Economic News
View all(90)📈 Customs Modernization Fast-Tracks Sri Lanka’s USD 36 Bn Export Target
A high-level meeting chaired by Secretary to the President Dr. Nandika Sanath Kumanayake outlined critical reforms for Sri Lanka Customs to support the National Export Development Plan (NEDP) 2026–2030, aiming for USD 36 billion in export revenue by 2030. • Key Reforms & Modernization Initiatives: Instructed Sri Lanka Customs to upgrade the capacity and facilities of the Export Facilitation Centre. Digital systems will be introduced to expedite document processing, reducing time and costs, alongside a risk-based assessment mechanism to fast-track low-risk exporters. • SME & Regional Growth: Plans include reviewing the Temporary Import for Export Processing (TIEP) scheme to support non-exporting small and medium enterprises (SMEs). To decentralize operations, attention is being given to establishing a new Customs Export Centre in Jaffna. • E-Commerce & Sector Support: Discussions focused on removing trade barriers for e-commerce platforms, with joint streamlining efforts planned alongside the Department of Posts to boost digital trade channels. • Monitoring & Execution: Sri Lanka Customs, the Sri Lanka Export Development Board (EDB), and the Revenue Administration, Reforms and Modernization Bureau will hold monthly review meetings to monitor progress and address ongoing exporter challenges.
📈 SL Global Competitiveness Hampered by Low Domestic Demand & Supplier Gaps
• Strategic Focus: Sri Lanka must shift from passive production to global brand ownership by fostering demanding local consumers and upgrading local suppliers across vital sectors like apparel & textiles and hospitality & tourism. • Sector Dynamics: • Apparel & Textiles: Sector remains strictly buyer-driven by Western corporations due to a domestic market flooded with cheap imports, stifling local design innovation and original R&D. • Hospitality & Tourism: Inconsistent quality and "dual service standards" between foreign and local guests dilute national competitive advantages. • SMEs: Facing a compliance squeeze as the VAT/SSCL annual registration threshold is slashed from Rs. 60 Mn to Rs. 36 Mn. • Budget 2026 & Policy Metrics: • Enhanced Capital Allowance threshold aggressively reduced from US$ 3 Mn to US$ 250,000, subsidizing 100% to 200% of automation/AI investments. • Rs. 35.6 Bn allocated for digital transformation, including a National Trade Window. • Only Rs. 8 Bn allocated for new credit schemes, leaving a massive funding gap for the 1.5 Mn SME sector. • Resilience & Risks: A US$ 4.1 Bn economic blow from Cyclone Ditwah underscores the absolute urgency for climate-ready industrial zones and pre-emptive parametric insurance to protect export reliability against competitors like Vietnam and India.
📈 Govt. Maintains 5% Growth Target, Targets 7% Medium-Term Expansion
Sri Lanka's government remains confident in hitting its 5% economic growth target for 2026, supported by a strong 5.1% GDP expansion in Q1, according to Deputy Finance Minister Dr. Anil Jayantha Fernando. Key Insights: • Growth Targets: The state is holding its 2026 growth target at 5% and eyes a medium-term goal of 7% inclusive growth to combat poverty and income inequality. • Interest Rates: Despite rising interest rates temporarily dampening demand, the government does not expect a significant contraction in economic activity and anticipates conditions to normalize. • Capital Expenditure: Addressing concerns over lagging state spending, the ministry noted capital expenditure does not follow a strict monthly arithmetic pattern due to extensive procurement and preparatory work in large projects like the Bandaranaike International Airport (BIA) expansion. • Budget Utilization: The government expects strong capital budget utilization by year-end, mirroring last year's 75% utilization rate, by working with line ministries to expedite procedural delays.
📈 Sri Lanka Manufacturing & Services PMIs Rebound Strongly in May
Sri Lanka’s economic activities expanded at a faster pace in May 2026, bouncing back from the previous month’s seasonal dip, according to provisional data from the Central Bank of Sri Lanka (CBSL). • Manufacturing Sector: The Manufacturing PMI surged to 56.6 in May from 42.6 in April. All sub-indices stood above the neutral threshold, driven by a higher number of working days. - New Orders & Production: Rose to 52.6 and 54.6 respectively, led primarily by the food & beverages and textiles & wearing apparel sectors. - Stock of Purchases: Increased to 52.6 (from 44.0 in April) in line with order growth. - Sentiment: The 3-month outlook remains positive, though risks from the Middle East conflict continue to weigh on business sentiment and lengthen suppliers' delivery times. • Services Sector: The Services PMI rebounded to 56.9 in May from 46.7 in April, signaling higher expansion across major sub-sectors. - New Businesses: Climbed to 58.0 (from 48.9 in April), driven by financial services, professional services, wholesale and retail trade, and goods transportation. Notable growth was also seen in IT programming and real estate. - Labor & Backlogs: Employment declined due to retirements, resignations, and contract expirations, while backlogs of work decreased at a faster rate. - Sentiment: The 3-month outlook is positive, buoyed by an expected surge in tourist arrivals for the upcoming Perahera season, despite lingering global uncertainties.
📈 Remittances Hit Record Highs as Calls Grow for Structural Migrant Reforms
• Overall Performance: Workers’ remittances to Sri Lanka remain a vital economic backbone, contributing an estimated US$ 6.5–8.0 Bn annually, which accounts for roughly 8–10% of the national GDP. Over the last two decades, migrant labor has infused more than US$ 100.0 Bn into the domestic economy. • Recent Inflows & Growth: April 2026: Inflows reached US$ 767.9 Mn, marking an 18.9% YoY increase compared to April 2025. May 2026: Remittances surged further to US$ 847.0 Mn—a sharp 36.2% YoY increase and the highest monthly inflow recorded since December 2025. Resilience: These records were achieved despite ongoing geopolitical tensions and conflicts across the Middle East, which remains the primary employment destination for Sri Lankan workers. • Policy and Advocacy Proposals: Following International Day of Family Remittances (June 16), the Voice of Migrants (VOM) Network submitted a memorandum for Budget 2027 urging a policy shift from basic welfare to economic empowerment. Key structural demands include: Migrant representation in governance bodies like the SLBFE. Specialized support frameworks for left-behind families and children. Financial mechanisms to channel consumption-driven funds into productive SME investments and savings schemes. Implementation of overseas voting mechanisms to eliminate democratic exclusion.
Sri Lanka's Tax Challenge: Voluntary Compliance vs Enforcement 📉
Sri Lanka faces a critical dilemma in transforming its tax culture from forced enforcement to voluntary compliance amid ongoing economic recovery, according to a recent analysis. • The Core Challenge: While voluntary compliance lowers administrative costs, Sri Lanka cannot afford to wait for this culture to develop naturally. The state requires immediate revenue to fund essential public services like health and education, and to meet debt obligations. • The Compliance Cycle: Weak compliance creates unfairness, frustrating honest taxpayers and fueling a cycle where low trust leads to lower revenue, which in turn diminishes the quality of public services and further damages public trust. • The Solution: Sri Lanka must strike a balance. Enforcement (audits and penalties) is vital in the short term to maintain fairness and secure immediate revenue. Long-term sustainability requires building trust through transparent governance, simplifying procedures, and investing in digital systems.
📈 Sri Lanka’s Spatial Divide: Why Growth Must Move Beyond Colombo
A new study by economist Umesh Moramudali for the Neelan Tiruchelvam Trust highlights that Sri Lanka’s economic model has historically over-favoured the Western Province, creating a deeply uneven growth pattern that contributed to the 2022 sovereign default. • The Colombo Monopoly: For decades, the Western Province has generated nearly 40% of Sri Lanka's GDP, centralizing foreign investment, industries, and high-paying professional jobs while leaving other provinces to stagnate. • Labor & Informal Sector: By 2018, nearly 60% of Sri Lankan workers were trapped in the informal sector (agriculture, small-scale businesses, and casual services) characterized by low wages, zero retirement benefits, and severe vulnerability during crises. • Past Policy Failures: Previous initiatives like the Regional Economic Advancement Programme (REAP) and rural garment factory schemes failed long-term because they over-indexed on basic infrastructure rather than sustainable enterprise, skills training, or localized job creation. • Socioeconomic Costs: Lack of regional opportunities forces rural graduates to migrate to Colombo, driving up urban housing costs. It heavily disadvantages women, informal workers, and conflict-affected communities in the North and East. • Path to Inclusive Growth: The study recommends empowering provincial councils for bottom-up development, linking large firms with rural SMEs, building peripheral economic hubs, expanding interregional business networks, and tying social safety nets (like Aswesuma) to economic empowerment.
📈 BOJ Raises Interest Rates to 31-Year High Amid Inflation Risks
The Bank of Japan (BOJ) raised its short-term policy rate to 1% from 0.75% in a 7-1 vote on Tuesday, marking borrowing costs unseen since 1995. The move reflects policy normalization to tame broadening price pressures stemming from the Middle East energy shock. • Policy & Rate Metrics: Short-term policy rate increased by 25 basis points to 1.00%. The BOJ also paused its bond taper program from April 2027, maintaining Japanese Government Bond (JGB) purchases at ~2 trillion yen (US$ 12.5 Bn) per month. • Economic Drivers & Inflation: While a recent US-Iran peace deal diminished sharp economic deterioration risks, wholesale inflation hit a 3-year high of 6.3% in May. Companies are rapidly passing on previous oil shocks to consumers, threatening to push core inflation above the BOJ's 2% target. • Market & Currency Reaction: The Nikkei 225 jumped 1% to a fresh record high above 70,000. The yen briefly rose before sliding to 160.29 per US$, keeping the central bank under pressure to prevent import-driven inflation. Analysts expect a gradual hiking path of once every six months to a year.
🚨 Fitch Warns of El Niño Economic Risks for Weaker Sovereigns
A newly formed El Niño weather phenomenon, projected to persist into early 2027, poses economic disruption risks that could intensify fiscal, growth, and inflation pressures for vulnerable nations. • Overall Projections: The US NOAA confirmed El Niño conditions on June 11, with a 63% chance of it becoming a rare ‘very strong’ event and a 96% chance of continuing through Feb 2027. • Macroeconomic Impacts: The phenomenon will trigger severe droughts in some regions and heavy rainfall in others. This threatens to weaken credit profiles for lower-rated sovereigns (particularly ‘B’ category or below) due to disrupted economic activity. • Agricultural & Food Security: Global crop yields are already strained by high fertilizer prices linked to the US-Iran war. El Niño-induced shortages could further spike globally traded food commodity prices and drive up inflation. • Sri Lankan Context: While the report focuses globally, such weather anomalies historically disrupt critical emerging-market sectors like agriculture, tea, and rubber, affecting rural employment and export revenues.
📈 Sri Lanka Posts Rs. 105 Bn Budget Surplus as Vehicle Taxes Drive Revenue Surge
Sri Lanka’s fiscal position strengthened sharply in Jan-Apr 2026, recording an overall Budget surplus of Rs. 105.00 Bn, reversing a Rs. 261.60 Bn deficit from the same period last year. • Overall Fiscal Performance: Total revenue and grants jumped 34.6% YoY to Rs. 1.96 Trillion, outpacing an 8.0% increase in total expenditure (Rs. 1.85 Trillion). The primary surplus expanded to Rs. 862.70 Bn, aided by a 4.6% decline in interest costs to Rs. 757.70 Bn. • Sector & Agency Breakdown: Sri Lanka Customs overtook the Inland Revenue Department as the top collector, contributing 49% (Rs. 876.00 Bn) of total tax revenue. The surge was driven by the resumption of motor vehicle imports, with motor vehicle excise revenue skyrocketing by 251.7% YoY to Rs. 187.10 Bn (up from Rs. 53.20 Bn). VAT on imports also rose 35.0% to Rs. 299.90 Bn. • Domestic Revenue: Total tax revenue rose 31.7% YoY to Rs. 1.78 Trillion. Taxes on goods and services remained the largest source at Rs. 1.21 Trillion (62% of total revenue), where total VAT contributed Rs. 677.40 Bn. Income tax revenue grew 13.2% to Rs. 310.20 Bn, supported by domestic economic recovery. • Expenditure & Targets: Recurrent expenditure rose 5.1% to Rs. 1.69 Trillion. Capital spending increased 49.3% to Rs. 168.60 Bn, though execution remains slow with only 9.8% of the annual capital allocation utilized. Overall, the government has secured 36.9% of its full-year Rs. 5.30 Trillion revenue target.
📈 Sri Lanka Tourist Arrivals Decline 9% in First Half of June
Sri Lanka's tourism sector experienced a temporary slowdown in early June, with arrivals dropping by 9% compared to last year, based on provisional data. • Overall Figures: Arrivals for the first 14 days of June reached 54,465, down from 59,787 in the same period of 2025. Average daily arrivals dropped to 3,890 from 4,271 last year. • Year-to-Date (YTD) Performance: Total YTD arrivals reached 1.07 Mn (1,076,487), maintaining a baseline above the 1-million mark. However, this reflects a minor 1.2% YoY decline from the 1.08 Mn arrivals recorded during the same period in 2025. • Top Source Markets (First 14 Days of June): India firmly dominates June arrivals, contributing 21,839 visitors (40%). The UK followed with 4,160 (8%), China with 3,530 (6%), Australia with 3,105 (6%), and Bangladesh with 1,813 (3%). • Top Source Markets (YTD): On a cumulative yearly basis, India remains the leading contributor with 272,099 visitors (25%). The UK holds the second spot with 102,253 arrivals (9%), followed closely by Russia with 76,686 arrivals (7%).
Rupee Weakness: CBSL Chief Defends Flexible Exchange Rate as Shock Absorber 📈
Central Bank of Sri Lanka (CBSL) Governor Dr. Nandalal Weerasinghe defended the country's Flexible Inflation Targeting framework to Parliament, stating that a market-determined exchange rate is vital for economic stability. • Exchange Rate Movements: The Sri Lankan rupee depreciated by 8.0% against the US dollar between end-2025 and 9 June 2026, reaching Rs. 336.82 per dollar. • Pressure Factors: Recent currency weakness is attributed to high import expenditure (particularly on fuel and vehicles), lower tourism inflows, delayed export conversions, and foreign investment outflows from government securities and the Colombo Stock Exchange (CSE). • Regional Comparison: The 8.0% depreciation aligns with regional peer currencies experiencing pressures from global uncertainty and the Middle East conflict. Over the same period, the Indonesian rupiah fell 7.9%, the Indian rupee dropped 6.2%, and the Philippine peso weakened 4.6%. • Policy Stance: CBSL emphasized it does not target a predetermined rate. Instead, it uses interest rates to manage inflation. Currency flexibility acts as an automatic shock absorber, preserves finite foreign reserves, and maintains macroeconomic stabilization.