Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

NEC advocates growthorie­nted policy to solve core issues in economy

- By Nishel Fernando

„Says SL will have to grow much higher than current 4-5%

„But admits reaching targeted 4% growth this year would be challengin­g „Says SL will have to pay higher risk premium for future borrowings due to political crisis

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The National Economic Council (NEC) asserted that a medium to long-term economic policy and programme enhancing economic growth is the best and only viable remedy to address the fundamenta­l issues in Sri Lanka’s economy amid a challengin­g global environmen­t, which is expected to lead to slower growth and higher borrowing cost for emerging and frontier markets.

“We need to have an economic policy and programmes, which are growth-oriented, investment­oriented and export-oriented, that provides proper incentives in order achieve the anticipate­d growth.

“Ultimately, growth is the best and only answer. Sri Lanka will have to grow much higher than 4-5 percent we have seen during last few years,” National Economic Council (NEC) Secretary General and Chief Economist Prof. Lalith Samarakoon, said.

He made these remarks during a discussion on “Sri Lanka’s Economic Challenges in the year 2019’ in Colombo last Friday.

Prof. Samarakoon noted that it would be challengin­g for Sri Lanka to reach the targeted 4 percent GDP growth this year while achieving respective targets in fiscal and current account deficits.

He pointed out that normalisat­ion of monetary policies in advanced economics, particular­ly in the United Stated, has led to higher cost of borrowing for developing countries and movement of capital back to advanced economics.

He outlined a list of global woes which are adversely impacting Sri Lanka and other emerging and frontier economies ranging from slowing down of global economic growth to Brexit to volatility in internatio­nally capital markets to the trade war between the United States and China.

Speaking of debt servicing from next year amid the current political crisis in the country, Prof. Samarakoon assured that Sri Lanka has the ability and provisions to pay off all its contractua­l debt on time regardless of the political situation.

However, he admitted that Sri Lanka will have to pay a higher risk premium for future borrowings, given the prevailing political uncertaint­y in the country.

He noted that Sri Lanka’s bonds in the secondary markets are already trading at a 5.5 percent premium rate to the United States 10-year treasury yields.

Moody’s recently downgraded Sri Lanka’s ratings to B2 from B1 and changed the outlook to Stable from Negative for the first time since it began rating the Sri Lankan sovereign in 2010.

The rating agency said the protracted political crisis exacerbate­s the tightening in external domestic financing and reserve position of Sri Lanka, having a lasting impact on policy.

According to Prof. Samarakoon, Sri Lanka has debt repayments of US $5 billion on average for the next five-year period.

Further, he outlined that a new crisis could be triggered in Italy as European Union (EU) and Italy are yet to reach a deal over managing Italy’s debt and budget deficit.

He said that such a crisis could pave way for a Greece-like scenario, resulting in higher bond yields in the rest of the world, further increasing the cost of financing for economies such as Sri Lanka.

However, he said that the oil (Brent) prices have come down by nearly 31 percent since last October which is a 12 percent decline compared to the previous year.

Speaking of deprecatio­n of the rupee against US dollar, Prof. Samarakoon admitted that the local currency has depreciate­d 15 percent so far this year while the depreciati­on of the rupee has accelerate­d in the past few months compared to the currencies of regional peers.

“Rupee depreciati­on reflects the structural weakness of the economy,” he stressed.

Prof. Samarakoon said the twin deficit—the budget deficit and the current account deficit—is the main reason for the depreciati­on of the currency, as the countries with twin deficits have seen depreciati­on of their currencies faster than others.

He noted that normalisat­ion of interest rates in the US which resulted in better yields, has also caused the outflow of foreign funds from Sri Lanka’s capital and debt markets.

Sri Lanka has seen over Rs.17 billion of outflows from stocks and over Rs.118 billion from government securities so far this year.

 ??  ?? Prof. Lalith Samarakoon Pic by Nimalasiri Edirisingh­e
Prof. Lalith Samarakoon Pic by Nimalasiri Edirisingh­e

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