Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Sri Lanka’s PM to helm crucial Finance Ministry

- COLOMBO / REUTERS

SRI LANKA’S Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe was yesterday appointed to hold a dual charge and run the Finance Ministry, as this Indian ocean island nation confronts its worst economic crisis in memory.

Wickremesi­nghe will lead talks with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) as the cashstrapp­ed nation seeks a bailout.

“Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe was sworn in as finance, economic stabilizat­ion and national policies minister before President Gotabaya Rajapaksa this morning,” a statement from the president’s office said.

In an interview with Reuters on Tuesday, Wickremesi­nghe laid out his immediate plans for the economy, including presenting an interim budget within six weeks that will slash government expenditur­e “to the bone” and reroute funds into a twoyear relief program.

Sri Lanka, an island nation of 22 million people, is reeling under its worst economic crisis since independen­ce in 1948, with a severe shortage of foreign exchange severely curtailing imports, including essentials such as fuel and medicines.

The turmoil has come from the confluence of the COVID-19 pandemic ravaging the country’s lucrative tourism industry and foreign workers’ remittance­s, ill-timed tax cuts by Rajapaksa draining government coffers and rising oil prices.

On Tuesday, the World Bank said it is not planning to provide any new financing to Sri Lanka until an adequate economic policy framework has been put in place.

Trade Minister Ramesh Pathirana told Reuters the new budget “will set out a path for multilater­al institutio­ns and other lenders to track public finance targets and hopefully extend support to Sri Lanka.”

In the interview, Wickremesi­nghe said he hoped for a “sustainabl­e loan package” from the IMF, while undertakin­g structural reforms that would draw new investment­s into the country.

Initial discussion­s with the IMF ended on Tuesday. Earlier this week, IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva said the lender was “working relentless­ly” at a technical level on Sri Lanka.

Sri Lanka has also been officially declared in default by ratings agencies after the nonpayment of coupons on two of its sovereign bonds. It has hired heavyweigh­t financial and legal advisers Lazard and Clifford Chance as it prepares for the difficult task of renegotiat­ing its $12 billion of overseas debt.

VETERAN POLITICIAN KNOWS IMF

Wickremesi­nghe, 73, is a veteran politician who has been prime minister five times before the current appointmen­t.

The economic liberal already has experience with the IMF – Sri Lanka last had an IMF program in 2016 during one of his tenures as prime minister.

He has also built relationsh­ips with regional powers India and China, key investors and lenders who vie for influence in Sri Lanka, which lies along busy shipping routes linking Asia to Europe.

The problem is that any economic reforms Wickremesi­nghe may bring to meet conditions for an IMF program could cause short-term pain and trouble on the streets. Petrol and diesel price increases announced on Tuesday are bound to filter down to transport and food prices.

Annual inflation is already at 33.8% and could go above 40%, Wickremesi­nghe has said.

Udeeshan Jonas, chief strategist for market research firm Capital Alliance, said Wickremesi­nghe retaining the finance portfolio was largely expected. But Jonas added: “With or without support, difficult measures will have to be taken. He has no other choice.”

Demonstrat­ions have roiled Sri Lanka since late March, with protesters accusing the president and his powerful family of mishandlin­g the economy.

Violence broke out two weeks ago after clashes between government supporters and protesters in Colombo sparked clashes across the country that left nine people dead and about 300 injured. Mahinda Rajapaksa, the president’s elder brother, resigned as prime minister after the violence.

President Rajapaksa and Wickremesi­nghe have since tried to cobble together a new Cabinet of ministers, drawing members from the ruling party and some opposition groups. But the critical Finance Ministry portfolio has, so far, remained vacant, with some likely candidates declining the job, according to government and ruling party sources.

Ali Sabry, the previous finance minister who started talks with the IMF in April, quit in early May when the Cabinet was dissolved after Prime Minister Rajapaksa resigned.

“The finance minister’s appointmen­t is extremely crucial because he needs to get the ball rolling on a new budget, talks with the IMF and spearhead fiscal support,” said Lakshini Fernando, macro-economist for Sri Lanka-based investment firm Asia Securities. “Ranil Wickremesi­nghe is the better option, but we’ll have to see if he has a majority in parliament and if he can do the job of both the prime minister and finance minister.”

 ?? ?? Sri Lanka’s Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe (L) sworn in as the new finance minister, in Colombo, May 25, 2022.
Sri Lanka’s Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe (L) sworn in as the new finance minister, in Colombo, May 25, 2022.

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