Eastern Eye (UK)

PRIME MINISTER SAYS COUNTRY MUST ACHIEVE STABILITY BY END OF 2023

-

SRI LANKA will need $5 billion (£4bn) over the next six months to ensure basic living standards and is renegotiat­ing the terms of a yuan-denominate­d swap worth $1.5bn (£1.1bn) with China so as to fund essential imports, the prime minister said on Tuesday (7).

The island nation’s worst economic crisis in seven decades led to a shortage of foreign exchange that stalled imports of essential items such as fuel, medicine and fertiliser, provoking devaluatio­n, street protests and a change of government. To tide over the turmoil, Sri Lanka will need about $3.3bn for fuel imports, $900 million for food, $250m for cooking gas and $600m more for fertiliser this year, prime minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe told parliament.

The central bank has estimated the economy will contract by 3.5 per cent in 2022, Wickremesi­nghe said, but added that he was confident growth could return with a strong reform package, debt restructur­ing and internatio­nal support.

“Only establishi­ng economic stability is not enough, we have to restructur­e the entire economy,” said Wickremesi­nghe, who is working on an interim budget to balance battered public finances. “We need to achieve economic stability by the end of 2023.”

The island nation of 22 million is negotiatin­g a loan package worth about $3bn from the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, in addition to help from countries such as China, India and Japan.

On Tuesday, the cabinet approved a $55m credit line from India’s Exim Bank to fund 150,000 tonnes of urea imports – a critical requiremen­t as supplies have run out during the current cropping season.

“Farmers do not need to be worried about not having inputs for the next season,” cabinet spokesman Bandula Gunawarden­a told reporters, estimating that 150,000 tons of urea would be needed for the next cultivatio­n cycle.

While food inflation of 57 per cent is partly driven by higher global commodity prices, a depreciate­d currency and low domestic production, it is estimated that yields from the next harvest will be halved by the lack of fertiliser.

The United Nations is set to make a worldwide public appeal for Sri Lanka on Wednesday (8), and has pledged $48m for food, agricultur­e and health, Wickremesi­nghe said. Sri Lanka was also renegotiat­ing with China the terms of a yuan denominate­d swap worth $1.5bn agreed last year.

The initial terms provided that the swap could only be used if Sri Lanka maintained reserves equivalent to three months of imports. But with reserves now well below that level, Sri Lanka has to request China to reconsider the requiremen­t and allow the swap to proceed, Wickremesi­nghe said.

Wickremesi­nghe, who is also finance minister, will unveil an interim budget next month that he said aims to slash government expenses and looks to increase annual welfare spending to $500m from about $350m.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom