Economic News
View all(73)📈 IT and Electronics Key to 7-8% Economic Growth Target
President Anura Kumara Dissanayake outlined plans to boost Sri Lanka's economic growth from ~5% to 7-8% in the coming years, positioning tech and electronics as pivotal drivers. • Growth & Investment Targets: The government intends to allocate Rs. 2 Trillion for capital expenditure next year to accelerate economic growth and expand foreign exchange inflows. • Sector Breakdowns & Export Potential: • ICT/BPM: Currently Sri Lanka's 3rd largest export earner, projected to have the potential to reach US$ 5 Bn in annual export earnings. • Electrical & Electronics: Currently generates ~US$ 500 Mn, with a target potential to scale up to US$ 2 Bn annually. • Key Policy & Infrastructure Plans: • Plans to establish a Virtual Special Economic Zone and a dedicated data centre. • Introduction of a "Green Channel" mechanism to streamline Customs for R&D electronic equipment imports. • Regulatory fixes for banking, Colombo Port City transaction bottlenecks, and SaaS/cloud computing payment limits. • Implementation of incentive schemes aimed at retaining highly skilled professionals and curbing talent migration. • Industrial Feedback: A special unit will be formed to directly address industrial challenges, including local market promotion hurdles and component import complexities.
📈 World Bank Approves US$150 Mn to Support Sri Lanka’s Reform Agenda
The World Bank’s Board of Executive Directors has approved US$150 million in financing under the Reforms for Growth, Resilience and Openness Development Policy Operation (REGROW DPO). This marks the first in a proposed series of three operations, transitioning focus from economic stabilization to long-term growth. • Core Financing Details: Provides US$150 Mn in vital budget support aimed at boosting private sector-led investment, strengthening competitiveness, and driving sustainable job creation. • Key Structural Reforms: Anchored in reducing trade barriers, upgrading the investment climate, strengthening the financial sector, and enhancing power sector competitiveness to lower energy costs. • Social & Governance Focus: Supports measures to expand women’s employment opportunities and improve the overall performance and governance of state-owned enterprises (SOEs). • Broader Portfolios: The World Bank currently manages 13 active projects in Sri Lanka totaling over US$1.5 Bn across health, education, and agriculture. Additionally, the IFC has committed nearly US$1.8 Bn to the local private sector between 2021 and 2026.
Sri Lanka’s Current Account Posts Second Consecutive Monthly Deficit in May 2026 📉
Sri Lanka's external current account recorded a US$ 194 Mn deficit in May 2026, driven by a widening trade deficit and lower services surplus, pushing the Jan-May cumulative deficit to US$ 97 Mn. Performance reflects ongoing Middle East conflict pressures. • Overall Trade Figures: The cumulative trade deficit widened significantly to US$ 4.7 Bn during Jan–May 2026, up from US$ 2.7 Bn in the same period of 2025, as import growth outpaced exports. Terms of trade deteriorated YoY. • Key Import Sectors: - Fuel: YoY expenditure surged by 112% to US$ 536 Mn in May due to higher prices and volumes, though it fell 39.5% month-on-month. - Motor Vehicles: Rose 20% MoM to US$ 250 Mn, reaching a cumulative US$ 1.07 Bn for Jan–May. • Services & Tourism: The services surplus contracted 36.8% YoY to US$ 143 Mn. While tourism arrivals grew 9.6% YoY (surpassing 1 Mn arrivals Jan-May), monthly tourist earnings dipped 5.1% YoY to US$ 156 Mn. • Remittances & Capital Flows: Workers' remittances remained strong, rising 26% YoY to a cumulative US$ 3.9 Bn (US$ 847 Mn in May). However, May saw net foreign outflows from government securities (US$ 60 Mn) and the CSE (US$ 23 Mn). • Reserves & Currency: Gross Official Reserves stood at US$ 6.9 Bn at end-May, bolstered by the 6th and 7th IMF-EFF tranches. The Sri Lankan Rupee depreciated 7.9% against the US$ year-to-date as of end-June 2026.
Balancing Import Liberalisation & Currency Stability in Sri Lanka 📈
• The Macro Outlook: Unrestricted imports of non-essential luxury goods place massive pressure on foreign exchange reserves. While the exchange rate stood at ~Rs. 178 per US$ at the end of 2019, it has depreciated by nearly 88% to around Rs. 335 per US$, severely eroding real incomes following the 2022–2023 crisis. • Socio-Economic Impact: Sri Lanka's richest 20% of households secure over half of national income, while the poorest 20% get less than 5%. Roughly 75% of households earn under Rs. 70,000/month; they do not drive luxury imports but bear the heaviest burden of currency depreciation through inflation. • Sector Alternatives: Relying solely on monetary tightening stalls growth in vital sectors like apparel & textiles and tea. Sustainable competitiveness requires moving beyond low-value-added industries by investing in domestic capacity, skills, logistics, and infrastructure rather than forcing workers to subsidise exports via falling living standards. • Policy Recommendations: Sri Lanka needs a sequenced, pragmatic trade strategy, mirroring nations like Vietnam or China. Instead of rigid IMF-prescribed austerity, a controlled annual vehicle import allocation of ~US$ 1.2 Bn (vs a risky US$ 2.6 Bn) and a temporary 50% vehicle surcharge can prevent a recurring balance-of-payments crisis.
📈 IMF Review & Tax Reforms: Fiscal Strategy Sparks Alternative Debate
An IMF mission is reviewing Sri Lanka's economic reforms (June 24–30), as the Government implements critical structural changes to stabilize the economy, enhance revenue, and maintain fiscal discipline. • Tax Adjustments & Streamlining: VAT obligations are being extended to non-resident digital service providers to ensure equal treatment for local businesses. Additionally, VAT and the Social Security Contribution Levy are being consolidated into a single effective tax rate of 20.5% to simplify tax administration. • Economic Outlook & Criticism: While the Government emphasizes strong public financial management and fiscal discipline to keep recovery on track, critics argue these policies may prolong IMF dependency beyond March 2027. Neoclassical tax policies—such as raising VAT from 8% to 18% (and now 20.5% combined)—are criticized for heavily burdening low-and middle-income households while inflating the cost of essentials, medicines, and educational materials. • Alternative Economic Perspectives: Heterodox economic arguments suggest that a sovereign State with its own currency does not face the same immediate liquidity constraints as a household. Critics recommend alternative, productive development paths—such as minimal taxation on essential commodities to boost manufacturing and capital accumulation, alongside higher taxes on luxury items.
📊 IMF Confirms Vehicle Curbs Did Not Derail EFF Program as Imports Cross $ 1 Bn
The IMF clarified that Sri Lanka’s temporary tightening of vehicle import financing requirements did not derail its Extended Fund Facility (EFF) program, despite triggering a continuous performance criterion on import restrictions. • Overall Figures: The country's cumulative vehicle import bill crossed US$ 1.071 Bn during the first five months of 2026 (January–May). Expenditure on vehicle imports rose 20% month-on-month to US$ 250 million in May alone. • Policy Measures: To contain the sharp post-reopening surge in imports, the Central Bank reduced maximum loan-to-value (LTV) ratios on motor cars, SUVs, vans, and three-wheelers to 40% (down from 50%), and commercial vehicles to 60% (down from 70%). Additionally, a temporary 50% surcharge was imposed on the existing 30% Customs Import Duty. • IMF Stance: IMF Mission Chief Evan Papageorgiou stated the IMF Executive Board accepted the deviation during the combined Fifth and Sixth Review after the Government confirmed the curbs are temporary and outlined corrective actions to reverse them within the announced timeframe.
📊 IMF Confirms Vehicle Curbs Did Not Derail EFF Program as Imports Cross $ 1 Bn
The IMF clarified that Sri Lanka’s temporary tightening of vehicle import financing requirements did not derail its Extended Fund Facility (EFF) program, despite triggering a continuous performance criterion on import restrictions. • Overall Figures: The country's cumulative vehicle import bill crossed US$ 1.071 Bn during the first five months of 2026 (January–May). Expenditure on vehicle imports rose 20% month-on-month to US$ 250 million in May alone. • Policy Measures: To contain the sharp post-reopening surge in imports, the Central Bank reduced maximum loan-to-value (LTV) ratios on motor cars, SUVs, vans, and three-wheelers to 40% (down from 50%), and commercial vehicles to 60% (down from 70%). Additionally, a temporary 50% surcharge was imposed on the existing 30% Customs Import Duty. • IMF Stance: IMF Mission Chief Evan Papageorgiou stated the IMF Executive Board accepted the deviation during the combined Fifth and Sixth Review after the Government confirmed the curbs are temporary and outlined corrective actions to reverse them within the announced timeframe.
📈 Colombo Inflation Surges to 6.8% in June 2026
Overall headline inflation in Colombo accelerated notably during the month, driven largely by a sharp turnaround in food prices alongside steady upward pressure in non-food categories. • Overall Figures: The Colombo Consumer Price Index (CCPI) recorded a Year-on-Year (Y-o-Y) inflation rate of 6.8% in June 2026, marking an increase from the 5.5% reported in May 2026, according to official data from the Department of Census and Statistics. • Food Sector: Y-o-Y inflation in the Food Group saw a significant jump, rising to 3.6% in June 2026 after sitting at a low 0.9% in May 2026. This sharp increase highlights shifting domestic supply and price dynamics for essential consumer goods. • Non-Food Sector: The Non-Food Group also experienced an upward trajectory, with Y-o-Y inflation increasing to 8.4% in June 2026, compared to 7.8% in the previous month. This continuous rise reflects broader macroeconomic pressures impacting service and utility costs across the capital.
📈 IMF Concludes Sri Lanka Visit: Economic Resilience Maintained Amid External Shocks
An International Monetary Fund (IMF) team led by Mr. Evan Papageorgiou concluded a staff visit to Colombo (June 24–30, 2026) to assess macroeconomic developments and progress under the Extended Fund Facility (EFF). Overall Macroeconomic Impact • Inflation: Headline inflation rose from 1.6% y/y in February 2026 to 5.5% y/y in May due to energy price hikes driven by the Middle East war. • External Sector: Tourist arrivals growth softened, and gross international reserves accumulation decelerated. • Policy Responses: Central Bank hiked rates by 100 bps; government rolled out temporary fuel, electricity, and fertilizer subsidies alongside cash transfers. Key Sector & Reform Breakdowns • Fiscal Policy: Authorities committed to reverting to a primary balance target of 2.3% of GDP by 2027 following fiscal easing in 2026. • SOE & Energy: Accelerating state-owned enterprise (SOE) restructuring and maintaining cost-recovery energy pricing remain critical to minimizing fiscal risks. • Debt Management: Debt restructuring is nearing completion, though capacity building for the Public Debt Management Office must accelerate. Next Steps • Performance will be formally assessed in the upcoming Seventh Review of the EFF arrangement in the fall of 2026.
📉 LMD-BCI Free Falls to 20-Month Low Amid Rupee and Fuel Pressures
Sri Lanka’s business sentiment plummeted in June 2026 as currency depreciation, fuel hikes, and geopolitical inflationary pressures hit corporate confidence. • Overall Business Sentiment: The LMD-PepperCube Business Confidence Index (BCI) dropped by 16 points to 132 in June (down from 148 in May). This marks its lowest level since October 2024 and sits 42 points below its 12-month average of 174. By comparison, the index stood at 210 in June last year. • Currency & Forex Market: The Sri Lankan Rupee depreciated by 7.8% against the US Dollar on a year-to-date basis as of 5 June. To manage foreign exchange demand, the Central Bank of Sri Lanka (CBSL) sold over US$ 223 Mn in the domestic forex market in May, while purchasing US$ 12 Mn. • Macroeconomic Outlook: Short-term inflation is projected to rise up to 7% (from 5.5% in May), driven by elevated energy prices and commodity volatility. However, BMI expects a rupee recovery by year-end due to tightening monetary policy and easing global oil prices. • Financial Reforms: On a positive note, the IMF approved a disbursement of US$ 695 Mn following the successful completion of the fifth and sixth reviews under the Extended Fund Facility (EFF). Firms remain highly cautious due to rising costs, exchange rate volatility, and political uncertainty, keeping near-term projections for the index subdued.
📈 Indonesia’s Golden Vision 2045: Key Insights & Lessons for Sri Lanka
At a Pathfinder Foundation roundtable, Indonesian Ambassador Dewi Gustina Tobing detailed Indonesia's "Golden Vision 2045" strategy, highlighting shared goals in human capital, food security, and investment attraction that offer valuable lessons for Sri Lanka’s economic path. Economic Benchmarks & Projections • Current Stand: Indonesia is Southeast Asia's largest economy with a population of over 280 Mn, a GDP of ~$ 1.4 Tn, and resilient growth of ~5% driven by infrastructure and industrial development. • 2045 Targets: Aims to become the world's 5th largest economy, projecting a GDP of US$ 9.1 Tn to US$ 9.8 Tn and a GDP per capita of US$ 23,000 to US$ 30,000. Strategic Pillars & Industry Focus • Foundational Pillars: Driven by human development (science/technology), sustainable economic growth, equitable development, and robust national governance/resilience. • Downstream Industrialisation: Shifting from raw material exports to domestic value-addition. For example, its nickel reserves have been transformed into an integrated ecosystem for smelting, battery production, and electric vehicle supply chains. Other key natural assets being leveraged include palm oil, coal, and gold. Bilateral Relevance for Sri Lanka • Shared Interests: As Indian Ocean states, both nations seek enhanced regional stability, connectivity, and trade. • Partnership Focus: Deeper bilateral cooperation is expected via frameworks like ASEAN and the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) to boost trade, investment, and diversification.
📈 IMF Reviews Progress of Sri Lanka Customs
A high-level International Monetary Fund (IMF) delegation met yesterday with senior officials of the Sri Lanka Customs Department to review ongoing reform milestones and outline future steps. • Key Highlights: Meeting Objective: Progress review focused on assessing the department's ongoing reform milestones, operational efficiency improvements, and revenue generation measures. Strategic Focus: Key discussions centered on strengthening revenue administration frameworks and enhancing compliance mechanisms to stabilize national fiscal collections. Participants: An IMF delegation—including Andrew Okello, Cindy Negus, Greg Topping, Philip Griffiths, Bob Hamilton, and Maureen Kidd—engaged directly with local customs leadership. _Note: This summary is based on provisional administrative updates regarding the ongoing IMF review framework._