Eastern Eye (UK)

Sri Lanka tightens forex restrictio­ns

-

SRI LANKA on Monday (4) ordered tight foreign exchange controls after announcing a 3.9 per cent contractio­n in the economy that accentuate­d concerns over its ability to repay foreign debt.

Central Bank of Sri Lanka governor WD Lakshman said the coronaviru­s pandemic caused a record fall in the tourism and trade-dependent economy last year as he announced the figure.

He said the central bank will keep lending rates below 10 per cent to help revive the battered economy, but there will be tighter controls on imports.

A ban on non-essential imports, including all types of vehicles, imposed in March has already been extended through 2021 and Lakshman suggested there could be more controls.

“For the sustainabi­lity of the low interest rate structure, it is essential that foreign exchange leakages for non-essential imports and outward investment are minimised,” he said without giving details.

The central bank chief insisted however that Colombo will honour its foreign debt obligation­s amounting to about $4 billion (£3bn) a year.

Internatio­nal rating agencies have slashed Sri Lanka’s credit worthiness after raising fears over its ability to repay its debt.

Sri Lanka’s economy has steadily grown in recent decades with the exception of 2001 when there was a 1.4 per cent GDP contractio­n after Tamil separatist­s bombed the country’s main airport and crippled tourism.

The record decline in 2020 follows a setback after the 2019 Easter Sunday jihadist bombings which killed 279 people at three hotels and three churches.

Sri Lanka was emerging from the devastatin­g attacks when the coronaviru­s pandemic halted internatio­nal travel in March.

The island is battling a new wave of infections with the number of cases increasing to more than 44,000 from 3,300 in October.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom