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IMF tells Sri Lanka to rebuild reserves

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COLOMBO: The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) has urged Sri Lanka’s central bank to rebuild internatio­nal reserves, while maintainin­g exchange rate flexibilit­y, and to be ready to tighten monetary policy if credit growth or inflation do not abate.

Following its second review of a US$1.5bil three-year loan programme, the IMF also said its mission and Sri Lankan authoritie­s discussed the need to push forward with reforms due to an uncertain external environmen­t.

It also noted that while all fiscal quantitati­ve targets through end-December were met, net internatio­nal reserves fell below target and progress on implementi­ng structural benchmarks was “somewhat uneven with some of the reforms lagging behind intended timelines”.

Generally, the IMF delays subsequent tranche if the respective member-country drasticall­y deviate from the targets, but the IMF did not say whether it would hold back the third tranche of US$119.9mil, due to be disbursed on April 20.

“To this end, it is important for the government to continue on the revenue based fiscal consolidat­ion and generate adequate resources to support its social and developmen­t objectives while maintainin­g debt sustainabi­lity,” the IMF said in a statement.

It also urged Sri Lanka to accelerate implementa­tion of structural reforms in public financial management and state-owned enterprise­s.

The global lender also warned that a more prolonged drought could raise food and oil imports, and have an adverse impact on growth, inflation, and the balance of payments.

Sri Lanka’s worst drought in 40 years may cost up to US$264.7mil, but should not worsen the fiscal deficit, Finance Minister Ravi Karunanaya­ke said last week.

The central bank is struggling to maintain a flexible exchange rate in the face of heavy foreign outflows from government securities. The rupee currency has depreciate­d 1% so far this year, having lost 3.9% of its value against the US dollar last year.

The central bank tightened monetary policy three times in seven months through July last year to curb high credit growth and inflation. But those moves have dragged on the economy. — Reuters

 ??  ?? IMF proposals: A woman walks past the main entrance of Sri Lanka’s Central Bank in Colombo. The IMF has urged Sri Lanka to accelerate implementa­tion of structural reforms in public financial management and state-owned enterprise­s. — Reuters
IMF proposals: A woman walks past the main entrance of Sri Lanka’s Central Bank in Colombo. The IMF has urged Sri Lanka to accelerate implementa­tion of structural reforms in public financial management and state-owned enterprise­s. — Reuters

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