Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

CB independen­ce ensured in new Monetary Act

- By Bandula Sirimanna

Despite the stern objections of the President, the government will be moving the new Monetary Law Act in Parliament next month with the aim of depolitici­sing the Central Bank (CB) and preventing direct financing of budget deficits through primary market purchases o f gover nment securities ( Treasury bills), official sources confirmed

However the CB will intervene in the secondary market to influence monetary conditions whenever the need arises to do so in accordance with the best practice followed by modern central banks the world over.

The Parliament­ary Committee on Public Finance is expected to approve the new Act soon enabling the Finance Minister Mangala Samaraweer­a to present it in Parliament.

The committee is continuing consultati­ons with the Ministry of Finance and CB before arriving at a final conclusion, official sources said.

Another objective is to limit provisiona­l advances that can be obtained by the government from the CB.

The new Act will provide provisions to do away with the current practice of printing money by the CB to provide credit to

the government by purchasing Treasury bills at auctions or outside of it, expanding base money of the country, a senior Treasury official explained.

The Monetary Law Act which would amend the existing 70- year old law will be complement­ed by fiscal rules and legislatio­n designed to prevent Sri Lanka from chronic macroecono­mic instabilit­y, he added.

The CB will be relieved from printing money on instructio­ns of the government to finance its deficit following the enactment of the new Act, he pointed out without elaboratin­g modalities of its implementa­tion.

In addition, the CB’s governance structure is also expected to be strengthen­ed, along with provisions to make it an independen­t institutio­n with public accountabi­lity.

It will also provide provisions for a modified inflation targeting process, and remove the Treasury Secretary from the Monetary Board ensuring its independen­ce as well as making the CB an independen­t institutio­n with public accountabi­lity, he said.

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