Eastern Eye (UK)

Sri Lanka revival plan

IMF DEAL REQUIRES COLOMBO TO SEEK DEBT RELIEF FROM REGIONAL LEADERS

- (Reuters)

SRI LANKA’S Internatio­nal Monetary Fund bailout plan could be a turning point in its worst economic crisis, but far-from-stable politics and a need to get debt relief from competing powers China, India and Japan means some of the hardest work is still to come.

President Ranil Wickremesi­nghe knows a lot of circles will need to be squared for the IMF’s $2.9 billion (£2.5bn) lifeline to become a reality. Spending cuts, tax hikes and debt write-downs are a common formula for bankrupt countries, but crisis veterans say there are some uniquely difficult elements here.

An impoverish­ed population that forced former president Gotabaya Rajapaksa to flee in July still needs to accept Wickremesi­nghe, seen by many as of the same political ilk. He also faces a bristling opposition.

The country’s borrowings are so complex that estimates of the total range anywhere from $85bn (£73.7bn) to well more than $100bn (£86.82bn). To get it to a sustainabl­e level Beijing, New Delhi, Tokyo, multilater­als and global asset managers must all swallow losses.

“This one of the biggest messes I’ve ever seen,” said Renaissanc­e Capital’s chief economist Charles Robertson, who has watched emerging market crises unfold for decades. “The government destroyed its revenue base with unsustaina­ble tax cuts, it tried to hold the currency when tourism revenues collapsed and now it has no reserves in the bank and a population facing widespread poverty.”

Estimates from the United Nations say the crisis has left more than a quarter of Sri Lanka’s 22 million population struggling to secure adequate, nutritious food.

The IMF’s four-year rescue plan, provisiona­lly agreed last week, demands serious fiscal repair work and more autonomy for the central bank, which was ordered to franticall­y print money under Rajapaksa.

To hit the IMF’s target of lifting its primary budget surplus to 2.4 per cent by 2025, Sri Lanka would get its economy growing by around six per cent, something not achieved for about five years. This year it expected to contract at least eight per cent.

Just as challengin­g, the IMF wants Colombo to secure “financing assurances” – fund speak for debt relief and new loans – from regional heavyweigh­ts China, Japan and India, who have long jostled for influence.

The World Bank estimates Beijing’s lending, which has funded costly projects from ports to stadium, adds up to $7bn (£6bn), or 12 per cent of Sri Lanka’s $63bn

(£54.7bn) external debt. Japan has provided another $3.5bn (£3.03bn) while India has given around $1bn (£868.5m). Without the “assurances” from those countries, the fund’s money cannot flow, IMF mission chief Peter Breuer stressed.

“Finding creative ways to have a collaborat­ive platform to advance these debt restructur­ing discussion­s is very useful,” Breuer said. “How debt relief is distribute­d amongst creditors...that is something we don’t insert ourselves into.”

The crisis has culminated in Sri Lanka’s starkest crisis first debt default since independen­ce from Britain in 1948. The rupee almost halved in value since the central bank abandoned its peg in March, basic goods becoming scarce and inflation running at 64 per cent.

Economists say the restructur­ing could have been far simpler if the country had been part of the G20 “Common Framework” plan – a programme set up at the height of Covid-19 to help debt-crippled countries. At the time, Sri Lanka was classified as a middle-income country and did not qualify.

China automatica­lly provides debt relief alongside “Paris Club” countries and private sector creditors under that arrangemen­t. Colombo’s absence from the setup means an alternativ­e is needed.

Step up Japan – which is now pushing for China, India and others to join talks.

Beijing, which did not respond to a request for comment, has not yet signalled if it will, although there are hopes its lead role in Zambia’s restructur­ing may encourage it to do so. India has not commented so far. Pessimists worry though that if China doesn’t take a writedown, others won’t either, including global asset managers who hold nearly $20bn (£17.36bn) of Sri Lanka’s internatio­nal bonds.

“China is the largest creditor country. Without

its participat­ion, any scheme won’t succeed,” a Japanese official who requested anonymity said.

Another problem is what to do about the country’s $50.5bn (£43.85bn) of “local” debt mostly dominated in rupee and largely held as capital by commercial banks and local pension funds.

Sanjeewa Fernando, head of research at CT CLSA Securities, said it won’t be a straightfo­rward decision, especially with elections looming in 2024.

“From a realistic point of view, banks are preparing for a 40 per cent haircut (on Sri Lanka’s internatio­nal bonds and ‘developmen­t’ bonds which are also dominated in dollars) as a base case scenario,” he said.

Even that might not be enough though, given the IMF wants the debt-to-GDP ratio slashed to under 100 per cent from 140 per cent currently.

That would put domestic debt in play but David Beers, a senior fellow at the London-based Center for Financial Stability who has compiled a global database of sovereign defaults, said there are always trade-offs.

“If the domestic debt is predominat­ely held by domestic banks and you get haircuts, then that eats into their capital,” he said.

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 ?? ?? BITTER PILL: University students clash with police in Colombo last Tuesday (30); (bottom) Peter Breuer (second from right) speaks during a press conference, next to IMF’s mission chief for Sri Lanka Masahiro Nozaki (second from left), in Colombo last Thursday (1); (left) Sri Lanka continues to struggle for fuel
BITTER PILL: University students clash with police in Colombo last Tuesday (30); (bottom) Peter Breuer (second from right) speaks during a press conference, next to IMF’s mission chief for Sri Lanka Masahiro Nozaki (second from left), in Colombo last Thursday (1); (left) Sri Lanka continues to struggle for fuel

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