Economic News
View all(94)President to Revise Fuel Prices and Taxes Amid Middle East Crisis 📈
The Government of Sri Lanka has announced urgent measures to stabilize the energy sector as the Middle East conflict disrupts global supply chains and increases costs. • Overall Impact: National fuel prices have already seen an average increase of 8% due to global crude rising from $81 to$ 114. Long-term tender premiums have surged from $2.50 to$ 40. • Pricing & Private Sector: A price revision is expected "very soon" to prevent supply shortages. Private suppliers, who hold 43% of the domestic market, face potential losses of $ 55 million per shipment and may halt imports without market-aligned pricing. • Taxation & Revenue: The government earns roughly Rs. 20 billion monthly from fuel taxes. While tax relief is under review, the state is shifting toward targeted subsidies over broad reductions to maintain revenue and meet policy goals. • Energy Supply & Procurement: • Crude Oil: Significant strain exists; a 90,000-ton shipment is delayed, and no proposals were received for April supply. • Refined Products: Supplies of petrol, diesel, and aviation fuel remain stable through April via Singapore and India. • Diversification: G2G talks are underway, including with Russia, to secure long-term supplies. • Exporters: Private licenses have been issued to ensure the export sector receives uninterrupted fuel. • LP Gas: Supply remains stable for March and April. Note: Based on parliamentary statements regarding immediate energy planning.
📈 Economist Warns of Rising Debt Strain and Stagflation Risks
Former CBSL Deputy Governor Dr. W.A. Wijewardena warns that Sri Lanka’s "honeymoon" period of low interest rates is ending, as external shocks and domestic refinancing needs create a volatile economic outlook. • Monetary & Inflation Risks CBSL may be forced to tighten monetary policy if inflation breaches the 7% upper bound. Potential for Stagflation: A high-risk scenario where rising input costs and price pressures coincide with slowing economic growth and rising unemployment. • Debt & Fiscal Vulnerability The government’s "revolving credit" model is under pressure; while interest payments are currently met by revenue, the rollover of maturing debt depends heavily on market liquidity. Tighter global conditions and the Middle East conflict threaten to increase borrowing costs, ending the low-yield environment for government securities. • External Sector & Currency Exchange Rate: A downward depreciation trend is anticipated due to weakening FX inflows and rising import bills. Energy & Imports: Higher global oil prices are expected to widen the trade deficit and strain external accounts. • Key Concerns Supply constraints affecting manufacturing and production inputs. Limited fiscal space to buffer against external shocks, leaving little room for policy error.
Vehicle Import Momentum Cools Following 2025 Peak 📈
JB Securities reports a moderation in Sri Lanka’s automotive sector as the initial import surge eases, providing relief to the current account. • Overall Figures: Total vehicle imports dropped to US$ 236.4 Mn in January 2026, down from the December peak of US$ 311.1 Mn. Personal vehicle imports saw a sharper 32% MoM decline to US$ 163.8 Mn. • Registration Trends: Total registrations fell by 3,683 units to 51,682 in February. Motor car registrations specifically declined from 4,648 to 4,163 units. • Sector Breakdowns: Two-wheelers remain the highest volume category. SUVs and Crossovers are outpacing traditional cars in the passenger segment. Electric Vehicles (EVs) and hybrids showed moderate growth, with a rising presence of Chinese manufacturers. • Economic Impact: The slowdown in imports likely supported the CBSL’s US$ 461 Mn forex purchase in February, signaling a healthy current account surplus. • Market Insight: Experts suggest headline registration numbers may be "inflated" as dealers register slow-moving inventory to avoid a 3% monthly penalty on vehicles not registered within 90 days of import.
Fragile Recovery in Nuwara Eliya Post-Cyclone Ditwah 📉
An IOM assessment reveals that while 98% of the nearly 69,000 people displaced by the November 2025 cyclone have returned, the recovery remains precarious due to high environmental risks and economic gaps. • Displacement Status: As of March 2026, 1,798 individuals remain displaced. However, a significant 60,000 people are living in "red zones" prone to landslides, technically classified as displaced due to high risk. • Infrastructure & Services: While electricity is fully restored, 77% of roads and bridges remain only partially functional. Access to safe water and sanitation is still uneven in Nuwara Eliya, Norwood, and Kothmale East. • Livelihood Impact: Only 43% of income-generating activities have fully resumed. The plantation communities face the toughest recovery due to insecure land tenure and high dependence on estate-based labor. • Key Sector Needs: Housing & Relocation: 97% of affected households require financial assistance or planned relocation support. Agriculture & ICT: There is an urgent demand for livelihood inputs (seeds, tools) and better access to landslide risk information and ICT-backed early warning systems. • Barriers to Recovery: Psychological trauma and social tensions affect 97% of respondents, compounded by a lack of financial resources (63%) and limited employment opportunities.
📈 Global Energy Crisis: Brent Crude Hits $115 Amid Iran Conflict
The escalation of the Iran war has triggered a sharp surge in global energy prices, signaling prolonged inflationary pressure for oil-importing economies like Sri Lanka. • Overall Figures: Brent crude futures surpassed US$ 115 per barrel, marking its highest level in over a week. Natural gas prices have spiked by 30% following severe production disruptions. • Market Outlook: Analysts suggest these price hikes are no longer temporary. The blockade of the Strait of Hormuz and direct hits to production infrastructure mean a return to price stability is unlikely in the short term. • Economic Impact: Central banks (Fed, ECB, BoE) may be forced to maintain higher interest rates to combat this "substantial" price increase, rather than "looking through" the volatility as previously expected. • Local Context: For Sri Lanka, sustained high energy costs exert significant pressure on foreign exchange reserves and the cost of production across key export sectors such as tea and apparel & textiles. Increased fuel and electricity costs could further strain domestic inflation and logistics.
📈 Fuel Price Mitigation: Strategies to Cushion Consumers
Global oil prices have surged above US$ 100 per barrel due to Middle East conflicts. In mid-March 2026, Singapore benchmarks for petrol and diesel hit US$ 140 (+86%) and US$ 189 (+112%) respectively compared to February levels. Without intervention, domestic prices could skyrocket by up to 81%. • Projected Impact (Formula-based) • Petrol: Potential rise to Rs. 452 (+53% YoY) • Diesel: Potential rise to Rs. 540 (+81% YoY) • Risk: Sharp inflationary pressure on transport and essential goods. • Proposed Triple-Adjustment Pathway • Cost-Recovery Neutral: Treat administrative costs as fixed constants rather than percentages to stop price amplification during global spikes. • Fuel Tax Neutral: Apply a government subsidy to offset "unexpected excess tax" (VAT/SSCL) generated when landed costs rise, keeping net tax revenue stable. • Fiscally Neutral: Use additional VAT revenue collected from across the economy (due to fuel-led inflation) to further subsidize pump prices without hurting the national budget. • Economic Context These adjustments aim to maintain fiscal discipline and IMF cost-recovery commitments while preventing a cost-of-living crisis. This "both-and" approach ensures the CPC recovers costs without passing the full global shock to households and the ICT/BPM or manufacturing sectors.
ME Conflict Triggers Early Losses and Supply Chain Risks 📈
The ongoing Middle East crisis is impacting key Sri Lankan industries through revenue losses, rising input costs, and logistical bottlenecks based on private sector reports. • Tourism Sector losing US$ 80–100 Mn in monthly revenue. European arrivals for March are down 30–40%, with a projected 50% drop in real revenue as high-spenders stay away. Forward bookings for May–July remain "dreadful." • Apparel & Textiles Order books remain stable for the next few quarters, but Brandix warns of significant impact from April. Risks include rising costs for petroleum-based synthetic fabrics, dyes, and chemicals, alongside surging freight charges. • Tea The Middle East accounts for 55% of export volumes. Shipments to Iraq, Iran, and Jordan were temporarily halted or redirected. While auction prices have stabilized, higher insurance premiums and freight surcharges are squeezing margins. • Rubber & Manufacturing Drastic cost shocks reported as 90% of inputs are petroleum-based; synthetic rubber prices have surged by 50%. DSI Samson Group warns of "dark times" post-April holidays once current inventories are exhausted. • Macro Risks • Logistics: Rising freight and insurance costs across all sectors. • Energy: High sensitivity to petroleum-linked utility and transport costs. • Employment: Risks to smallholder incomes and worker mobility if fuel disruptions persist. _Source: Industry briefings (Provisional Data)_
IMF Mission to Sri Lanka: Combined 5th & 6th Reviews 📈
An International Monetary Fund (IMF) staff team, led by Mission Chief Evan Papageorgiou, is scheduled to visit Colombo from March 23 to April 9, 2026. This mission marks a critical step in maintaining the country's macroeconomic stability. • Mission Scope: The visit will focus on the combined fifth and sixth reviews of Sri Lanka’s economic reform program under the Extended Fund Facility (EFF). • Key Objectives: Discussions will center on progress regarding structural reforms, fiscal targets, and the overall trajectory of the national recovery plan. • Next Steps: The team will engage directly with local authorities, with formal findings and staff-level conclusions expected at the end of the mission on April 9. Successful completion of these reviews is vital for the continued release of funding tranches, which support debt sustainability and bolster investor confidence in the financial services and external trade sectors. _Note: Based on official IMF scheduling as of March 19, 2026._
Fitch: Sri Lanka's Sovereign Rating Resilient Amid Global Energy Shock 📈
• Overall Assessment: Fitch Ratings expects no "severe downside pressure" on Sri Lanka’s sovereign credit rating despite the Middle East conflict. While the energy shock may blunt recent improvements in credit metrics, the country is in a stronger position than in 2022 to manage volatility. • Key Economic Buffers: • External Sector: A shift from a wide deficit in 2022 to a current account surplus in 2025 provides a cushion against rising oil prices. • Reserves: Improving foreign exchange reserves through 2026 act as a vital rating buffer. • Fiscal Discipline: Significant fiscal deterioration is not expected, as the IMF program limits fiscal slippage, though it also constrains policy flexibility. • Risk Factors & Pressure Points: • Energy: High oil prices threaten the trade balance. • Remittances & Tourism: Prolonged regional instability could disrupt inflows from the Gulf and dampen tourism recovery. • Debt: Government debt remains a key weakness, projected to fall to 96% of GDP by 2027 from 100.5% in 2024 (still above the 74% peer median). • Growth & Infrastructure: Gains are supported by a Rs. 342 Bn allocation for road development, ICT/digital infrastructure tax incentives, and the expansion of Colombo’s international airport. • Current Rating: Affirmed at CCC+ in October 2025 following the upgrade from Restricted Default in late 2024.
⛽ Strict Odd-Even Fuel Rationing Reinstated Amidst Panic Buying
Authorities have escalated fuel distribution controls as persistent panic buying continues to strain supply chains despite the return of the QR-code system. • Fuel Rationing Measures: Effective immediately, the Ceylon Petroleum Corporation (CPC) has implemented an odd-even system based on the last digit of vehicle number plates. • Even Digits (inc. 0): Allowed to pump on even-numbered days. • Odd Digits: Allowed to pump on odd-numbered days. • QR Code Enforcement: The Fuel Station Owners’ Association confirmed that fuel will now strictly be issued only upon presentation of a valid QR code. Previous concessions for emergency or manual issuing have been revoked. • LPG Supply Stability: In contrast to vehicle fuel, Litro Gas Lanka assures stable supplies for the energy sector. • Shipments are arriving every three days. • Current stocks are sufficient until the end of April. • A vessel carrying 88,000 MT of LPG is due in the Maldives tomorrow, with another 88,000 MT expected by April 20th. • National Context: These measures aim to curb excessive demand and restore order at filling stations to prevent further disruption to logistics and transport services essential for the economy.
## 📈 Middle East Conflict: Risks to Global Growth & Fiscal Stability
A prolonged Middle East conflict poses significant credit challenges for developed markets (DMs), primarily through surging energy costs and weakened economic growth, according to Fitch Ratings. • Energy & Inflation Impact: Higher oil and gas prices remain the most direct contagion channel. While the baseline expects Brent to average US$ 70/bbl in 2026, a stress scenario of US$ 95-100/bbl could push several DMs toward recession. • Vulnerable Regions: Japan and Korea: Projected to face the greatest hit to growth due to high energy/transport costs eroding real incomes. UK, Italy, and France: High exposure to acute inflation risks based on their energy supply composition. Central/Eastern Europe: Taiwan, the Baltic states, and Slovenia are identified as highly sensitive among smaller DMs. • Fiscal & Monetary Outlook: Fiscal Pressure: Government debt ratios are already elevated. Targeted interventions like price caps or tax rebates could widen budget deficits further. Borrowing Costs: Eurozone bond yield spreads have risen by an average of 29bp since late February, increasing long-term refinancing costs. Monetary Policy: Central banks face a difficult trade-off; rate hikes to curb energy-led inflation may be constrained by weakening employment and demand. • Sri Lankan Context: While the report focuses on DMs, prolonged global volatility and high oil prices traditionally pressure Sri Lanka’s energy imports and logistics costs, potentially impacting export competitiveness in sectors like apparel & textiles and tea.
Global Energy Crisis: Iran Strikes UAE as Gulf Conflict Escalates 📈
A significant widening of the Gulf conflict has triggered a sharp reaction in global markets, directly impacting Sri Lanka’s external economic environment through heightened energy costs and supply chain volatility. • Global Market Impact: Oil prices surged over 5% following fresh Iranian strikes on UAE oil facilities, including the Shah gas field and Fujairah. The Strait of Hormuz remains largely closed, disrupting a primary artery for global crude flows. • Macroeconomic Risks: The conflict, now in its third week, is driving global inflation and slowing growth. Central banks are already responding, with the Reserve Bank of Australia raising interest rates for a second consecutive month to counter energy-driven price pressures. • Regional Stability & Shipping: Direct targeting of US-aligned Gulf states has led to airspace closures and severe shipping risks. Major partners like Germany, Japan, and Italy have declined naval deployments to secure waterways, citing a lack of clear mandates. • Security Update: Escalation continues across multiple fronts, including missile strikes in Tehran, Beirut, and Baghdad. Despite sustained attacks, Iran claims its offensive accuracy and operational capacity remain high. _Note: Summary based on reports as of March 18, 2026._