Sri Lanka, Its Economy
Reeling, Is Approved for $3 Billion Rescue Loan
The
nation, having weathered negotiations with Japan, India and China, hopes the
emergency funds from the International Monetary Fund will see it through its
debt crisis.
The
executive board of the International Monetary Fund approved a loan worth $3
billion to help Sri Lanka through the financial crisis that has had the nation
in a rolling economic and political crisis for more than a year.
The
I.M.F. had agreed in principle to extend the funds last September — subject to
Sri Lanka’s meeting a series of conditions that included tightening its finances
and renegotiating the terms of repaying debt it owes to the biggest economies
in Asia.
Even
before the announcement was made, late on Monday by a finance minister in the
capital, Colombo, markets had breathed a sigh of relief. Sri Lanka’s stock
market has jumped 6 percent this month, its bonds have gained 20 percent this
year, and its currency, the rupee, ceased sliding against the dollar.
The
Sri Lankan economy remains in a precarious state, however: Last month,
inflation ran at 50.6 percent, barely a point lower than in January. An initial
$330 million from the I.M.F., a global institution that works to shore up
troubled countries’ economies, will soon start reaching Sri Lanka’s central
bank. Other tranches of hard currency, desperately sought by Sri Lanka, will
follow over the next several months.
Ordinary
Sri Lankans, no less so than the investors and private lenders with money on
the line, hope that rock bottom has been reached and that the I.M.F. support
will mark the beginning of their country’s recovery.
As
it typically does when it lends money, the fund pushed the government of Sri
Lanka to change a number of policies in pursuit of financial stability, for
example by broadening the base of individuals and companies that pay taxes and
reducing official subsidies on imported goods.
“Tax
reforms are badly needed to regain the confidence of creditors,” Peter Breuer,
the I.M.F.’s senior mission chief to Sri Lanka, said on Tuesday. “However tax collections must be carried out in a
growth-friendly manner.”
The
government has been led by President Ranil Wickremesinghe since the former
president, Gotabaya Rajapaksa, and his family, who led Sri Lanka into the
crisis, were forced from power last July. Mr. Wickremesinghe’s administration
has made fitful progress toward meeting those targets over the past five
months. More significantly, it has restructured its bilateral debt after having
tricky meetings with Japan, then India and finally China — its main
international creditors.
After
China agreed to a two-year moratorium on Sri Lanka’s debt payments, things
started looking up for I.M.F. approval. One other positive turn: Tourist
arrivals devastated by the pandemic are recovering even more quickly than
anticipated, back up to an expected 1.5 million this year (before the pandemic,
roughly two million visited the country).
This
time last year, Sri Lankans were facing 12-hour-long power cuts on a daily
basis, waiting in lines for fuel that stretched miles, as well as shortages of
food and medicine.
A
year later conditions have improved, albeit at an agonizing pace. The fuel
lines are, for now, a thing of the past, and after a recent increase in
electricity prices, power outages have ended. Cooking gas has become readily
available again.
However,
despite progress and increases in foreign-exchange reserves, the government was
still struggling to find the dollars to import drugs and other medical
necessities.
With
the help of Chinese loans, over the past 15 years Sri Lanka had built enormous
infrastructure projects near the Rajapaksas’ home, in
Hambantota, including an international airport and one of the biggest shipping
ports in the region; they attract only a small fraction of the volume for which
they were designed. When the crisis began early last year, Mr. Rajapaksa
ordered the printing of more money, while monetary policy hung loose.
Not
all of Sri Lanka’s problems were caused by long-term mismanagement. In
announcing its loan, the I.M.F. offered a mixed judgment: “The economy is
facing significant challenges stemming from pre-existing vulnerabilities and
policy missteps in the lead-up to the crisis, further aggravated by a series of
external shocks.”
There
were also short-term blunders inflicted by the Rajapaksas,
starting with a disastrous organic-only farming policy. But then the acute pain
caused by the pandemic, which disrupted remittances sent back by Sri Lankans
working abroad, has eased. Finally, the war in Ukraine, which drove up the
prices of food and fuel worldwide, pulled the rug out from under Sri Lanka’s
currency — the country relies on imports to fulfill
many of its basic needs. The Sri Lankan rupee had traded at 202 to the dollar
in February 2022; now it is at 345 rupees.
The
good news from the I.M.F. comes at an otherwise difficult time for Mr. Wickremesinghe,
73. A veteran of Sri Lankan politics, he served as prime minister six times
before taking the country’s top office, during the moment of chaos when the Rajapaksas were toppled. But his party holds only a single
seat in Parliament and he depends on support from the Rajapaksas’
party to govern. He has nonetheless managed to push through some of the tough
changes that the I.M.F. demanded, allowing the rupee to float within a wider
“trading band,” for instance, and asking China to take a haircut on its loans.
But
he cannot risk others, like privatizing money-losing state-owned firms, which
would aggravate trade unions already striking against his government. Mr.
Wickremesinghe is pleading with the country’s election commission to postpone
local races, which might reveal his weakness in the face of an angry and
resurgent opposition, on the grounds that printing ballots and having a vote
would simply cost too much money.