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India, China, Bangladesh to Help Sri Lanka Steer the Economic Crisis, Caused by War in Ukraine March 29, 2022
India, China, Bangladesh to help Sri Lanka steer economic crisis BY REUTERS COLOMBO MAR 29, 2022 - India, China and Bangladesh have stepped in to help Sri Lanka weather a foreign exchange shortage that has forced it to devalue its currency amid soaring inflation, and to seek International Monetary Fund (IMF) assistance. Sri Lanka's worst economic crisis in decades is a result of mismanaged government finances and ill-timed tax cuts, alongside the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. With only $2.31 billion left in reserves, Sri Lanka has to repay debt of about $4 billion over the rest of this year, including a $1 billion-international sovereign bond that matures in July. Below is a look at external help Sri Lanka has received since last year: Bangladesh Last May, Bangladesh's central bank agreed to a $200 million swap, the first swap arrangement between the two countries. IMF In August, Sri Lanka received its $787 million share of the global $650 billion Special Drawing Rights (SDR) allocation from the IMF. This was part of pandemic support extended by the lender and the funds were used to top up reserves. Foreign Minister Basil Rajapaksa is set to hold talks with the IMF in April. The island nation of 22 million people is struggling to pay for essential imports after a 70% drop in foreign exchange reserves over the past two years. China Last August, Sri Lanka received the last tranche of a $1.3 billion syndicated loan from the China Development Bank negotiated in 2020. Sri Lanka's central bank received a $1.5 billion swap denominated in yuan in December, which was again used to top up reserves. Sri Lanka, which had drawn closer to China in recent years, ended 2021 with reserves of $3.1 billion. China is considering offering a $1.5 billion credit facility to Sri Lanka, besides a separate loan of up to $1 billion which the government has requested. China is Sri Lanka's fourth-biggest lender, behind international financial markets, the Asian Development Bank (ADB) and Japan. India The Reserve Bank of India January announced a $400 million swap to help Sri Lanka shore up reserves, as part of an aid package the neighbors negotiated. Sri Lanka signed an agreement for a $500 million credit line to purchase fuel from India in February. The agreement proved critical as global oil prices soared after Russia invaded Ukraine and Sri Lanka's fuel import costs jumped as much as 40% in a week. Fuel shortages have led to long lines at petrol stations and rolling power cuts across much of the country. Shipments from the Indian Oil Corporation began arriving around mid-March. In the same month, Sri Lanka and India signed a $1 billion credit line for importing essentials, including food and medicine. Sri Lanka has sought an additional credit line of at least $1 billion from India to help bring in essentials as shortages persist and protests break out. India, China, Bangladesh to help Sri Lanka steer economic crisis | Daily Sabah *** Sri Lanka's economy is being crushed by war in Ukraine Times of India, Bloomberg, Mar 17, 2022, Russia’s war in Ukraine, which has caused a humanitarian crisis and convulsed global financial markets, is now threatening to crush an $81 billion economy more than 4,000 miles away in the Indian Ocean. Hit by soaring oil import costs and a dip in tourism revenue, Sri Lanka is racing to avert a default amid dwindling foreign-exchange holdings. With inflation already at 15% -- the worst in Asia -- the conflict is only making it harder for the tropical island located off the southern tip of India. Fuel shortages and blackouts lasting as long as seven hours have become daily routine, while the wait gets longer at gas stations where prices surged almost 50% this month. Authorities are struggling to contain the crisis. They’ve raised interest rates, devalued the local currency and placed curbs on non-essential imports. But with a meager $2 billion in forex reserves and $7 billion in debt payments due this year, the battle is turning uphill. The government this week finally abandoned its reluctance to seek help from the International Monetary Fund and President Gotabaya Rajapaksa pledged to fulfill Sri Lanka’s obligations. “Seeking help from the IMF is the most feasible way to get out of the crisis,” said Ankur Shukla, a Mumbai-based economist with Bloomberg Economics. “The Russia-Ukraine war has worsened the already weak external balances situation, increasing the gap between external financial requirements and financing sources available.” One of Europe’s worst conflicts since World War II couldn’t have come
at a worse time for Sri Lanka, which is still recovering from a brutal
30-year ethnic strife that ended in 2009. The South Asian country has
sought to revive growth since, spending millions on tourism
infrastructure, until the pandemic dealt a blow to its plans. The crisis
also shows how Russia’s war is putting some of the fragile developing
economies at risk and imperiling decades of efforts to lift millions out
of poverty. With a population of about 22 million, Sri Lanka is a net importer of goods from medicines to fuel. In December, petroleum products accounted for about 20% of inbound shipments and the cost jumped 88% from a year earlier. The increase in oil prices this year is adding to the burden. The country has also been paying off external debt it piled on to help rebuild an economy scarred by the bloody civil war between the majority Buddhist Sinhalese and a Tamil minority that’s predominantly Hindu. That has been draining its forex reserves. Another pain point is tourism revenue. About 30% of visitors this year were from Russia, Ukraine, Poland and Belarus, and the war is threatening to turn off that tap. Sri Lanka earned $3.6 billion from tourism in 2019 before the pandemic slashed that to less than a fifth two years later, official data show. The central government’s foreign-owned debt stood at $32 billion as of November. Optimism that the government will soon manage to reach a deal with the IMF has already spurred a rally in the country’s dollar bonds. An offshore bond due 2030 rallied to 49 cents to the dollar from a record low of 38.9 cents on March 9, while one-year default probability has dropped to 18.2% from as much as 31.3% in late December, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The nation’s international bonds need to be restructured by July as
Sri Lanka doesn’t have the necessary resources to pay the $1 billion due
that month, Citigroup Inc. said in a February note. “The government seems to be reacting positively and that would help steer the economy to calmer waters in this time of unprecedented global challenges,” Cabraal said by phone last week. Yet for ordinary Sri Lankans, the pain is real. Civic groups have held vigils highlighting rising costs, while the main opposition party organized a mass rally in the capital city of Colombo on March 15, demanding the resignation of President Rajapaksa. The protests pose no immediate threat to his government, which commands almost two-thirds majority in parliament. Sugath Chaminda, 44, said he spent about 10 hours to refuel his auto rickshaw, after being turned away by numerous gas pumps that had run dry. He then spent more time hunting for a cylinder of cooking gas, which was also in short supply. “I don’t know what the government is doing to have brought us to this situation,” he said in Colombo. Some of the inflation surge is also self-inflicted. Last year, the government banned imports of chemical fertilizers in an ambitious plan to promote organic farming. That caused a shortage of nutrients, leading to crop failure and protests, prompting the government to reverse the decision in November. Sri Lanka has also approached China and India for bilateral credit lines to avoid an IMF bailout, but negotiations have been complicated by the war in Ukraine. In the past, policymakers have generally considered some of the IMF’s conditions as burdensome, leading to reluctance to engage with the agency. Rajapaksa said Wednesday his government has weighed the advantages and disadvantages of working with the IMF, which has urged a “credible and coherent strategy” to restore macroeconomic stability and debt sustainability. A restructuring is necessary as the debt levels are too high, said
Kenneth Akintewe, head of Asian sovereign debt at abrdn in Singapore. *** Share the link of this article with your facebook friendsFair Use Notice This site contains copyrighted material the
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