Eastern Eye (UK)

Hard-hit Sri Lanka hikes fuel prices to record high

NEW RATES APPROVED ‘TO CUT HUGE LOSSES AT STATE-RUN FIRM’

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CASH-STRAPPED Sri Lanka sharply hiked fuel prices to a record high on Tuesday (24), causing further pain to the country’s 22 million people in its worst crisis since independen­ce.

The south Asian island nation has suffered months of dire shortages and anti-government protests, which turned deadly earlier in May with at least nine people killed. Energy minister Kanchana Wijesekera said a newly appointed “economic war cabinet” on Monday (23) approved the new rates to stem huge losses at the state-run Ceylon Petroleum Corp.

The price of diesel, commonly used in public transport, was raised from 289 Sri Lankan rupees (£0.64) to 400 rupees (£0.88) a litre, a 38-per cent jump, while the cost of a litre of petrol was increased from 338 to 420 rupees.

Diesel prices have increased 230 per cent and petrol has gone up 137 per cent in the past six months. Both are in short supply and motorists have to queue, sometimes for days, to fill up.

An acute foreign exchange shortage has also led to widespread scarcity of food and medicines, with the public suffering lengthy electricit­y blackouts and high inflation. Bus and taxi fares have risen by up to 50 per cent sparking price increases in almost all goods and services, officials said.

Wijesekera said the government was seeking a $500 million (£399m) loan from India to purchase fuel, in addition to two credit lines worth $700m (£558m) already provided by New Delhi.

The census office reported on Monday that the country’s overall inflation last month was a staggering 33.8 per cent year on year, with food inflation at an even higher 45.1 per cent. However, an economist at Johns Hopkins University, Steve Hanke, who tracks prices in the world’s trouble spots, said Sri Lanka’s inflation was even higher than officially reported.

“Using high-frequency data and the purchasing power parity technique, I accurately measure inflation at 122 per cent year on year,” Hanke said, referring to March inflation, which was officially 21.5 per cent. “Inflation is crushing the poorest in Sri Lanka,” he added.

Sri Lanka last month announced a sovereign default on its $51 billion foreign debt and is in talks with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund to secure a bailout.

Cabinet spokesman Bandula Gunawardan­a said the government decided on Monday to appoint consultant­s to help Colombo negotiate debt restructur­ing as a prelude to an IMF programme.

France-based Lazard will negotiate with Sri Lanka’s sovereign bondholder­s and other creditors, while internatio­nal law firm Clifford Chance was retained to provide legal expertise. Sri Lanka imposed a broad import ban in March 2020 to save foreign currency as dollar inflows slowed.

The pandemic compounded economic woes triggered by president Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s drastic tax cuts in 2019.

Prime minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe took office this month after the protest violence forced the resignatio­n of his predecesso­r Mahinda Rajapaksa, the brother of the president.

Protesters are continuing to demand the president quit, and the country is still without a finance minister to conduct urgent talks with the IMF.

 ?? ?? ACUTE SHORTAGE: A woma wait beside LPG cylinders along a treet in Colombo on Monday 23
ACUTE SHORTAGE: A woma wait beside LPG cylinders along a treet in Colombo on Monday 23

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