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Friday June 9th, 2023

Sri Lanka has choice between 1991 India and Venezeula in reform path: Sabry

ECONOMYNEXT – Sri Lanka’s Finance Minister Ali Sabry said the country could take up to 10 years to recover from the latest currency crisis if wrong decision are made, but could use it as a ‘blessing’ to put the country on a strong growth path.

“I am not sure if we could resolve this crisis even in two years,” Sabry told the parliament in his 44-minutes speech at the parliament on the current economic crisis.

“Whether we can resolve this crisis in 2 years or 10 years, it all depends on us.”

Typically Sri Lanka takes about 15 to 23 months for private credit to recover from a currency crises triggered by the island’s third world soft-peg according to analysts familiar with the central bank’s policy errors.

The steeper the depreciation – and the destruction of real capital and real income which has outcomes similar to the Tanzi effect – the longer it will take.

The policy errors come from anchor conflicts described in the impossible trinity of monetary policy objectives (when money is printed and the currency peg comes under pressure, exchange controls are imposed instead of raising rates).

Sri Lanka in April 2022 suspended payments on foreign loans, after sovereign bond holdings ratcheted up during three currency crises from 2015 to 2022.

With a peg made dysfunctional the island nation of 22 million is unable to match inflows to outflows, and the country is facing shortages of medicine, food like milk powder, fuel and power cut in the worst soft-pegged crisis in the central banks 72 year history.

Sabry said Sri Lanka’s usable liquid foreign reserves are less than 50 million US dollars, which is adequate to finance less than a day’s imports.

An attempt to float the currency – suspend convertibility – and match outflows to inflows without a reserve pass through has so far not fully succeeded and forex shortages persist.

Under floating exchange rate no foreign reserves are needed to operate a monetary regime as the central bank does not buy or sell dollars (there is no reserve pass-through of inflows and outflows).

Demand for dollars and supply of dollars is matched outside the monetary base and reserve money is unaffected by dollar flows. The US Fed, Bank of England or the ECB does not provide one cent of money for imports.

Analysts have blamed a surrender rule which forces reserve pass through of inflows for the delay in restoring monetary stability.

The rupee has since fallen to 370 rupees to the US dollar so far in May from 203 when the attempt to float the currency started in March.

“We have a huge responsibility towards the future generation if we use this crisis in a short period like how India used its 1990s crisis as a turning point to recover strongly or if we would become like Lebanon or Venezuela,” Sabry said.

RELATED LINK: Could Sri Lanka be the next sovereign defaulted Lebanon?

Sri Lanka’s central bank started with its fundamentally flawed Latin America style central bank with the rupee at 4.70 to the US dollar legislatively breaking currency board which has kept the country stable since 1885. (How Sri Lanka, Latin America was busted by Fed money doctors creating strongmen, anti-Americanism)

Sri Lanka is one of several central banks by the Federal Reserve in Latin America and Asia including Iran using a cookie cutter law devised by its once time Latin America division chief who was an admirer of Raul Prebisch and his Argentina central bank set up in 1935, which has defaulted repeatedly.

“Argentina’s experience served as an inspiration for Robert Triffin’s work concerning the revision
of the structure and functions of central banks in developing countries, which was reflected in the laws of Paraguay, Guatemala, the Dominican Republic and Ecuador,” wrote Felipe Pazo in CEPA Review of April 1998.

“These, in their turn, served in part as a model for the laws which created the central banks of Chile and Honduras and for the modifications made in the banking laws of El Salvador and Venezuela.

“The work of Raul Prebisch can thus be said to have been the basis for the contemporary central
banking system in Latin America.”

El Salvardor’s currency has since died and the country is dollarized, as had several Latin American cookie cutter central. Prebisch himself served as a consultant to Venezuela central bank in 1947.

Sabry said the government will present a new budget in the near future with tax increases as the government revenue has fallen to record low of 8.7 percent of the GDP by end-2021.

Sabry said the country could either use it to come back strongly or allow the island nation to suffer further.

India faced a currency crisis in 1991 as large volumes ‘special issue Treasury bills’ were bought running down foreign reserves.

India had to ship its last gold reserves but engaged in a strong reform program backed by the IMF and World Bank with trigger happy anti-austerity economists put on a backfoot.

The crisis, however, paved the way for the liberalisation of the Indian economy, since one of the structural reform conditions stipulated in the World Bank and IMF loan, required India to open itself up to participation from foreign entities in its industries, including its state-owned enterprises.

Lebanon’s central bank has record for stability in recent years but its policy started to grow wrong from 2016, when instead of raising rates to sterilize inflows it started to borrow dollars at high rates from the domestic market much like Sri Lanka’s central bank swapped dollars.

Sri Lanka’s economic crisis has led to political crisis and thousands of your-led protesters are agitating near President Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s office in the commercial heart of capital Colombo demanding the resignation of President and his brother Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa.

Both leaders have defied calls, to step down citing that they were chosen by a democratic election with popular mandates. (Colombo/May05/2022)

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  1. Bhagawaan says:

    He is setting up the stage for foreign corporations, to exploit further our resources in the name of reform.
    At this hour the need is a home grown program to reach self sufficiency .
    Learn from Greek.
    No foreign countries or entities are charitable towards us without looking for some benefits for them , therefore
    Design the right program and pick the right help to implement it not the other way around, once and for all we will glorious again

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Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  1. Bhagawaan says:

    He is setting up the stage for foreign corporations, to exploit further our resources in the name of reform.
    At this hour the need is a home grown program to reach self sufficiency .
    Learn from Greek.
    No foreign countries or entities are charitable towards us without looking for some benefits for them , therefore
    Design the right program and pick the right help to implement it not the other way around, once and for all we will glorious again

Sri Lanka facing unknown claims over halted airport terminal, Rs15bn in bills

ECONOMYNEXT – State-run Airport and Aviation Services of Sri Lanka, has 15 billion rupees of bills and unknown additional claims after a contractor suspended work on a Japan funded terminal, following a sovereign default.

Sri Lanka ran out of foreign reserves in April 2022 after two years of money printing by macro-economists to mis-target interest rates for stimulus (output gap targeting) and defaulted amid forex shortages.

“Due to suspension and termination, there will be severe financial impacts to AASL..” the agency said in its annual report, which was noted in an emphasis of matter by Sri Lanka’s Auditor General.

The costs included delay charges to the Contractor, cost of plant and materials ordered with additional warehouse charges, cost for the care of works (safety, operational, environmental), costs for maintenance of incomplete works at the site, loss due to deterioration of the material, cost of demobilization and fixed rentals of temporary works, contractor’s equipment, cost of repatriation of the contracts staff and labor employed.

There could contractor’s claims arising out of suspension and termination, possible litigation charges by the subcontractors, which will be back charged by the main contractor,

Japan’s Taisei Corporation has already submitted bills of 6.35 billion yen (15.8 billion rupees at balance sheet date).

There could contractor’s claims arising out of suspension and termination, possible litigation charges by the subcontractors, which will be back charged by the main contractor, the report said.

A final claim has not yet been made.

Meanwhile Aviation Minister Nimal Siripala de Silva told parliament this week that Japan had agreed to resume the project after debt re-structuring is complete.

After Sri Lanka’s government defaulted a circular was issued not to settle loans obtained by government entities.

AASL has said it had funds to continue to service loans, and informed the Treasury and the Japan International Co-operation Agency.

“Despite the circular issued by General Treasury, Company in writing communicated to JICA as well as to General Treasury that we are expecting to make loan repayments and continue the project as company has enough funds,” the company said.

“However at that time JICA requested an endorsement from Ministry of Finance regarding the capability of loan repayments.

“Since that endorsement was not available due to IMF restructuring programme, constructor temporally suspended the project.” (Colombo/June09/2023)

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Sri Lanka’s Peoples’ Leasing to buy 33-pct of First Capital

ECONOMYNEXT – Sri Lanka’s People’s Leasing and Finance said it had entered into an agreement with Janashakthi Limited to buy a 33 percent stake in First Capital Holdings Plc for 4.95 billion rupees.

People’s Leasing will pay 37.10 rupees for a share of First Capital Holdings.

The transaction is subject to approval of the central bank and other regulatory authorities applicable to the two parties, the company said in a stock exchange filing.

If the transaction goes ahead People’s Leasing will make a mandatory offer to minority shareholders. (Colombo/June08/2023)

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Sri Lanka’s police, health workers mostly violate rights of LGBTQ community – report

ECONOMYNEXT – Sri Lanka’s law implementing police officials and health workers among the top in violating the rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ), according to a study, citing the complaints at the local Human Rights Commission and police.

A study conducted by Bridge to Equality, a civil rights group concerned over LGBTQ in Sri Lanka, shows that 160 rights violation cases reported to the police out of a total 235  during the 18 month period through March 31, 2023, are involved with police and health sector workers.

The data showed that police have been the perpetrators in 96 rights violation cases, while 64 cases are involved with health workers including medical officers.

“The analysis shows that some LGBTQ persons are reluctant to go to the authorities (such as the Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka or the Police) due to the existing penal laws and various social stigmas that continues to exist in the society,” the Bridge to Equality said in the conclusion of the report based on the 235 complaints.

“These stigmas may include inaccurate perceptions that LGBTQ persons are psychologically unwell or that it is a trend or ‘lifestyle’ that conflicts with the Sri Lankan culture.”

The human rights violations have been involved with article 12 of the constitution which is involved with equality before the law and protection from discrimination, followed by article 11 which is linked to protection from torture and cruel, inhumane and degrading punishment.

The LGBTQ community also faces unlawful arrest, the report said.

Sri Lanka’s Penal Code, which states that “carnal intercourse against the order of nature” is a criminal offence” makes gayism  and lesbianism against the country’s law.

Meanwhile, the transgender community has been targeted by another section of the Penal Code which criminalises “pretending to be some other person.”

Civil groups such as the Human Rights Watch and iProbono have said that individuals in the LGBTQ+ community have been subjected to forced anal and vaginal exams as well as being subjected to homophobic slurs from hospital staff.

The Health Ministry admitted that its workers have been violating the rights of LGBTQ.

“The LGBTQ+ community has been subjected to physical, verbal and sexual harassment by those in the medical field,” Anwar Hamdani, Director of Tertiary Care Services at the Ministry of Health, told EconomyNext.

Police Spokesman Nihal Thalduwa said only transgender people are legalized in Sri Lanka.

“Others are not legally accepted in the country. That’s how the police get included in this. Take lesbian as an example. There can be some who like it. However, even if there are people who are in favour of that, if some people complain about it, since it is not legally accepted then the police will have to take actions against it,” Thalduwa told EconomyNext.

“Since it is illegal, police will have to act on the existing law.  Police do not have anything against it if that is legal. Maybe because of that there may be a perception saying the police are harassing them. But it is not like the police are going after individuals and harassing them.”

“However, when it comes to transgender issues the Police commissioner has issued circulars asking all police officers to take necessary precautions to not to harm the individuals privacy.”

While the repeal of the Penal Code that criminalizes gayism and lesbianism is currently in the process of being debated in parliament, convictions against those in the community are being carried out by the police.

“Other than a transition between genders, LGBTQ+ activity is unlawful in the country,” Thalduwa said.

“Therefore, those who are against the LGBTQ+ community look to the police to curb these activities. Because of its unlawful nature, convictions are being carried out.” (Colombo/June 08/2023)

 

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