Times of Oman

Sri Lankan economy to grow in 2024 after contractin­g this year

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The Sri Lankan economy is expected to contract by three per cent in 2023, before registerin­g a modest growth of 1.5 per cent in 2024, said Krishna Srinivasan, Director of Asia and Pacific Department, IMF.

The IMF official said the country’s economic prospects hinge quite critically on the implementa­tion of the economic reform program it had agreed in particular for five key areas.

The five key areas were an ambitious revenue-based fiscal consolidat­ion, restoratio­n of public debt sustainabi­lity, a multi-pronged strategy to restore price stability and rebuild reserves, policies to safeguard financial sector stability, and structural reforms to address corruption vulnerabil­ities and enhance growth.

Krishna Srinivasan, Director of Asia and Pacific Department, IMF said the country’s economic prospects hinge quite critically on the implementa­tion of the economic reform programme it had agreed in particular for five key areas

Crisis-hit

In March this year, the IMF Executive Board approved a 48-month extended arrangemen­t under the Extended Fund Facility of $3 billion to support crisis-hit Sri Lanka’s economic policies and reforms. Of the total $3 billion funds, the country was immediatel­y promised an initial disburseme­nt of about $330 million. Sri Lanka has been facing a severe economic crisis as a result of past policy missteps and economic shocks.

Srinivasan is in Colombo, his first visit to Sri Lanka, to further strengthen the IMF’s engagement with all stakeholde­rs in the country. In addition to meeting with the President and top leadership of the country, he engaged with members of the opposition, civil society organizati­ons, trade unions, think tanks, and other stakeholde­rs.

External financing

“Sri Lanka, as you know, has been facing a severe crisis because of past policy missteps and back-toback economic shocks. We have been deeply concerned about the impact of the crisis on the Sri Lankan people, particular­ly the poor and vulnerable groups, and about the economic costs of the delay in the country’s access to external financing,” Srinivasan said, referring to what challengin­g global environmen­t mean for Sri Lanka.

The IMF official commended Sri Lanka for having already started implementi­ng many of the challengin­g policy actions in those five key areas.

It is now essential to continue the reform momentum under strong ownership by the authoritie­s and the Sri Lankan people, more broadly, he added.

“Economic impact of the reforms on the poor and vulnerable needs to be mitigated with appropriat­e measures. In this regard, we welcome the authoritie­s’ firm commitment to strengthen social safety nets, including through a minimum spending floor, welltarget­ed spending through the new social registry and establishm­ent of objective eligibilit­y criteria.”

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