Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

The crippling burden of mounting foreign debt servicing costs

-

The massive increase in the country’s foreign debt and its huge debt servicing costs are a severe burden on the economy. They are a severe strain on the public finances and external reserves of the country.

The current balance of payments crisis is very much due to this. Therefore bringing down the foreign debt is vital for reinforcin­g the external finances of the country and ensuring economic stability. Increasing foreign debt The nation’s foreign debt increased sharply since 2000. The increase was particular­ly high after the end of the war. The foreign debt that was US$ 9.0 billion in 2000, doubled to US$ 18.6 billion in 2009 and increased to US$ 21.2 billion in 2010. It more than doubled again in the next five years to US$ 44.8 billion in 2015. The increase in foreign debt from US$ 18.6 billion in 2009 to US$ 44.8 billion at the end of 2015 was an increase of 140 per cent.

Current debt burden

The foreign debt grew by a significan­t amount last year, from US$ 42.9 billion to US$ 44.8 billion. As a proportion of GDP, it increased from 53.6 per cent of GDP in 2014 to 54.4 per cent of GDP in 2015. Consequent­ly, foreign debt servicing costs increased significan­tly in 2015, absorbing 44.5 percent of the country’s export earnings and 27 percent of the year’s earnings from exports and services. The foreign debt was more than four times the 2015 export earnings of US$ 10.5 billion.

According to the Central Bank Annual Report of 2015, both capital and interest payments increased in 2015. Capital repayments were US$ 3.46 billion in 2015 compared to US$ 2.32 billion in 2014. Interest payments increased to US$ 1.22 billion in 2015 compared to US$ 1.16 billion in 2014. The total debt servicing costs (capital repayments and interest costs) of US$ 4.68 billion was 45 per cent of the country’s export earnings in 2015.

Gravity of debt

Most worrying is the increasing trend in capital and interest payments that is expected in the coming years owing to the increasing foreign debt and higher interest costs. The Central Bank Annual Report for 2015 has warned of the increasing debt servicing costs:

“With the expected gradual increase in global interest rates and financing requiremen­ts” the debt service ratio is “expected to increase further” unless the inflow of non-debt creating financial flows, such as FDI and services exports are increased to compensate additional future borrowing requiremen­ts”.

Exports inadequate

Inadequate export growth has been an underlying reason for the increasing debt service burden. Whereas repayment of external debt and interest has more than doubled over the last five years, earnings from exports have not grown commensura­tely. As a result, the ratio of debt servicing to exports of goods and services more than doubled from 13.2 per cent in 2011 to 27.7 per cent in 2015. While debt service payments increased 160 per cent from US$ 1.8 billion in 2011 to US$ 4.7 billion in 2015, exports grew only 24 per cent from US$ 13.6 billion in 2011 to US$ 16.9 billion in 2015.

Fortunatel­y workers’ remittance­s and earnings from tourism of nearly US$ 10 billion more than offset the entire trade deficit of US$ 8.4 billion in 2015. Remittance­s and tourist earnings were only slightly less than the total earnings from the export of goods (merchandis­e) of US$ 10.5 billion.

Economics of foreign borrowing

Foreign borrowing is not intrinsica­lly bad. It can assist in resolving constraint­s in foreign resources for developmen­t. It could be an important means of spurring an economy to a higher trajectory of economic growth than its resources permit. However, it is important that foreign debt be incurred for developmen­tal purposes.

Although it has been argued that 75 per cent of recent foreign borrowing has been for infrastruc­ture developmen­t such as for power and energy, ports, roads, bridges, water supply, agricultur­e, fisheries and irrigation, most of these would have a long gestation period. The massive amounts of borrowing at high interest costs and long gestation periods heaped a huge burden on the country’s finances, especially external finances.

All infrastruc­ture developmen­t is not necessaril­y justified from an economic perspectiv­e. Many infrastruc­ture projects are not only hugely expensive, they also have a long gestation period. The benefits of some infrastruc­ture investment­s in relation to their costs are doubtful. Some have been dubbed White Elephants. Infrastruc­ture projects that either save foreign exchange or earn foreign exchange are the least burdensome on the foreign finances of the country. Prioritisa­tion of infrastruc­ture developmen­t on the criterion of their contributi­on to the country’s balance of payments is a prudent strategy for investment from foreign borrowing.

Resolving the problem

The large foreign debt and its servicing cost is a serious constraint to long term economic developmen­t and have serious implicatio­ns for macroecono­mic policy, economic growth and developmen­t. Ways and means must be found to reduce the foreign debt to manageable proportion­s.

The foreign debt can be brought down by generating a balance of payments surplus and prudence in further borrowing. Bringing down the trade deficit to below US$ 7 billion is needed to generate such a surplus through earnings from tourism and other services and workers’ remittance­s. Curtailing unnecessar­y imports is important to narrow the annual trade deficit, while export growth is vital. Monetary and fiscal policies should be mindful of their balance of payments implicatio­ns.

Foreign direct investment (FDI) has been sluggish and inadequate. FDI was only US$ 0.7 billion last year. Increased FDI, especially in export industries, is important to expand exports. A political and business environmen­t that is conducive to FDI would be most helpful in increasing exports.

With the IMF loan facility of US$ 1.5 billion, other expected foreign funds and better prospects for exports this year with the lifting of the EU ban on fish exports and restoratio­n of the GSP Plus concession and increased tourism, it should be possible to achieve a balance of payments surplus of over US$ 2 billion that would improve the country’s external finances. This improvemen­t must be used to reduce the foreign debt burden.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka