Debt-hit Sri Lanka to get first tranche of IMF bailout funds in two days
Sri Lanka will get the first $330 million tranche of an International Monetary Fund bailout in the next two days, the global lender said on Tuesday, putting the onus on the cash-strapped country to rein in its debt to sustainable levels. Economic mismanagement coupled with the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic left Sri Lanka severely short of dollars for essential imports at the beginning of last year, tipping the island nation into its worst financial crisis in seven decades.
For the latest headlines, follow our Google News channel online or via the app. The IMF’s executive board on Monday approved a nearly $3 billion bailout with the endorsement expected to catalyse additional external support to the tune of $3.75 billion from the likes of the World Bank, the Asian Development Bank and other lenders. This was the 17th IMF bailout for Sri Lanka and the third since its decades-long civil war ended in 2009. The office of President Ranil Wickremesinghe said the Program would enable it to access up to $7 billion in overall funding. “Sri Lanka is no longer deemed bankrupt by the world,” Wickremesinghe said in a video statement. “The loan facility serves as an assurance from the international community that Sri Lanka has the capacity to restructure its debt and resume normal transactions.” Getting financial assurance from China, its largest bilateral credi-tor, was the last remaining hurdle for Sri Lanka in securing the IMF bailout. Once China confirmed its backing this month, the IMF went ahead with the deal. Sri Lanka, which also needed support from other major lenders like India and Japan, thanked the international community, includ-ing the United States, for talking to the Chinese government to back its debt restructuring plan.
No immediate relief
The IMF funding will, however, not immediately help millions of Sri Lankans, who are being squeezed by soaring costs of living, high income taxes of up to 36 percent and a 66 percent increase in power tariffs. Half of Sri Lanka’s families have been forced to reduce portions they feed their children, according to a survey by Save the Chil-dren released this month. Citizens waking up on Tuesday to news of the IMF approval, said they hoped the funds would reduce some of their burden. “It must be spent to solve the country’s problems,” said vegetable seller Amilanath Jayatilake, 35, in Colombo. “If they reduce the price of fuel and food items and give people some relief, then it’s good.” Shehan Semasinghe, state minister of finance, said the IMF bailout was “absolutely essential”. “But now we have to patiently focus on very difficult reforms going ahead,” he said in a statement late on Monday. The Colombo Stock Exchange All-Share index ended down 1.1 percent, while the Sri Lankan rupee was up about 6.5 percent against the dollar. Bonds were up by 0.79 cents to 1.67 cents across tenors, with the March 2029 bond leading the gains.
Tough road ahead
Peter Breuer, senior IMF mission chief for Sri Lanka, Asia and Pacific Department, said debt sustainability was one of the key criteria for the IMF to approve a bailout for any economy. Sri Lanka’s disbursements from the bailout package would be tied to reviews every six months, Breuer said, adding that the IMF had not set any growth target but had put in place an inflation band of 12 percent-18 percent for the country to achieve by end of 2023. Sri Lanka’s retail prices have eased from last year’s peaks but still hover at over 50 percent. The IMF expects the economy to expand by 3 percent in 2026 after contracting by 3 percent during the current year. Sri Lanka aims to announce a debt-restructuring strategy in April and step up talks with commercial creditors ahead of the next IMF review in six months, its central bank governor told Reuters this month. “We need to keep in mind that it’s still going to be a difficult road no matter how much potential funds or support is being thrown at Sri Lanka,” Katrina Ell, senior economist at Moody’s Analytics, told Reuters. “Ultimately, it comes down to them being able to successfully ad-dress some of the systemic problems in terms of economic man-agement, fiscal management.”