Can Sri Lanka Implement Unpopular Decisions to Secure an IMF Bailout Package?

The crisis-ridden nation is hoping to secure IMF’s $2.9 billion Extended Fund Facility bailout which is hinged upon written financing assurances from its three major bilateral creditors – China, Japan and India. 

The prospects for Sri Lanka securing the International Monetary Fund (IMF) $2.9 billion Extended Fund Facility (EFF) bailout, which hinged upon written financing assurances from its three major bilateral creditors China, Japan and India, appear to be propitious.

India was the first of Sri Lanka’s creditors to officially back its debt restructuring programme. In early February financing assurances were provided by the Paris Group, of which Japan is a member, to support the IMF’s approval of the EFF. The delay in securing the IMF package was due to Beijing, which has the biggest share of Sri Lanka’s debt. China has been reluctant to enter into the agreement, in part because debt restructuring talks with Sri Lanka could become a precedent for its other failing borrowers.

Also read: IMF Provisionally Agrees on $2.9-Billion Loan for Sri Lanka

Although 10% is owed to China, combined with the borrowings from Chinese banks, especially EXIM Bank of China and the China Development Bank, the percentage of Chinese-held debt is close to 19.6%. Even though the quantum of the loan is not large, and provides limited provision of liquidity, given the dire situation that Sri Lanka finds itself in, the IMF package might impart a measure of stability. Since 2022, India has become the largest bilateral lender to Sri Lanka.

Economic mismanagement

A year ago, Sri Lanka plunged into its worst financial crisis ever, rudely shattering its popular perception as a more progressive, prosperous and democratic South Asian country. Since the angry mass mobilisation in the form of the ‘aragalaya (struggle)’ protests, Sri Lanka is yet to emerge from the economic and political volatility and social upheaval.

Anti-government protest in Sri Lanka on April 13, 2022 in front of the Presidential Secretariat. Photo: CC BY-SA 4.0

Historically, Sri Lanka has had a problem of twin deficits, an internal fiscal deficit underlined by a severe balance of payment deficit. The situation came in March 2022 when reserves fell to $1.9 billion. On March 7, 2022, the regulator of the banking system announced the devaluation of the national currency with immediate effect, and the Sri Lanka Rupee (LKR) rate fell to a record historic low of Rs 230 against the US Dollar; by April, LKR was 365 to a dollar. On April 12, Colombo announced that it will be defaulting on its external debt of $51 billion. By mid-July, President Gotabaya Rajapaksa fled the country and resigned from abroad.

Nevertheless, the old political elite, perhaps best epitomised by the current President Ranil Wickremesinghe, has managed to hold on to power without popular support or legitimacy. Urgent humanitarian issues continue to grip the nation and progress on economic relief and democratic change is imperceptible.

Economic mismanagement which had been going on for years blew up because of policy decisions like the abrupt ban on fertilisers and shift to all-organic agriculture. Foreign debt was spent on vain projects which had almost no rate of return. Colombo was paying more than two-thirds of its revenue as interest for the heavy borrowing from the international market in the last decade.

Also read: Sri Lanka’s Passage Into an Alley of Darkness – and Lessons for India

Given the shortage of foreign exchange, import controls were introduced into the economy which led to a sharp contraction, more so because Sri Lanka is heavily dependent on the import of intermediate goods. However, the underlying affliction is the high rates of corruption and rent-seeking in Sri Lanka embedded in its economic decision making. Inflation is at about 60% and nearly 33% of all Sri Lankans are experiencing food insecurity. Anyone with any measure of resources is desperate to get out of the country.

The Sri Lankan crisis was a type of “liquidity trap” in which people were accumulating wealth but were not ready to spend it. Poverty and inflation led to a rise in expenditure on public utilities like electricity, and fuel. On the other hand, rising debt of foreign banks mainly from the IMF may lead to further rise in income tax, corporate tax, etc.

The IMF may push USD into the economy amid the weakening of the LKR that ends in the complete surrender of the Sri Lankan economy. Sri Lanka’s debt crisis is so intractable that more than 182 economists and development experts, including Jayati Ghosh, have called for total debt forgiveness for the country

IMF intervention

The IMF agreement signed in September had pushed for greater liberalisation, committing the government to a range of reforms. Foremost in the key elements of the EFF arrangement is the IMF’s push for making the personal income tax more progressive and broadening the tax base. The arrangement entails ending subsidies by introducing “cost recovery-based” pricing for fuel and electricity. In February, the government hiked electricity prices by 66%, following an increase in prices by 75% last year.

Under the IMF agreement, the central bank will buy dollars, prevent an appreciation of the currency and build reserves, amid slower domestic credit. This week, the central bank completely lifted a surrender rule and a guidance peg, allowing the rupee to go up and has bought more than $300 million.

International Monetary Fund. Photo: World Bank/Flickr CC BY NC ND 2.0

Sri Lanka has gone to the IMF 16 times in the past after triggering monetary instability. It does not operate an inflation-targeting framework as it does not have a clean float, leading to sovereign default after currency crises. It has been pursuing a flexible exchange rate which tends to be unstable and permanently depreciating.

Post 2022 economic crisis, the focus has been on easing currency pressure and money printing. A draft bill to legalise an inflation-targeting regime and prevent monetary financing of the budget deficit (money printing) has been tabled. The Central Bank Act will effectively allow officials to modify the monetary policy, exchange rate policy and growth policy to attain a specific yearly inflation rate. Fears of domestic debt restructuring have inadvertently pushed up interest rates, helping reduce credit.

The IMF agreement also seeks to reduce corruption vulnerability through fiscal transparency and the introduction of a stronger anti-corruption legal framework. An ambitious state-enterprise restructuring move, through the sale of 14 state firms is being initiated and primed to raise $4.5 billion. An Indian private firm has been keen on the loss-making Sri Lankan Airlines which recently defaulted on its $175 million government-guaranteed bond. This is easier said than done in a country where the outlook of society is largely “statist,” and a bulk of state revenues is spent on salaries to public servants.

Will Wickramasinghe implement unpopular decisions?

Presidential elections are due to take place in September 2024. In the interregnum, much depends on whether Wickremasinghe tries to cushion people from the effects of the economic restructuring with an eye on the election, or pursues a radical restructuring of the economy.

Sri Lanka President Ranil Wickremesinghe. Photo: Twitter/@RW_UNP

Despite becoming President through a constitutional mandate, Wickremasinghe lacks the political legitimacy to lead the government. Aware of his unpopularity, his government was reluctant to provide LKS 10 bn needed to fund the local elections, forcing the Supreme Court to intervene.

In a bold policy address, Wickremesinghe has underlined the need to fully implement the 13th Amendment to the Constitution to grant political autonomy to the minority Tamils in the country. In his address to parliament in February, he said, “Remember, I’m not here to be popular. I want to rebuild this nation from the crisis situation it has fallen. Yes, I’m ready to make unpopular decisions for the sake of the nation.” Given the deep fault lines based on ethnicity, religion and class within Sri Lankan government structures and its polity, how this devolution of power will play out is deeply suspect.

Also read: Watch | If Ranil Doesn’t Take Tough Steps, Sri Lanka Economy Could Fall into Abyss: Former Central Bank Head

The IMF-induced reforms have had the effect of aggravating inflation. Individual incomes above LKR 125,000 per month are subjected to a tax rate starting at 6%. Protestors from this income bracket are threatening to trade union action against the ‘regressive’ tax regime, indicating a new phase of politicisation among previously affluent sections of society.

The government has demonstrated little inclination to hold accountable any of those who have been accused of large-scale corruption. The crackdown on protests has persisted, with police continuing to arrest activists and protesters. While the crisis has to be examined in the context of debt and wealth accumulation, what’s concerning for Sri Lanka is the sharp increase in poverty. It remains to be seen whether this is transitory or will there be segments which remain trapped in poverty in the long term.

Vaishali Basu Sharma is an analyst of strategic and economic affairs. 

Hedge Funds, Private Investors Precluding Sri Lanka’s Economic Recovery, Say Experts

A group of 182 economists and experts said extensive debt cancellation is needed for Sri Lanka’s economic recovery, and lenders who benefitted from charging a premium to lend to the nation must be willing to share the burden of restructuring.

New Delhi: A group of 182 economists and developmental experts have said that some of the world’s powerful hedge funds and private investors are precluding economic recovery in Sri Lanka with their hard-line stances.

According to the Guardian, this group of economists and experts include Indian economist Jayati Ghosh; Thomas Piketty, author of Capital in the Twenty-First Century; and Yannis Varoufakis, former finance minister of Greece.

They said extensive debt cancellation is needed for Sri Lanka’s economic recovery, and lenders who benefitted from charging a premium to lend to the nation must be willing to share the burden of restructuring.

In a statement, they said, “Debt negotiations in Sri Lanka are now at a crucial stage… All lenders – bilateral, multilateral, and private – must share the burden of restructuring, with assurance of additional financing in the near term.”

Sri Lanka owed $6 billion in external debt service (interest) payments in 2022, but it had only $1.9 billion in foreign currency reserves, the Washington Post reported in September last year.

External debt is the portion of a country’s debt that is borrowed from foreign lenders. These loans, including interest, must usually be paid in the currency in which the loan was made.

Amid a deep economic and political crisis, the country defaulted on its debt for the first time in history in May 2022. Simply put, it temporarily suspended foreign debt payments. Such a situation can make it harder for a country to borrow the money it needs on international markets. This can further harm confidence in its currency and economy.

Also read: Knee-Deep in Debt, Food Shortages, Depleting Foreign Reserves: How Did Sri Lanka Get Here?

The Guardian report said that 40% of Sri Lanka’s external debt stock is owned by private investors, mostly as international sovereign bonds. These bonds have high interest rates. So it means that private creditors will receive more than 50% of external debt payments.

“Such lenders charged a premium to lend to Sri Lanka to cover their risks, which accrued them massive profits and contributed to Sri Lanka’s first ever default in April 2022. Lenders who benefitted from higher returns because of the ‘risk premium’ must be willing to take the consequences of that risk,” the statement said.

Negotiations to restructure Sri Lanks’s debt have been ongoing since its $51 billion default in 2022. A major element of that has been negotiating with the International Monetary Fund (IMF). However, the IMF has only agreed to provide Sri Lanka a loan if they are confident that the country’s debts are sustainable.

The group of economists and experts fear that hard-line stances of private creditors could lead to a poor deal for the country.

Debt Justice, a campaign group, said that Sri Lanka is one of the many nations that have defaulted on or are seeking debt restructuring as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. Other countries that suspended external debt payment include Lebanon, Suriname, Ukraine, and Zambia, with the newest addition being Ghana.

“With global interest rates increasing and widespread recessions expected in 2023, many more countries could follow”, Debt Justice said, also noting that two-thirds of the lower-income countries were vulnerable to a debt default.

The statement of the economists and experts also said, “The Sri Lankan case will provide an important indicator of whether the world – and the international financial system in particular – is equipped to deal with the increasingly urgent questions of sovereign debt relief and sustainability; and to ensure a modicum of justice in international debt negotiations.”

“It is, therefore, crucial not only for the people of Sri Lanka, but to restore any faith in a multilateral system that is already under fire for its lack of legitimacy and basic viability.

Also read: India’s Dilemma on Sri Lanka Is Playing Out Again

Andy Mukherjee, a Bloomberg Opinion columnist, in December, had written that Sri Lanka’s suffering may not end soon as debt restructuring has become an exhausting exercise for troubled nations as some investors mount legal challenges. The delay in resolution of sovereign crises is increasingly a norm, he noted, giving an example of Argentina’s economic situation.

Reuters had reported in June last year that more than 30 asset managers – including Amundi Asset Management, BlackRock and Morgan Stanley Investment Management – which hold Sri Lanka’s international bonds, formed a creditor group to start debt restructuring talks with the island nation.

The country’s bilateral creditors include China and India. Sri Lanka owed Chinese lenders $7.4 billion by the end of 2021, Reuters reported, citing a research report. This is 52% of the bilateral debt, and a fifth of Sri Lanka’s public external debt.

However, the Bloomberg Opinion columnist noted that neither Beijing nor New Delhi wants the other to extract more financial or geopolitical mileage out of the crisis.

IMF Provisionally Agrees on $2.9-Billion Loan for Sri Lanka

The agreement is subject to approval by IMF management and its executive board, and is contingent on Sri Lankan authorities following through with previously agreed measures.

Colombo: Sri Lanka has reached a preliminary agreement with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for a loan of about $2.9 billion, the global lender said on Thursday, as the country seeks a way out its worst economic crisis in decades.

The agreement, which Reuters first reported on Wednesday, is subject to approval by IMF management and its executive board, and is contingent on Sri Lankan authorities following through with previously agreed measures.

“The staff level agreement is only the beginning of a long road for Sri Lanka,” senior IMF official Peter Breuer told reporters in the commercial capital Colombo.

“Authorities have already begun the reform process and it must continue with determination.”

The IMF requires receiving financing assurances from Sri Lanka’s official creditors, besides ensuring efforts are made to reach a collaborative agreement with private creditors.

“Debt relief from Sri Lanka’s creditors and additional financing from multilateral partners will be required to help ensure debt sustainability and close financing gaps,” the IMF said in a statement.

The IMF programme, spread over 48 months, will aim to raise government revenue to support fiscal consolidation, introduce new pricing for fuel and electricity, hike social spending, bolster central bank autonomy and rebuild depleted foreign reserves.

“Starting from one of the lowest revenue levels in the world, the programme will implement major tax reforms. These reforms include making personal income tax more progressive and broadening the tax base for corporate income tax and VAT,” the statement said.

“The programme aims to reach a primary surplus of 2.3% of GDP by 2024,” it added.

Creditor collaboration

President Ranil Wickremesinghe, who also serves as the country’s finance minister, on Tuesday presented an interim budget aimed at clinching the deal with the IMF.

The budget revised Sri Lanka’s deficit projection for 2022 to 9.8% of the gross domestic product from 8.8% earlier, while outlining fiscal reforms, including a hike in value-added taxes.

Sri Lanka needs to restructure nearly $30 billion of debt, and Japan has offered to lead talks with the other main creditors, including regional rivals India and China.

“If creditors are not willing to provide assurances, it would deepen Sri Lanka’s crisis and undermine repayment capacity,” Breuer said, adding that it was in the interest of all creditors to collaborate.

Sri Lanka will also need to strike a deal with international banks and asset managers that hold the majority of its $19 billion worth of sovereign bonds, which are now classified as in default.

The debt-laden country has been seeking up to $3 billion from the IMF in a bid to escape its worst economic crisis since independence from Britain in 1948.

Sri Lankans have faced acute shortages of fuel and other basic goods for months, leaving it in political turmoil and hit by runaway inflation, which is now at almost 65% year-on-year.

(Reuters)

Wickremesinghe Announces Resumption of Bailout Talks with IMF in August

Wickremesinghe’s remarks came during a speech in which he also appealed to lawmakers to come together to form an all-party government.

Colombo: Sri Lanka’s new President Ranil Wickremesinghe told parliament on Wednesday, August 3 that talks with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for a bailout package would restart in August, as the country wrestles with its worst economic crisis in decades.

“We are confident of successfully completing discussions,” Wickremesinghe said in a speech, in which he also called on lawmakers to come together to form an all-party government.

Wickremesinghe took office last month after his predecessor, Gotabaya Rajapaksa, fled the country and then quit following mass protests over his mishandling of the economy.

(Reuters)

Sri Lankan President Seeks Support From India, China, Middle East Amid Worsening Crisis

Sri Lanka’s economic crisis has created political unrest with protesters demanding President Rajapaksa’s resignation.

Colombo: Sri Lankan President Gotabaya Rajapaksa has sought all possible assistance from India, China and the countries in the Middle East when he met the high commissioners and ambassadors amidst the unprecedented economic crisis faced by the island nation.

“Had a productive meeting with Amb and HC’s of the #MiddleEast, #China & #India this morning. I requested their assistance in resolving the existing crisis, while briefing them on the current economic, social and political situation of #lka & appreciate their positive response,” President Rajapaksa tweeted.

The president also appreciated the assistance already provided by these countries to Sri Lanka which has been grappling with unprecedented economic turmoil since its independence from Britain in 1948.

Sri Lanka’s economic crisis has created political unrest with protesters demanding President Rajapaksa’s resignation.

President Rajapaksa requested the diplomats to extend all possible assistance for Sri Lanka in resolving the existing situation. He also expressed his appreciation of the assistance provided by those countries so far, according to a statement issued by the President’s office.

In keeping with India’s ‘Neighbourhood First’ policy, New Delhi has extended this year alone support worth over $3.5 billion to the people of Sri Lanka for helping them overcome their current difficulties.

India has rushed assistance in the form of line credit and other modes to help Sri Lanka which has virtually declared insolvency and defaulted on all foreign loans, including that of China totalling $51 billion.

China has announced an assistance of 500 million RMB (about $74 million) for the supply of essential goods but remained silent about President Rajapaksa’s request to defer the loan repayment and as well as its earlier announcement to consider a USD 2.5 billion loan facility for Colombo.

Also read: Knee-Deep in Debt, Food Shortages, Depleting Foreign Reserves: How Did Sri Lanka Get Here?

An International Monetary Fund (IMF) bailout programme is being currently worked out and expected to be available in the last quarter of the year.

Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe has announced that extended credit lines from India are being sought until the availability of the IMF facility.

In a rare gesture, China on June 8 commended India’s efforts to assist Sri Lanka to deal with its worst financial crisis but refuted the island nation’s President Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s remarks that Beijing has shifted its strategic focus from South Asia, including Pakistan, to South East Asia, saying the region still remained its priority.

India has extended an additional $500 million credit line to Sri Lanka to help the neighbouring country import fuel as it has been struggling to pay for imports after its foreign exchange reserves plummeted sharply in recent times, causing a devaluation of its currency and spiralling inflation.

With the economic crisis and the shortage of forex, the Indian credit line of $500 million for fuel imports has provided a lifeline to the island nation, which is currently experiencing its worst economic crisis since gaining independence in 1948.

A total of close to 4,00,000 million tonnes of various types of fuel have been delivered with Indian assistance in March and April.

(PTI)