Economic News
View all(72)📈 IMF & RARMB Hold Talks on Sri Lanka Revenue Reforms
A high-level meeting between the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the Revenue Administration Reform and Modernisation Bureau (RARMB) reviewed Sri Lanka's Medium-Term Revenue Strategy (MTRS) at the Presidential Secretariat. • Overall Institutional Reforms: The IMF recognized RARMB as a 'reform hub with a strong governance framework' and committed to continued technical and advisory support to modernize the country's public revenue collection. • Inland Revenue Department: Structured restructuring has reorganized branches into Medium Corporate, Metro, and Regional Offices. Consequently, tax compliance has significantly increased from 40–45% up to 70–75%. • Sri Lanka Customs: A new draft Bill to amend the decades-old Customs Ordinance has been submitted to the Legal Draftsman’s Department. Upcoming measures include simplifying the tariff structure, transitioning to paperless processes, and enhancing exporter facilitation. • Department of Excise: Operational modernization is currently underway through the introduction of a new Excise Management System. • Data Integration & Compliance: A unified, integrated coordination mechanism has been established between Customs and Inland Revenue to enable joint audits, data sharing, and real-time verification of importer tax compliance. The discussions primarily focused on accelerating digital transformation, broadening the tax base, and driving human resource and leadership development across revenue-collecting agencies.
📈 Why a 5% Inflation Target Outperforms 2% for Sri Lanka
An analysis by the President of the Sri Lanka Economic Association details why a flexible 5% inflation target (with a +/-2% margin) is superior to a 2% target for Sri Lanka's economic stability and growth. Overall Figures & Growth Prospects • GDP Projections: Sri Lanka's growth remains constrained, with official GDP projected at 3.0% in 2026, 3.2% in 2027, and 3.1% in 2028. • Tolerable Inflation Zones: For developing nations, 1% to 7% is the beneficial zone for growth, while 7% to 11% is considered tolerable. Detrimental impacts occur only when inflation exceeds 11%. Advanced economies maintain lower thresholds (1% to 3%). Key Structural Realities • Monetary Policy Space: A 2% target lowers baseline nominal interest rates, leaving the Central Bank of Sri Lanka (CBSL) minimal room to cut rates during downturns, risking a Zero Lower Bound (ZLB) liquidity trap and deflationary spirals. • External & Internal Shocks: Inflation in Sri Lanka is heavily driven by weather-induced domestic food supply disruptions and global oil prices—factors outside CBSL's direct control. • The Productivity Problem: Low inflation alone cannot drive productivity. Growth is severely hindered by outmoded factor-driven manufacturing relying on cheap labor, and an extremely low R&D expenditure of just 0.1% of GDP (vs. Malaysia's 1.0% or Singapore's 2.2%). Strategic Policy Takeaway • Moving to an innovation-driven economy requires prioritizing Science, Technology, and Innovation (STI). Tightening the target to 2% restricts the necessary policy flexibility to cushion economic downturns, further decelerating GDP. Trade liberalisation, SOE efficiency, and investment climate improvements remain the true priorities to unlock growth potential.
📈 Eurozone Disinflation to Ease Pressure on Sri Lanka’s Rupee and Import Costs
Lower global energy prices and cooling Eurozone inflation could significantly improve Sri Lanka’s external economic position, according to Frontier Research. • Eurozone Inflation Slows: June headline inflation dropped to 2.8% (down from 3.2% in May), while core inflation eased to 2.4% (down from 2.6%). Disinflation broadened across major markets, with Germany hitting 2.3% and France slowing to 2.0%. • Impact on Key Imports: A sustained decline in global oil prices will help lower Sri Lanka's volatile fuel import bill, which previously surged to US$ 866 Mn in April before moderating to US$ 536 Mn in May. Additionally, lower inflation in Europe will reduce the cost of Sri Lanka’s US$ 1.15 Bn annual imports from the EU. • Currency and Macro Stability: The reduction in import bills is expected to narrow the current account deficit and reduce depreciation pressure on the Sri Lankan rupee, which has weakened by approximately 7% against the US dollar so far this year. • Monetary Policy Outlook: The cooling data strengthens expectations (96% probability) that the European Central Bank (ECB) will maintain its deposit rate at 2.25% on July 23. • Key Risks: Frontier Research warns that risks remain as energy prices hover above pre-conflict levels. Ongoing Middle East tensions, potential fertilizer shortages, and adverse European weather could still push food prices upward.
📈 CBSL Resumes Net Dollar Purchases in June
The Central Bank of Sri Lanka (CBSL) returned to being a net buyer of foreign exchange in June 2026 as pressure on the rupee eased, reversing the net sales seen in May. • Overall Interventions: CBSL purchased US$ 96.3 Mn and sold US$ 25.8 Mn, resulting in a net purchase of US$ 70.5 Mn for June. This successfully reversed May’s net sale of over US$ 211 Mn (which had marked the first net sale in 22 months). • First-Half Cumulative Figures: Total cumulative net foreign exchange purchases reached US$ 556.4 Mn for 1H 2026. This follows a record net purchase of US$ 2.00 Bn across the full year of 2025. • National Reserves Context: Gross official reserves were provisionally estimated at US$ 6.88 Bn as of end-May 2026, a figure that includes proceeds from the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) swap arrangement.
📈 Sri Lanka Economic & Political Update: Key Risk Indicators
Based on provisional data and analysis, Sri Lanka faces intense economic strains driven by external geopolitical shocks and internal financial mismanagement. • Overall Financial Figures IMF EFF Program: Sri Lanka has utilized US$ 2.40 Bn out of the approx. US$ 3.00 Bn package; official program concludes in November 2026. Foreign Reserves: Rose slightly by 1.6% from US$ 6.70 Bn in April to US$ 6.80 Bn in May, falling short of the revised US$ 8.00 Bn IMF target. External Debt Burden: Non-IMF external debt remains heavy, comprising US$ 10.70 Bn from bilateral lenders and US$ 10.30 Bn in International Sovereign Bonds (ISBs). Socio-Economic Impact: The national poverty level is at risk of climbing above 24% due to aggressive tax increases. • Macro Shocks & Sector Breakdowns Geopolitical Disruptions: Ongoing Middle East conflicts and transit drops in the Hormuz Strait led to a US$ 1.90 Bn spike in national imports, increasing fuel/food prices and disrupting key export markets like tea. Industrial Fallout: Escalating power and fuel costs are driving a collapse in the MSME sector. • Reported Financial Irregularities Revenue Leaks: US$ 23.71 million in LCs (1,782 vehicles) were opened hastily right before a 50% vehicle import surcharge in May 2026. Banking & Transaction Frauds: A multi-billion fraud involving a siphoning of Rs. 13.00 Bn was flagged at the National Development Bank, alongside a wrongly processed US$ 2.50 million external transfer from Treasury accounts.
Govt. Signals Tighter Spending with 2027 Budget Call 📉
The Sri Lankan government has officially commenced preparations for the 2027 Budget under National Budget Circular 02/2026. Emphasizing strict fiscal consolidation, the Treasury has imposed binding expenditure ceilings on ministries, leaving little room for spending beyond ongoing commitments. Key Fiscal Targets • Primary Surplus: Targeted to rise to 2.6% of GDP in 2027, up from 2.1% in 2026. • Budget Deficit: Projected to contract to 4.5% of GDP in 2027, down from 5.6% in 2026. Top Ministry Allocations (Baseline Ceilings) • Public Administration & Local Govt.: Rs. 722 Bn (Largest allocation) • Provincial Councils: Rs. 655 Bn • Health and Mass Media: Rs. 595 Bn • Transport, Highways & Urban Dev.: Rs. 491 Bn • Finance, Planning & Economic Dev.: Rs. 458.1 Bn • Defence: Rs. 447 Bn Stricter Project Scrutiny & Priorities • New Projects: Banned from baseline allocations. Proposals must be submitted separately to the Public Investment Committee for rigorous evaluation under the Public Financial Management Act. • National Priorities: Priority will be granted to initiatives driving economic growth, exports, digital transformation, climate resilience, and public service efficiency. • Cost Management: Chief Accounting Officers must prioritize non-discretionary obligations (salaries, pensions, utilities) within existing limits to avoid mid-year supplementary demands. • Digitization: All estimates must be processed via the Integrated Treasury Management Information System (ITMIS). _Note: Budgets are prepared based on provisional forward baseline estimates. All ministry submissions are due by 31 July 2026._
📈 Sri Lanka Customs Revenue Surges 29.5% in 1H 2026, Exceeds June Target by 22%
• Overall Figures: Sri Lanka Customs collected Rs. 1.37 trillion (Rs. 1,373.8 Bn) during the first half (1H) of 2026, marking a 29.5% increase compared to the same period last year. This cumulative collection achieves 62.2% of the department's full-year target of Rs. 2,207 Bn. • June Performance: Revenue for June 2026 surged to Rs. 225.2 billion, beating the monthly target of Rs. 184.9 billion by 22%. • Growth Drivers & Context: The revenue boost was driven by stronger enforcement, improved valuation practices, and a recovery in import volumes. The 2026 full-year target is 13.5% lower than 2025's record collection of Rs. 2,551 billion, which reflects an expected sharp decline in vehicle imports. Despite lower targets, performance continues to exceed expectations, continuing a trend from 2025 where the department beat its revised target of Rs. 2,241 billion.
📈 Sri Lanka Q1 2026 Unemployment Edges Down to 3.7%
Sri Lanka’s unemployment rate fell marginally to 3.7% in Q1 2026 from 3.8% YoY, according to provisional data from the Department of Census and Statistics. However, the overall labour force participation rate (LFPR) eased by 0.5 percentage points to 49.2%. • Labor Force & Participation: The total labour force stood at 8.41 Mn (5.40 Mn men, 3.01 Mn women). While male participation dropped to 69.1% (from 70.1% YoY), female participation improved to 32.5% (up from 32.0% YoY). • Sector Breakdown: Employed persons totaled 8.10 Mn. The services sector remained the primary employer at 50.4%, followed by industry at 25.9% and agriculture at 23.7%. Non-agricultural activities accounted for 76.3% of total employment. • Gender & Youth Disparities: Unemployed persons reached 311,495. The female unemployment rate (6.1%) was over double the male rate (2.4%). Youth unemployment (ages 15-24) remained high at 16.1%, rising to 19.2% for women. • Education Insights: Joblessness was highest among individuals with GCE Advanced Level qualifications and above, sitting at 6.5%. This trend is significantly more severe for educated women (9.7%) compared to men (3.2%).
📉 SL Official Poverty Line Rises to Rs. 17,315 in May 2026
The Department of Census and Statistics (DCS) has released the latest minimum monthly expenditure figures required per person to fulfill basic needs in Sri Lanka. • National Overview: The national official poverty line increased to Rs. 17,315 per person per month in May 2026. This reflects a Month-on-Month (MoM) increase of Rs. 198 from April 2026 (Rs. 17,117) and a Year-on-Year (YoY) increase of Rs. 894 from May 2025 (Rs. 16,421). • Highest District Expenditures: Regional disparities persist, driven heavily by urbanization and living costs in key employment and plantation hubs. - Colombo: Rs. 18,675 - Nuwara Eliya: Rs. 18,209 - Kegalle: Rs. 18,105 • Lowest District Expenditures: Chiefly rural and agricultural regions recorded the lowest required basic thresholds. - Moneragala: Rs. 16,556 - Mannar: Rs. 16,698 - Hambantota: Rs. 16,823
📈 Monetary Policy Shift Expected to Stabilize Exchange Rate
The Central Bank of Sri Lanka (CBSL) is anticipated to implement significant changes in monetary and macroprudential policy tools over the next six months. The primary objective is to manage private credit growth, steering it toward a moderate level of around 13% to curb foreign exchange rate volatility and restore investor confidence. • Overall Economic Context: Sri Lanka's current account has faced renewed pressure in 2026 after displaying improvements throughout 2024 and 2025. Proactive intervention is deemed critical, particularly ahead of the upcoming removal of the 50% vehicle import duty surcharge in August, a commitment made to the IMF that could trigger further exchange rate volatility. • Strategic Focus Areas: Exchange Rate Stability: Maintaining an orderly, transparently managed exchange rate framework is highlighted as the most vital macroeconomic variable for attracting local and Foreign Direct Investment (FDI). Credit & Liquidity Management: CBSL is expected to deploy interest rates, macroprudential measures, and liquidity tools to monitor import demand, reserve adequacy, and capital inflows, while avoiding direct foreign exchange interventions. Production & Growth: Stabilizing the currency aims to protect business sector investments that drive exports, capital formation, productivity, and the nation's "total sellable output." A clearly communicated medium-term framework from the CBSL is urged to prevent destabilizing market speculation and align external sector sustainability with price stability.
📈 El Niño Flagged as Potential FX Risk for Sri Lanka
The government's appointment of special committees to study El Niño's impact highlights the urgent need to view this climate event through a foreign exchange (FX) resilience lens to avoid severe economic vulnerability. • From Weather to FX Risk: If El Niño reduces rainfall in key catchment areas, a drop in hydropower generation will force a heavy reliance on thermal energy, drastically increasing costly fuel and coal imports. • Agriculture & Food Security: Altered weather patterns threaten agriculture yields and rural incomes. This risks triggering food inflation and driving up emergency food and fertilizer imports, directly pressuring national reserves. • Industrial Impact: Rising electricity costs and supply chain disruptions could heavily strain critical, competitive export-driven sectors like apparel & textiles. • Proactive Safeguards: Recommendations include building an El Niño-linked FX exposure map to forecast import burdens, exploring weather-linked financial risk-transfer instruments, and implementing weather-based crop insurance. • Coordinated Action: A resilient response requires cross-ministry collaboration (Energy, Agriculture, Treasury, and Central Bank) alongside proactive risk management by private businesses regarding energy use and import timing.
📈 World Bank Upgrades Sri Lanka to Upper Middle-Income Status
The World Bank Group has officially reclassified Sri Lanka as an upper middle-income country, marking a major milestone in the island’s economic recovery following its recent financial crisis. • Overall Figures & Growth: The upgrade follows a strong economic rebound in 2025, where Sri Lanka registered a 5% real GDP growth. This expansion follows a prolonged period of economic contraction and intense macroeconomic adjustments. • The Classification Process: The World Bank updates its income groupings annually based on Gross National Income (GNI) per capita using the Atlas methodology. The thresholds are adjusted yearly to account for global inflation. • National Context: While the transition from the lower middle-income category signals a strengthening of national income levels and economic fundamentals, the World Bank notes that these groupings are for analytical and operational purposes and do not fully reflect overall development levels.