Eastern Eye (UK)

‘Positive’ IMF talks to boost Sri Lanka plans

PRESIDENT UNVEILS INTERIM BUDGET TO BRING ECONOMY BACK ON TRACK

-

TALKS with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) on a bailout package have made solid progress, the Sri Lankan president said on Tuesday (30), as he presented an interim budget aimed at boosting revenue and mending the country’s battered finances.

In an address to parliament, president Ranil Wickremesi­nghe also said the government would aim to control inflation and introduce legislatio­n to bolster central bank independen­ce.

The island nation of 22 million people is battling its worst economic crisis since independen­ce from Britain in 1948. Wickremesi­nghe, who took over as president last month, is pushing to bring in fiscal consolidat­ion measures agreed with the IMF.

Negotiatio­ns with the IMF, which has a team of officials visiting Sri Lanka, had made headway, said Wickremesi­nghe, who also serves as finance minister.

“Many people are still unaware of how serious this financial crisis is. But it is imperative that we use this opportunit­y to correct past mistakes and implement long-term policies that will stabilise the economy and take us out of the challenges we currently face,” he said.

“Talks with the IMF have reached a positive juncture and we will also hold discussion­s with creditors on how to put Sri Lanka debt on a sustainabl­e path.”

Sri Lankan officials hope the budget will be followed by a preliminar­y, staff-level agreement with the IMF for a loan package worth between $2 billion (£1.71bn) and $3 bn (£2.56bn).

The country’s sovereign bonds jumped 1.9 cents on the dollar following Wickremesi­nghe’s address, although they were still below 33 cents (28p), less than a third of their face value.

Outlining a raft of measures to stabilise the bruised economy, Wickremesi­nghe said he aimed to bring annual inflation down to mid single-digit levels from over 66 per cent currently.

Fresh taxes will be introduced in the next full-year budget, but value-added tax will rise from next month to 15 per cent from 12 per cent currently.

In the medium term, Sri Lanka will aim to bring its debt to GDP ratio below 100 per cent, down from around 120 per cent currently, alongside economic growth of five per cent.

The economy is likely to contract eight per cent this

year and growth is not likely until the second half of 2023, the central bank said earlier.

The government will introduce legislatio­n to reduce politicisa­tion of the Central Bank of Sri Lanka and reduce money printing, Wickremesi­nghe said.

Separate new laws would also be brought in to strengthen fiscal management, restructur­e over-leveraged firms and fight corruption.

The Covid-19 pandemic upended Sri Lanka’s tourismrel­iant economy and slashed remittance­s from workers overseas. The damage was compounded by rising oil prices, populist tax cuts and a seven-month ban on importing chemical fertiliser­s last year that devastated the agricultur­e sector.

The result has been chronic shortages of basic goods, runaway inflation and mass protests that forced then president Gotabaya Rajapaksa to flee the country. It left his successor, Wickremesi­nghe, to handle the restructur­ing of billions of dollars in debt to China and other countries.

 ?? ?? MEASURED APPROACH: Ranil Wickremesi­nghe
MEASURED APPROACH: Ranil Wickremesi­nghe

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom