Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

IMF AGREES $1.5 BN BAILOUT FOR SL TO AVERT BOP CRISIS

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The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) has reached agreement with the government for a $1.5 billion bailout to help the island nation avert a balance of payments crisis.

The Sri Lankan authoritie­s and the IMF have reached a stafflevel agreement on a 36-month Extended Fund Facility (EFF)

The three-year loan will require IMF board approval in June, the global lender said on Friday, and is subject to Sri Lanka implementi­ng reforms, including streamlini­ng the tax code and reducing a bloated deficit.“the Sri Lankan authoritie­s and the IMF have reached a staff-level agreement on a 36-month Extended Fund Facility (EFF),” for a $1.5 billion loan, Todd Schneider, IMF mission chief for Sri Lanka, said in a statement.

The agreement comes as debt-laden Sri Lanka faces a looming balance of payments crisis due to heavy foreign outflows from Government securities and high external debt repayments.

Sentiment on financial markets was bolstered by the IMF deal, helping the rupee currency LKR to trade firmer. Sri Lanka’s foreign exchange

The Government will seek to raise the taxto-gross domestic product (GDP) ratio, which was 10.8 percent in 2014, to near 15 percent by 2020 through a new Inland Revenue Act, reform of the VAT and the Customs code, Schneider said.

reserves have fallen by a third from their peak in late 2014 to $6.2 billion at end-march.

The Government will seek to raise the tax-to-gross domestic product (GDP) ratio, which was 10.8 percent in 2014, to near 15 percent by 2020 through a new Inland Revenue Act, reform of the VAT and the Customs code, Schneider said.

The loan - the second bailout from the IMF since 2009 - will support the Government’s ambitious economic reform agenda aimed at fundamenta­l changes to tax policy, reverse a two-decade decline in tax revenues, and put public finances on a sustainabl­e medium-term footing, Schneider said.“stronger revenue performanc­e will enable smaller fiscal deficits and lower borrowing, reduce the overhang of public debt, and ease pressure on the balance of payments.”

Sri Lanka’s 2015 budget deficit hit 7.4 percent of GDP, up from 5.7 percent in 2014.

Schneider said the formal approval of the EFF was “expected to catalyze” an additional $650 million loans, bringing total support to about $2.2 billion.

The majority of the $650 million loans will be from the World Bank and the Asian Developmen­t Bank, government officials told Reuters.

“This (agreement) will boost the investor confidence,” Central Bank Governor Arjuna Mahendran told Reuters via telephone from Hong Kong. Finance Minister Ravi Karunanaya­ke said Sri Lanka was already well on the way to implementi­ng reforms, including raising value added tax (VAT) by 4 percent, announcing a restructur­ing plan for its loss-making staterun airline, and eliminatin­g tax holidays granted by a state-run investment body.

Moody’s Ratings agency said in a statement the loan would provide external liquidity to ease immediate financing pressures and could reduce Sri Lanka’s vulnerabil­ity to a sudden halt in capital inflows. Reuters

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