Economic News
View all(65)📈 Sri Lanka & Kerala: Lessons on Welfare and Economic Growth
An analysis by the former Chairman of the Finance Commission of Sri Lanka highlights that while Sri Lanka and Kerala achieved high human development before reaching high-income status, their welfare systems became vulnerable due to a weak productive economy. • Core Issue: Welfare did not fail; rather, social progress outran economic depth. Neither region built a sufficiently deep industrial and export base to sustain welfare costs, leaving public services and pension obligations fiscally vulnerable. • Sri Lanka’s Vulnerability: Unlike Kerala—which benefits from India's federal cushion and RBI stability—soverign Sri Lanka faced full exposure to external debt and currency risks. With a narrow export base heavily dependent on apparel & textiles, tourism, and remittances, exports were only ~1/5 of GDP by 2024. Consequently, foreign reserve exhaustion led to a 7.8% economic contraction in 2022. • The Contrast: Tamil Nadu offers a successful alternative, combining robust social welfare with industrialization. Its merchandise exports doubled from US$ 26 Bn in 2020–21 to over US$ 52 Bn in 2024–25, driven by manufacturing, engineering, and logistics. • Key Takeaway for Sri Lanka: Macroeconomic stabilization (falling inflation, debt restructuring) is not permanent development. To sustain its welfare model, Sri Lanka must urgently transform its productive engine by boosting exports, attracting investment, reforming State-Owned Enterprises, and widening the tax base.
📈 CBSL Steps In to Calm Rupee Volatility
The Central Bank of Sri Lanka (CBSL) is intervening to manage sharp exchange rate fluctuations driven by external global shocks and speculative market activity. • Overall Figures & Exchange Rate: The Sri Lankan rupee has depreciated 4.8% so far this year, crossing Rs. 331 per US$ from around Rs. 309 in late 2025. CBSL expects nearly US$ 1.00 Bn in multilateral inflows to stabilize the market, including US$ 700.00 Mn from the IMF next month, alongside US$ 250.00 Mn from the ADB and World Bank. • External Sector Pressures: External volatility is driven by rising global energy prices and the Middle East conflict. Sri Lanka’s petroleum import bill reached US$ 1.00 Bn in the first four months of 2026, compared to US$ 1.50 Bn for the entire previous year. Driven by fuel, electricity, and transport costs, headline inflation accelerated to 5.4%. A small current account deficit is projected for 2026 after three years of surpluses. • Sector Performance & Liquidity: Worker remittances rose to over US$ 3.06 Bn for Jan-Apr 2026, a robust 24.5% YoY increase. Tourism earnings reached US$ 954.00 Mn for Q1 2026, though recent inflows have eased. The trade deficit widened to US$ 2.30 Bn during Jan-Mar 2026. Private sector credit expanded by Rs. 2.10 Tn (+25.2%) in 2025, driving import demand. • Reserves & Interventions: Foreign currency reserves fell by US$ 295.00 Mn to US$ 6.54 Bn in March. CBSL became a net seller of US$ 13.00 Mn in April—its first net sales in 22 months—but remained a net purchaser of US$ 697.20 Mn during Jan-Apr 2026. • Policy Outlook: CBSL will not defend a fixed rate but will smooth short-term volatility. Plans are underway to introduce a real-time reference exchange rate indicator by year-end to deepen market operations.
📉 Fuel Subsidy Risks Sri Lanka’s Fiscal Buffers and IMF Program, Warns HNB Stockbrokers
A new report highlights that Sri Lanka’s recently announced three-month fuel subsidy could erode fiscal cushions and complicate IMF commitments if extended beyond its initial timeframe. • Overall Fiscal Impact: The three-month subsidy—offering a relief of Rs. 100 per litre on diesel and Rs. 20 per litre on petrol—is estimated to cost approximately Rs. 57 Bn (Rs. 19 Bn per month). • Extension Risks: If extended until the end of 2026, the cost could escalate to Rs. 150 Bn, and potentially surpass Rs. 200 Bn if global crude prices rise or the rupee weakens. • Current Fiscal Cushion: HNB Stockbrokers notes the immediate cost is manageable due to a strong primary surplus of Rs. 545.5 Bn recorded in Jan-Feb 2026, which already exceeds the full-year target of Rs. 360 Bn. • IMF Disconnect: The flat per-litre subsidy conflicts with IMF commitments on cost-reflective energy pricing required for the upcoming Fifth and Sixth Reviews of the EFF. • Lack of Targeting: Financial experts heavily criticize the measure for failing to align with IMF preferences for targeted relief, as the broad-based subsidy benefits all motorists rather than lower-income households most vulnerable to the Middle East oil shock.
🛢️ IEA Warns of Rapidly Falling Global Oil Stocks Amid Middle East Conflict
The International Energy Agency (IEA) has warned that global commercial oil inventories are depleting rapidly due to ongoing supply disruptions linked to the conflict involving Iran, Israel, and the US, despite coordinated strategic reserve releases. • Global Stock Depletion: Commercial inventories are declining at a record pace. While the IEA notes there are still several weeks of supply left, emergency reserves "are not endless." • Supply Disruptions: Tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz—a critical global energy shipping route—remains effectively halted by Iran following US and Israeli strikes in late February, driving oil prices sharply higher. • Emergency Response: IEA’s 32 member countries have coordinated a massive release of 426 million barrels from emergency reserves, with approximately 164 million barrels already drawn down. • Downstream Impact: Concerns over fuel shortages are intensifying ahead of the northern hemisphere summer travel season, with airlines warning of potential jet fuel shortages within weeks. • Geopolitical Strain: Diplomatic efforts remain stalled, with US President Donald Trump warning of severe consequences for Iran if a peace agreement is not reached amid fragile truce efforts. _Context for Sri Lanka_: As a net oil importer, Sri Lanka remains highly vulnerable to these escalating global energy prices and supply shocks, which typically exert direct pressure on national foreign exchange reserves and domestic fuel pricing.
Lessons from Singapore’s Economic Strategy for Sri Lanka 📈
• Overall Economic Outlook Sri Lanka’s GDP growth is projected at 4.6% for 2025 before slowing to 3.5% in 2026. Post-2022 crisis recovery remains constrained, with income poverty affecting ~22% of the population and high child malnutrition. Over 80% of government expenditure is locked in public salaries, welfare, and interest payments. • Sector & Trade Performance ICT/BPM: Export revenue grew 8.8% in 2025 to US$ 1.645 Bn. The sector aims for US$ 5 Bn in digital exports and a 12% GDP share by 2030. Traditional Exports: Apparel & textiles, tea, seafood, and rubber face export risks, including a 30% US tariff. The US absorbs 20–25% of total exports and nearly 40% of apparel shipments. • Strategic Roadmap & Blueprint Lessons Trust Infrastructure: Transition from mere geographic advantage (Colombo Port) to a trusted node by operationalizing FTAs with Singapore/Thailand, and concluding pacts with India and China alongside robust anti-corruption frameworks. AI Deployment: Focus on AI-augmented professional capabilities (legal, financial, healthcare data) utilizing the English-literate workforce, rather than building LLMs. Deliberate Jobs Architecture: Target targeted labor investments in AI-resilient sectors like social care, healthcare, advanced niche manufacturing, and the green economy instead of relying purely on growth driven by construction or tourism. Resilience: Build climate and economic shock buffers proactively, learning from the 2022 default and the late 2025 Cyclone Ditwah damage. _Summary based on provisional economic data and strategy briefs._
📈 Sri Lanka PMI Signals MoM Contraction in April Amid Seasonal Slowdown
The Central Bank of Sri Lanka (CBSL) reported a month-on-month contraction in both manufacturing and services sectors for April 2026, largely driven by post-festive seasonal impacts and fewer working days. • Manufacturing Sector Breakdown: The Manufacturing PMI fell to 42.6 in April from 66.7 in March. Sub-indices for New Orders, Production, Employment, and Stock of Purchases all declined. A drop in new orders was heavily felt in the food & beverage and textiles & apparel sectors due to fading festive demand. Production also dipped due to Sinhala and Tamil New Year holiday closures, while suppliers' delivery times lengthened amid Middle East logistical challenges. • Services Sector Breakdown: The Services PMI dropped to 46.7 in April from 59.5 in March, hit by holidays, a slowdown in tourist arrivals, and rising fuel prices. The sharpest contractions were seen in the transportation of goods and personal services, alongside notable downturns in wholesale/retail trade and accommodation. Furthermore, new businesses declined for the first time since April 2023. • Employment & Outlook: Employment contracted across both sectors as manufacturers released seasonal labor and service firms faced contract expirations and resignations. Despite the April dip, the three-month outlook remains generally positive and is expected to stabilize, though businesses remain cautious regarding ongoing geopolitical risks in the Middle East and global uncertainties.
📉 Sri Lanka Tourism Earnings Plunge to Lowest Level Since 2023 in April
Sri Lanka’s tourism earnings fell sharply in April 2026, marking the weakest monthly performance in nearly three years due to weaker arrivals, softer visitor spending, and global geopolitical uncertainty following the US-Israel-Iran war escalation. Key Figures & Trends • April Earnings: Dropped 39% YoY to US$ 157.1 Mn, representing the eighth monthly contraction over the past 10 months. • Cumulative Earnings (Jan-Apr 2026): Declined 19.4% YoY to US$ 1.11 Bn, down from US$ 1.37 Bn in the same period last year. • Tourist Arrivals: Dropped 22.32% YoY in April to 135,643, the lowest monthly arrival figure so far in 2026. • Visitor Spending: Average daily tourist expenditure has been revised down to US$ 148 from US$ 171 based on updated surveys. Sector Concerns & Outlook • Economic Impact: Tourism currently contributes around 3% to Sri Lanka's economy, remaining below the pre-2019 crisis level of nearly 5%. • Policy & Infrastructure: The Hotels Association of Sri Lanka (THASL) warned of potential multi-billion dollar losses due to policy delays, FX leakages, weak regulation, and a lack of global marketing. • Targets vs Reality: A widening gap exists between capacity and actual revenue, threatening the government’s 2026 targets of 3 million tourists and US$ 4.00 Bn in earnings. • Recovery Efforts: To restore competitiveness and boost arrivals, the Cabinet recently approved draft regulations to advance a long-delayed free visa policy.
IMF Board to Consider Sri Lanka’s EFF Reviews on May 27 📈
• Key Milestone: The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has scheduled May 27, 2026, for its Executive Board to consider the combined fifth and sixth reviews of Sri Lanka’s Extended Fund Facility (EFF) programme. • Financial Inflow: Upon the Executive Board's approval of the combined reviews, Sri Lanka will secure access to approximately US$ 700 Mn in financing. • National Impact: This crucial funding injection supports Sri Lanka's ongoing macroeconomic stabilization and economic reform agenda under the IMF framework.
## 📈 Govt. Moves to Relax National Fuel Management System
The Government is reviewing a proposal to discontinue the odd-even fuel distribution system and increase individual fuel quotas, following a high-level review at the Prime Minister’s Office. • Fuel Supply & Security: Officials confirmed that Sri Lanka maintains sufficient fuel stocks to last until August 2026. Procurement processes are already underway to secure requirements for the remainder of the year to ensure long-term energy security. • Crisis Management: Prime Minister Dr. Harini Amarasuriya noted that strategic management prevented the severe fuel queues and power cuts seen in other nations. However, she cautioned that the energy crisis is not fully over, requiring continued vigilance. • Efficiency & Sustainability Measures: State Sector: Energy Managers will be appointed across all state institutions to monitor consumption. Renewables: The government is pushing for greater adoption of renewable energy and the Green Building Concept under the "Clean Sri Lanka" program. Public Utilities: Instructions were issued to ensure an uninterrupted electricity supply during the upcoming Vesak period. • Sector Focus: The adjustments aim to streamline operations within the transport and logistics sectors, which are vital for national productivity and employment. _Note: Based on official government review proceedings as of May 16, 2026._
Sri Lanka at Economic Crossroads: Lessons from Greece’s Recovery 📈
A comparative analysis by First Capital Research highlights that Sri Lanka’s post-crisis path mirrors Greece’s 2013-2014 period, warning that early stability must transition into growth to avoid renewed stress. • Strategic Outlook: Sri Lanka’s current recovery is largely driven by "demand compression" (lower imports) rather than improved competitiveness. Like Greece, the risk remains that stability could be reversed by political cycles or weakening reform momentum. • Structural Fault Lines: Both nations shared pre-crisis vulnerabilities including weak investment incentives, public-sector inefficiencies, and a narrow export base in sectors like apparel & textiles and tea. • Key Comparison Metrics: • External Sector: Sri Lanka’s current account surplus reflects weak capital goods imports—a pattern of "doing less rather than selling more." • Credit Ratings: Upgrades have been slower for Sri Lanka compared to Greece’s early phase; future gains depend on debt-deal execution and market access. • Bond Markets: Yields are beginning to normalize as they shift from crisis-management to market-driven dynamics. • Path to Durable Growth: 1. IMF-led macro-stabilization (Current Phase). 2. Institutional & fiscal reforms. 3. Growth-oriented agenda focused on competitiveness. Conclusion: Sri Lanka’s early stabilization compares favorably on a composite index, but long-term success requires consistent reform sequencing to ensure macro-stability translates into employment and national wealth.
📈 Sri Lanka’s Economic Stability Post-IMF: The Institutional Challenge
Sri Lanka faces a critical transition as its IMF Extended Fund Facility (EFF) is set to conclude in March 2027. The focus shifts from external supervision to the strength of domestic institutions in maintaining fiscal discipline. • Fiscal Outlook & Debt: External debt servicing is projected to average US$ 2.7 Bn annually until 2027, before rising to US$ 3.2 Bn – US$ 3.5 Bn in subsequent years, with peaks near US$ 4 Bn. • Institutional Framework: The new Central Bank Act is the primary defense against future indiscipline. Key provisions include: Section 80: Grants the CBSL Governor the initiative to apprise Parliament on the state of the economy. Section 84: Establishes a Coordination Council to evaluate the impact of government fiscal operations on price and financial stability. • Key Risks: External Shocks: Middle East conflicts impacting energy prices and shipping costs. Political Pressure: Potential return of subsidies, tax concessions, and suppressed utility pricing once immediate IMF oversight ends. Institutional Culture: The challenge of transitioning from a culture of political deference to one of assertive independence. Summary: While the IMF provided temporary discipline, long-term stability depends on the Central Bank’s ability to exercise its new legislative authority to restrain fiscal overreach as debt repayments escalate post-2027.
IMF Reaffirms Energy Cost Recovery as Prerequisite for Review Approval 📈
The IMF has emphasized that restoring cost-reflective pricing for electricity and fuel is a mandatory "prior action" before the Executive Board can approve Sri Lanka’s combined Fifth and Sixth Reviews under the Extended Fund Facility (EFF). • Core Mandate: Full cost recovery in the energy sector is required to ensure fiscal sustainability, specifically targeting adjustments to electricity and fuel pricing structures. • Subsidy Concerns: The IMF highlighted that any measures, such as the reported Rs. 100 per liter diesel subsidy, must align with the agreed framework to avoid stalling the review process. • Social Safety Nets: A "two-part" strategy is required, where the move toward market-based pricing is coupled with robust protections to shield vulnerable populations from price shocks. • Current Status: Board approval remains pending until these specific prior actions are verified, focusing on moving away from untargeted subsidies toward a more sustainable energy pricing model.