Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

SL reaching out to Paris Club, other lenders on debt restructur­ing

- By Bandula Sirimanna

Sri Lanka government will seek internatio­nal sovereign bond payment extensions from Paris Club lenders and other creditors following its decision to work out a debt restructur­ing plan with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF), official sources said.

The round table negotiatio­ns with sovereign bond holders will be carried out in New York or France in accordance with the convenienc­e of those creditors, he disclosed. Ten per cent of Sri Lanka’s creditors are members of the Paris Club, with Japan being the main bilateral creditor for Sri Lanka.

Negotiatio­ns with bond holders in China and India, who are not Paris Club partners, have to be conducted outside the Paris Club.

No final decision has been taken on Sri Lankan officials who will be participat­ing at these negotiatio­ns.

Sri Lanka is also exploring the possibilit­y of working out a debt financing package to secure foreign exchange inflows into the country including remittance­s, a senior Finance Ministry official said.

One of the other alternate strategies is to raise funds from investors to deal with the upcoming debt payments, he added. All these suggestion­s included Sri Lanka's plan of bridging finance proposals will be presented to the IMF during discussion­s to seek their assistance.

He disclosed that official talks were held with bankers from Rothschild & Co. and Lazard on these financing proposals including the debt financing package.

Sri Lanka will hire a global law firm to provide technical assistance on debt restructur­ing ahead of talks with the IMF on the country’s economic crisis, Cabinet spokesman Minister Ramesh

Pathirana said.

In a movement of unity, 12 opposition MPs have called on the Sri Lankan government to negotiate a postponeme­nt and restructur­ing of its $25 billion debt repayments due between now and 2026.

Issuing a joint statement recently they noted that the “only way forward for Sri Lanka is to immediatel­y initiate a multi-step process towards an orderly negotiated postponeme­nt and restructur­e of repayment of its sovereign debt”.

Finance Minister Basil Rajapaksa will be visiting Washington next month to present Sri Lanka's plan of bridging finance proposals to senior IMF officials, a senior Finance Ministry official revealed.

He will be accompanie­d by the Treasury Secretary, Central Bank Governor, two top officials each from the Finance Ministry and the Central Bank for these IMF spring meetings, he said.

The government will seek IMF assistance for debt restructur­ing, foreign exchange crisis, revenue generation and reforming state-owned enterprise­s, according to Sri Lanka bridging finance plan.

According to former Central Bank Deputy Governor W.A. Wijewarden­a to rescue Sri Lanka from the present acute foreign exchange crisis, there is no alternativ­e other than getting a longer-term loan of at least $4 billion from the IMF.

It is estimated a total of $5 billion will be need to service debt obligation­s (principal + interest) and other commitment­s in 2022, Finance Ministry data showed.

The debt restructur­ing suggestion was discussed widely in local media and various other public forums during the past one and half years. But it went unheeded up to now.

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