Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Lanka’s growth rate to be lowered

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Sri Lanka’s economic growth for 2012 is expected to be lowered to 7.2 per cent from a projected 8 per cent with an announceme­nt on the lower growth (GDP) rate due on Tuesday, banking analysts said yesterday.

They said the decision was to be made at a meeting of the Monetary Board of the Central Bank (CB) chaired by Governor Ajith Nivard Cabraal and attended by Treasury Secretary P.B. Jayasunder­a who is also a member of the Monetary Board. At this meeting the CB’S monthly statement on monetary policy would be released and the announceme­nt of the lower GDP figure made. No other changes including interest rates are expected in the announceme­nt.

Mr. Cabraal, who has returned from a visit to Qatar where he led a delegation of bankers to induce investment­s from the fastest growing economy in the Middle East, was not available for comment.

The lower rate against 8.2 per cent GDP growth in 2011 comes in the backdrop of an external economic crisis in Europe and the US, and acute financial problems at home. The Treasury has urged government ministries and department­s to cut spending and save on energy costs as debts rise particular­ly for institutio­ns like the debt-ridden Ceylon Petroleum Corporatio­n and the Ceylon Electricit­y Board with both increasing fuel and power tariffs.

The analysts, who declined to be named, said reasons for the lower growth forecast was due to lending restrictio­ns on banks aimed at reducing non-essential imports, a rising US dollar and depreciati­on of the rupee which are all expected to reduce economic activity while troubled economies in the West would hurt Sri Lankan exports, particular­ly garments.

When the 2012 growth forecast of 8 per cent was made by the CB in January, top Sri Lankan economists questioned the wisdom of such a high growth projection when the country’s other trading partners were lowering economic growth figures.

“It doesn’t make sense to project high growth when all our key buyers (garment-buying countries) have lowered their forecasts due to a global financial crisis,” one economist said, adding that the CB plan to lower growth rates proved that “what we have been saying

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