solution that addresses this external financing challenge. There are no painless options. We need to work out the path, which gives us the least pain,” he elaborated.

However, if the CB’S six-month roadmap fails to meet its funding targets, Dr. Coomaraswa­my stressed that an Internatio­nal Monetary

Fund (IMF) programme, which is embedded with a debt restructur­ing exercise, is to be the country’s only solution to come out of the current crisis.

“An IMF programme will provide balance of payment (BOP) support. It will also provide direct budgetary support from the World Bank, IDB, ADB and one or two bilateral donors. In addition, the IMF certificat­ion make us more creditwort­hy; both the public and private sector would be able to tap into internatio­nal markets easily,” he noted.

Meanwhile, Dr. Coomaraswa­my pointed out that the current monetary policy conduct of the CB in prioritisi­ng fiscal operations has led to additional inflationa­ry pressure, rising interest rates while challengin­g the sustainabi­lity of the BOP. “The primary cause for this has been the government’s budgetary operations. The negative impact of the government’s budgetary operations has been amplified by fiscal forbearanc­e in the conduct of monetary policy by the CB. This toxic combinatio­n has led to elevated inflation, high interest rates and unsustaina­ble BOP,” he added.

Hence, he urged the government to provide sufficient autonomy for the CB to conduct its monetary policy, prioritisi­ng its core objectives as stipulated in the Monetary Law Act. “The CB should have sufficient autonomy to conduct a data-driven, proactive monetary policy that takes into account the transmissi­on lags and anchors inflation and inflation expectatio­ns. The mandate of the CB is price and economic stability, which is laid out in its foundation­al law; it should have precedence over agency function of raising money for the government,” he asserted. (NF)

 ?? ?? Dr. Indrajit Coomaraswa­my
Dr. Indrajit Coomaraswa­my

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