Analysis-More pain in Sri Lanka before any resolution to crisis
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[May 18, 2022] By
Jorgelina do Rosario and Swati Bhat
(Reuters) -Running out of petrol, medicines
and foreign reserves, once-booming Sri Lanka is in a mess. And the
measures needed to pull its economy out of the unparalleled crisis are
likely to bring even more pain.
The dire assessment by new Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe this week
of the island nation's economic plight was a necessary first step,
economists said. His proposed solution to bring back some stability
includes selling the loss-making national airline, printing more money
and possibly raising taxes as well as energy and utility prices.
Wickremesinghe said the "unpleasant and terrifying" facts facing the
country included a fiscal deficit that was 13% of gross domestic product
(GDP), virtually no foreign reserves and shortages of petrol, gas,
furnace oil and cancer and anti-rabies medications.
The country has suspended sovereign debt payments and ratings agencies
are expected to place it in default.
In addition, the chronic foreign exchange shortage has led to rampant
inflation, bringing thousands of anti-government protesters onto the
streets of the Indian Ocean nation, over which China and India jostle
for influence.
In Colombo, the commercial capital, no petrol was to be found at most
service stations on Wednesday. Long lines of auto-rickshaws, the city's
most popular mode of transport, and other vehicles were parked in front,
waiting for supplies.
"Any petrol station you go, there is no fuel, and people (are) lined up
for kilometres and kilometres," said Mohammad, a delivery driver who
only gave one name. "So, how can you run a vehicle, right? How can you
do your daily...day-to-day activities?"
Sri Lanka has no dollars to pay for petrol shipments, Power and Energy
Minister Kanchana Wijesekera told parliament, appealing to people to
stop queuing for the next two days.
Economists said most of the prime minister's proposals made sense.
However, the decision to print money was concerning and would raise
fiscal and external imbalances, said Patrick Curran, senior economist at
London-based Tellimer.
"The policies announced are a necessary first step to resolve Sri
Lanka's economic crisis, but will entail significant short-term pain via
higher inflation and currency depreciation and will necessitate further
rate hikes from the CBSL (Central Bank of Sri Lanka) to contain the
pressure," he said.
S&P said printing money would have "significant inflationary
implications".
The central bank holds a rate meeting on Thursday and is likely to raise
rates for a fourth consecutive time this year, according to a Reuters
poll. It increased the key lending rate by a historic 7 percentage
points to 14.5% in April and is likely to decide on a further increase
of up to 2 percentage points this week, most analysts said.
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Anti-government demonstrators hold placards as they shout slogans
during a protest demanding the arrest of former Prime Minister
Mahinda Rajapaksa, amid the country's economic crisis, in Colombo,
Sri Lanka, May 17, 2022. REUTERS/Adnan Abidi
SUBSIDIES, FERTILISER BAN
Sri Lanka's economic crisis, unparalleled since its independence in
1948, has come from the confluence of the COVID-19 pandemic
battering the tourism-reliant economy, rising oil prices and
populist tax cuts by the government of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa
and his brother, Mahinda, who resigned as prime minister last week.
Other factors have included heavily subsidised
domestic prices of fuel and a decision to ban the import of chemical
fertilisers, which devastated the agriculture sector.
Sri Lanka was a model for emerging market economies and grew at an
average rate of 6.2% between 2010 and 2016, according to World Bank
figures. In the next three years, the figure had dropped to 3.1%.
The World Bank has forecast the economy will grow 2.4% this year
from 3.5% in 2021 but has said the outlook is highly uncertain.
Charles Robertson, global chief economist at Renaissance Capital in
London, said the removal of electricity and fuel price subsidies was
essential.
These and other reforms would form the starting point for
discussions with the International Monetary Fund for a crucial
bail-out, other economists have said.
"We will also have to see massive tax hikes, probably a doubling of
VAT from 8% to at least back to the 15% we saw in 2019," Robertson
said. "It was the cut in those VAT rates which contributed to this
crisis."
The sale of SriLankan Airlines is not likely to fetch much money in
the current environment, the experts said. "Not a bad thing to sell
it but that is a drop in the bucket vs their USD financing needs,"
said Nathalie Marshik, head of emerging market sovereign research at
Stifel Financial Corp.
The worry is that fuel and utility price increases will add to
public anger against the government at a time when the
administration is in deep disarray. The new prime minister has to
convince the people that the measures are necessary to restore
stability, economists said.
Inflation hit 29.8% in April, with food prices sky-rocketing by
46.6% year-on-year.
"Overall, it seems that corporates and individuals are preparing for
more tax measures," said Trisha Peries, head of research at CAL
Securities in Colombo. "Further, expectations are being set for
electricity tariff hikes to come as well.
"In a sense he was preparing the minds of the public for the
economic pain that is to come," Peries said of Wickremesinghe.
(Additional reporting by Rachel Savage in London, Uditha Jayasinghe
and Alasdair Pal in Colombo, Writing by Raju Gopalakrishnan; Editing
by Robert Birsel anjd Andrew Heavens)
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