Colombo, Sri Lanka – March 21, 2024: After constructive
discussions in Colombo, IMF Senior Mission Chief Mr. Peter Breuer and
Deputy Mission Chief Ms. Katsiaryna Svirydzenka issued the following
statement:
“The IMF team reached staff-level agreement with the Sri Lankan authorities
on the second review under the economic reform program supported by a
4-year
Extended Fund Facility (EFF) arrangement
and concluded the 2024 Article IV Consultation discussions. The EFF
arrangement was approved by the IMF Executive Board for a total amount of
SDR 2.3 billion (about US$3 billion) on March 20, 2023.
“The staff-level agreement is subject to the approval by IMF management and
the IMF Executive Board in the period ahead, contingent on: (i) the
implementation by the authorities of prior actions; (ii) the completion of
financing assurances review, which will focus on confirming multilateral
partners’ committed financing contributions and whether adequate progress
has been made with the debt restructuring to give confidence that the
restructuring will be concluded in a timely manner and in line with the
program’s debt targets.
“Upon completion of the Executive Board review, Sri Lanka would have access
to SDR 254 million (about US$337 million), bringing the total IMF financial
support disbursed under the arrangement to SDR 762 million (about US$1
billion).
“The authorities are making good progress in implementing an ambitious
reform agenda under the EFF with commendable outcomes, including rapid
disinflation, robust reserve accumulation, and initial signs of economic
growth while preserving the stability of the financial system. Public
finances have strengthened following substantial fiscal reforms. Program
performance was strong, with all quantitative performance criteria and
indicative targets for end-December 2023 met except for the indicative
target on social spending. Most structural benchmarks due before
end-February 2024 were either met or implemented with delay. Reforms in
some areas are still ongoing.
“The economic situation is gradually improving. Growth turned positive
after six consecutive quarters of contraction, registering 1.6 percent and
4.5 percent y-o-y growth in the third and fourth quarters of 2023
respectively. High-frequency economic indicators point to a continued
pick-up in manufacturing, construction, and services. Inflation has come
down from a peak of 70 percent in September 2022 to 5.9 percent in February
2024. Gross official reserves increased to US$4.5 billion at end-February
2024 with sizeable foreign exchange purchases by the central bank.
“Sustaining the reform momentum is critical to put the economy on a path
towards lasting recovery and stable and inclusive economic growth. We
welcome the authorities’ commitment to fiscal reforms. Continued progress
towards the introduction of the property tax is critical, together with
revenue measures to meet the revenue mobilization goals in 2025 and beyond.
Revenue administration and anti-corruption efforts to boost tax collections
are also key. Maintaining cost recovery in fuel and electricity pricing
will help minimize fiscal risks arising from state-owned enterprises.
“While inflation has decelerated faster than expected, continued monitoring
is warranted to help anchor inflationary pressures and support
macroeconomic stability. Against ongoing external uncertainty, it remains
important to continue to rebuild external buffers through strong reserves
accumulation.
“Sri Lanka’s Agreements in principle with the Official Creditor Committee
and Export-Import Bank of China on debt treatments consistent with program
parameters were important milestones putting Sri Lanka’s debt on the path
towards sustainability. The critical next steps are to finalize the
agreements with the official creditors and reach Agreements in Principle
with the main external private creditors in line with program parameters in
a timely manner. This should help restore Sri Lanka’s debt sustainability
over the medium term.
“The authorities’ recently published Action Plan to implement the key
recommendations of the Governance Diagnostic Report is a welcome step.
Sustained efforts to implement these reforms will be essential for
addressing corruption risks, rebuilding economic confidence, and making
growth more robust and inclusive.
The IMF mission team met with tea plantation workers in Nuwara Eliya and
learned first-hand about some of the challenges Sri Lanka’s most vulnerable
face. Continued efforts to improve targeting, adequacy, and coverage of
social safety nets, particularly Aswesuma, remain critical to protect the
poor and the vulnerable.
“The IMF team held meetings with President and Finance Minister Ranil
Wickremesinghe, Central Bank of Sri Lanka Governor Dr. P. Nandalal
Weerasinghe, Minister of Power and Energy Mr. Kanchana Wijesekera, State
Minister Mr. Shehan Semasinghe, Chief of Staff to the President Mr. Sagala
Ratnayaka, Secretary to the Treasury Mr. K M Mahinda Siriwardana, and other
senior government and CBSL officials. The team also met with
Parliamentarians, representatives from the private sector, civil society
organizations, and development partners.
“We would like to thank the authorities for the excellent collaboration.”