Economic News
View all(94)📈 Sri Lanka’s IMF Review: Stabilisation Real, but Reform Unfinished
The completion of the IMF’s combined Fifth and Sixth Reviews under the Extended Fund Facility marks a crucial milestone for Sri Lanka's economic recovery, though long-term risks persist. Overall Figures & Disbursements • Total IMF Funds: The approval released SDR 508 Mn (~US$ 695 Mn), bringing total disbursements to ~US$ 2.4 Bn of the 48-month programme. • Emergency Buffer: Complemented by US$ 206 Mn received in Dec 2025 following Cyclone Ditwah. • Reserves: Gross official reserves hit ~US$ 7.0 Bn by end-March 2026, though usable liquid reserves remain lower due to the inclusion of the PBOC swap. Macroeconomic & Sector Successes • Fiscal Correction: Government revenue near-doubled to 16.6% of GDP in 2025 (vs 8.4% in 2022). Tax revenue reached 14.8% of GDP, driven by higher VAT and motor vehicle import taxes. • Growth & Inflation: The economy grew 5% in 2025 (GDP per capita at US$ 5,003), while March 2026 inflation stabilized at 2.2% YoY. A primary budget surplus of 2.3% of GDP was met. • Energy Reform: Cost-recovery pricing formulas were implemented for the electricity sector to curb state enterprise losses. Outlook & High Debt Risks • Debt Vulnerability: Debt sustainability risk remains "very high." Repayment pressures will intensify starting in 2027 as restructured bilateral and commercial debts mature. • Sovereign Ratings: Credit ratings remain in distressed territory (S&P: CCC+, Moody’s: Caa1, Fitch: CCC+), making market borrowing expensive (11-13% interest). • 2026 Growth Slowdown: GDP growth is projected to ease to 3% in 2026 due to Middle East conflicts affecting supply chains, tourism, and remittances, alongside domestic recovery friction.
📈 Sri Lanka Credit Card Growth Moderates in April
Data from the Central Bank of Sri Lanka shows a slowdown in the expansion of active credit cards for April 2026, though the overall trend remains positive amid recovering consumer spending. • Overall Figures & Growth: Total active cards reached 2,228,852 by end-April 2026, a modest MoM increase of 0.6% (up from 2,215,853 in March). April saw an addition of 12,999 active cards, a drop compared to the 22,473 cards added in March. Year-to-Date (YTD) growth for the first four months of 2026 stands at 2.9%, with 63,070 cards added. • Historical Context & Drivers: The April moderation follows a stronger trajectory in 2025, where active cards grew by 7.8% (+157,730 cards), and 2024, which saw 4.8% growth (+91,371 cards). Prior growth was driven by Sri Lanka's broader economic recovery, lower interest rates, and aggressive bank promotional campaigns. Total active cards currently remain above pre-crisis levels, reflecting a gradual but steady stabilization in national credit demand and retail activity.
📈 Sri Lanka Export Strategy: Weak Rupee Overreliance Warning
A commentary by a Chartered Financial Analyst warns that relying on currency depreciation for export competitiveness is structurally flawed, drawing critical lessons from Singapore's economic model. • Core Issue: The local export lobby argues a weaker rupee boosts global attractiveness. However, currency depreciation fails long-term because imported raw material costs (e.g., fabric from China) spike proportionally within 6 to 9 months, wiping out temporary margins. • Sector Impact: Key traditional cash cows—apparel & textiles (garments), tea, and rubber—operate strictly as "price-taker" commodities. Because these identical products lack unique differentiation, global buyers easily leverage Sri Lanka’s currency drops to renegotiate lower US$ contract prices. • The 2022 Crisis: The 80% collapse of the rupee during the 2022 economic crisis did not surge exports. Instead, reliance on imported fuel, chemicals, and machinery made production exponentially more expensive. • The Singapore Blueprint: While the Singapore Dollar appreciated over 30% against the US$ (2002–2023), its exports grew from US$ 130 Bn to over US$ 500 Bn. Singapore bypassed price competition by anchoring high-value ecosystems like ICT/BPM, precision engineering, and pharmaceuticals, leveraging a strong currency to keep capital equipment and domestic inflation cheap. • The Outlook: With a stabilizing post-crisis IMF framework, exporters are urged to stop relying on currency depreciation and immediately invest in ICT/BPM integration, high-end design capabilities, geographic branding, and premium value-addition to escape the commodity trap by 2030.
📈 Sri Lanka at Economic Crossroads: Reform or Relapse, Warns IMF
Sri Lanka has achieved hard-won stability following its sovereign default, but the IMF warns there is "no room for policy errors" as the nation risks slipping back into cycles of debt and fiscal stress without permanent structural transformations. • Current Progress: Most quantitative targets under the IMF's Extended Fund Facility (EFF) program have been met, debt restructuring is nearing completion, and governance and anti-corruption reforms are moving forward. • Key Vulnerabilities: The current stabilization should not be mistaken for a full recovery. Long-term prosperity is threatened by risks of complacency, domestic and external shocks, and the potential reversal of essential fiscal policies. • Strategic Economic Priorities: Institutional Reforms: Strengthening public oversight, digital governance, transparent procurement, and creating accountable state-owned enterprises (SOEs) to eradicate corruption. Export & Hub Transition: Accelerating the shift toward a competitive, export-oriented economy leveraging manufacturing, services, tourism, and technology/innovation to generate foreign exchange. Human Capital: Prioritizing domestic skills development and higher education to leverage Sri Lanka's highly literate population and actively reduce youth emigration. • National Outlook: Sustainable growth cannot rely on short-term populism or external borrowing. Sri Lanka’s future trajectory depends heavily on policy consistency, modern infrastructure, and the political resolve to embed permanent fiscal discipline within its governance framework.
🚗 Vehicle Surcharge Fails to Dent Demand; CBSL Sells $211M to Defend Rupee
Sri Lanka Customs reports that vehicle imports remain resilient despite May’s 50% temporary surcharge, while the Central Bank (CBSL) stepped up dollar sales to manage exchange rate pressures. Customs Revenue Breakdown • Vehicle imports continue to drive around 30% of total Customs revenue, aligning with last year’s 30%-35% contribution. • While import volumes dipped slightly, a depreciating Rupee boosted rupee-denominated tax collections, offsetting any volume decline. • Monthly vehicle tax contributions in 2026: - Jan: Rs. 91 Bn (Total: Rs. 235 Bn) - Feb: Rs. 75 Bn (Total: Rs. 215 Bn) - Mar: Rs. 77 Bn (Total: Rs. 231.9 Bn) - Apr: Rs. 84 Bn (Total: Rs. 242.9 Bn) - May (as of 28th): Rs. 76 Bn (Total: Rs. 212 Bn) Forex Pressures & CBSL Intervention • Global supply shocks from the Middle East war pushed the Rupee to a four-year low, forcing CBSL to be a net seller of foreign exchange for the second consecutive month. • In May, CBSL purchased US$ 12 Mn and sold US$ 223.3 Mn, resulting in net dollar sales of US$ 211.3 Mn (up from net sales of US$ 13 Mn in April). • Despite May outflows, CBSL remains a net purchaser of US$ 485.9 Mn for the first five months of 2026. Reserves Status • Gross official reserves grew by 1.7% MoM to US$ 6.87 Bn at end-May (up from US$ 6.76 Bn in April), supported by external foreign inflows despite CBSL's market interventions.
📈 Sri Lanka Economic & Investment Summit Set for Oct 2026
The Ceylon Chamber of Commerce will host the 26th edition of the Sri Lanka Economic and Investment Summit on 12–13 October 2026. This premier forum aims to foster high-level dialogue on national economic priorities. • Focus Areas: The summit will address _fiscal and structural reforms_, _trade competitiveness_, _digital transformation_, and energy sustainability. • Key Themes: Discussions will explore integrating into Asia's growth networks, leveraging ICT/BPM for development, and assessing the impact of AI on business. • Strategic Outreach: Following successful international engagements, including a high-level delegation to Mumbai, the event seeks to attract increased regional investment and global partnerships. • Historical Context: Building on the 2025 edition, which saw 850+ participants and delegates from 20+ countries, the forum remains a critical platform for shaping national economic policy. Further details regarding the programme and registration will be announced by the Chamber shortly.
📈 Global Growth Outlook Trimmed Amid Oil Crisis
Fitch Ratings has lowered its 2026 global growth forecast to 2.4%, a 0.2pp reduction due to the oil crisis caused by the US-Iran conflict. • Global Forecasts: US growth revised down to 1.9% (-0.3pp); Eurozone to 0.9% (-0.4pp). China’s forecast raised to 4.6% (+0.3pp) following resilient export data. • Oil Impact: Brent crude price assumption hiked to USD 87/bbl from USD 70/bbl. The Strait of Hormuz closure remains a major headwind, though global oil intensity is lower than in the 1970s. • Tech Cushion: Strong momentum in ICT/BPM and semiconductor investments is offsetting oil-driven slowdowns, particularly in Asia. Global semiconductor sales surged 80% YoY in March. • Economic Buffers: US IT investment grew 18% YoY in 1Q26, supporting global trade despite inflationary pressures. • Monetary Policy: Central banks are cautious; the Fed and Bank of England are expected to hold rates throughout 2026, while the ECB signals a potential 25bp hike this June. Note: Based on Fitch Ratings' June 2026 Global Economic Outlook.
📈 Govt. posts Rs. 116.35 b Budget surplus in 1Q as revenue surges 40%
Sri Lanka’s fiscal position strengthened significantly in Q1 2026, recording an overall budget turnaround driven by robust revenue collection and ongoing fiscal consolidation, according to Central Bank data. • Overall Fiscal Performance: The overall Budget balance recorded a surplus of Rs. 116.35 Bn, a sharp turnaround from the Rs. 234.46 Bn deficit in Q1 2025. The primary surplus expanded by 78.5% YoY to Rs. 709.6 Bn (up from Rs. 397.47 Bn). • Revenue Breakdown: Total revenue and grants jumped 40.5% YoY to Rs. 1.5 Trillion. • Tax revenue rose 36.4% YoY to Rs. 1.34 Trillion. • Non-tax revenue surged 91.2% YoY to Rs. 153.88 Bn. • Grants remained marginal at Rs. 0.47 Bn. • Expenditure Trends: Total expenditure and lending minus repayments grew at a slower pace of 6.2% YoY, totaling Rs. 1.38 Trillion. • Recurrent expenditure increased by 4.7% YoY to Rs. 1.28 Trillion. • Capital expenditure and lending minus repayments rose 29.2% YoY to Rs. 106 Bn. The surge in state revenue comfortably outpaced total spending, allowing the government to maintain a strong quarterly surplus.
📈 Sri Lanka Private Sector Credit Growth Moderates to Rs. 101 Bn in April
Private sector borrowing from the banking system slowed down in April 2026, recording its third-lowest monthly expansion in the past 12 months following a sharp surge in March, according to recent CBSL data. • Overall Figures: Total outstanding private sector credit rose by Rs. 100.6 billion month-on-month (M-o-M) to Rs. 10.8 trillion, a 0.9% M-o-M increase. On a year-on-year (YoY) basis, private credit expanded by 27% (down slightly from 27.1% in March). • Banking Sector Breakdown: - Domestic Banking Units (DBUs): Accounted for the bulk of credit, increasing by Rs. 97 billion (1% M-o-M) to Rs. 10.24 trillion. YoY growth eased to 29.1%. - Offshore Banking Units (OBUs): Rose by Rs. 3.4 billion (0.6% M-o-M) to Rs. 559.6 billion, but contracted by 2.2% YoY. • Public Sector & Money Supply: - Net Government Credit: Increased by Rs. 20.5 billion M-o-M to Rs. 8.15 trillion, but remains in an annual contraction of 2.7% YoY. - State-Owned Enterprises (SOEs): Outstanding credit to public corporations edged up by Rs. 2.2 billion M-o-M to Rs. 413.5 billion, continuing a sharp YoY contraction of 31.6%. - Broad Money (M2b): Expanded by 11.6% YoY in April.
📈 Workers’ Remittances Surge to Record Highs in May 2026
Sri Lanka’s migrant worker earnings have hit historic highs, strengthening its position as the nation’s single largest source of foreign exchange and driving macroeconomic stability. • May 2026 Performance: Inflows jumped 36.2% YoY to US$ 847 Mn, up 10.3% from April’s US$ 767.9 Mn. This marks the fifth consecutive month of robust growth and stands as the second-highest monthly inflow in history, just behind the US$ 879 Mn record set in December 2025. • Cumulative 5-Month Total: Remittances for January-May 2026 exceeded US$ 3.9 Bn, a 26% YoY increase, marking the strongest first-five-month performance ever recorded. • National Economic Context: With export earnings and tourism facing external pressures, these inflows provide critical support to external reserves. The momentum follows a historic 2025 where full-year remittances peaked at an all-time high of US$ 8.07 Bn (a 23% increase from 2024). • Historical Recovery: This sustained growth reflects a sharp turnaround from the 2022 economic crisis when inflows hit a 12-year low of US$ 3.78 Bn. Recovery was driven by a post-crisis surge in outbound labour migration starting in 2024, followed by higher average transfers per worker in 2025 and 2026.
📈 CBSL Q1 Financial Report: Systemic Risks Rise Amid Rapid Credit Growth
The Central Bank of Sri Lanka (CBSL) reports that the financial system remained resilient in Q1 2026 despite geopolitical tensions and external pressures. However, a widening positive credit-to-GDP gap signals rising systemic risks, prompting new macroprudential lending restrictions. • Overall Developments & Measures: To curb rapid collateral-based lending, CBSL imposed a 70% maximum loan-to-value (LTV) ratio on gold-backed credit and slashed vehicle financing LTV limits by 10 percentage points, effective 25 May 2026. • Banking Sector Performance: • Credit granted accelerated by 24.4% YoY at end-March 2026 (vs. 7.9% last year), driving the credit-to-deposit ratio past 70% for the first time in 3 years. • Asset quality improved as the Stage 3 loans ratio dropped to 9.4% (from 12.7%). • Profit after tax (PAT) declined by 7.1% YoY due to higher operating costs, while the Capital Adequacy Ratio (CAR) moderated to 18.3%. • Finance Companies Sector: • Credit expanded rapidly by 52.4% YoY, heavily driven by a 69.2% surge in gold-backed lending and a 52.8% rise in vehicle financing. • Stage 3 loans ratio improved significantly to 4.4% (from 8.6%). Profitability strengthened with PAT up 28.8% for FY2025/26. • Financial Market Pressures: • The Colombo Stock Exchange weakened with the ASPI down 1.4% as of end-May. Net foreign outflows reached US$ 103.4 Mn. • Government securities yields trended upward, further pressured by a 100-basis-point policy rate hike in late May. _Note: Based on CBSL's latest Financial Sector Performance Report data._
Responsible Economic & Import Management Urged for Sri Lanka’s Recovery 📈
Sri Lankan business chambers and policymakers are urged to collaborate on responsible import and foreign exchange policies to safeguard the country's recent economic recovery. • Core Directive: National economic discipline and controlled foreign exchange spending are essential to prevent future financial instability or recession following the historic economic crisis. • Import Prioritization: To protect foreign exchange reserves, large-scale importation of non-essential commercial consumer goods should be controlled. Resources must prioritize: • Food, medicines, and essential consumer items. • Fuel and energy-related products. • Industrial raw materials and machinery required for production and exports. • Educational and agricultural necessities. • Policy Recommendations: • Temporarily limit luxury and non-essential commercial imports while allowing reasonable quantities for personal use. • Review current foreign currency outflow mechanisms, including large passenger foreign exchange allowances, until reserve stability improves. • Chambers and trade bodies should present practical recommendations to support local industries and employment generation. • Strategic Objective: The goal is not to restrict trade unnecessarily, but to ensure foreign exchange resources are utilized carefully, productively, and sustainably until full economic stability is achieved.