Sri Lanka increases fuel prices to address economic crisis
Send a link to a friend
[May 24, 2022] By
Uditha Jayasinghe
COLOMBO (Reuters) -Sri Lanka increased fuel
prices on Tuesday, a long-flagged move to mend public finances and
combat its debilitating economic crisis, but the hikes are bound to add
to galloping inflation at least in the short term.
Power and Energy Minister Kanchana Wijesekera said in a message on
Twitter that petrol prices would increase by 20-24% while diesel prices
would rise by 35-38% with immediate effect. Daily limits on how much
each consumer can purchase will continue.
"The government will hold talks with transport sector stakeholders to
increase costs parallel to the latest increases," he later said in an
online cabinet briefing.
Fuel and transport price increases will inevitably flow through to food
and other goods, economists said.
Annual inflation in the island nation rose to a record 33.8% in April
compared with 21.5% in March, according to government data released on
Monday.
"Not only the petrol problem - consumer prices, everything is very high,
food is also very high," said businessman Mohammad Irfan, waiting in a
queue at a gas pump in the capital, Colombo. He said he had been there
for four hours.
"It is very difficult for the poor people, middle class people. They are
facing problems day by day."
Sri Lanka is in the throes of its worst economic crisis since
independence in 1948, as a dire shortage of foreign exchange has stalled
imports and left the country short of fuel and medicines, and struggling
with rolling power cuts.
The financial trouble 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 this month.
Wijesekera said people would be encouraged to work from home "to
minimise the use of fuel and to manage the energy crisis", and that
public sector officials would work from their offices only when
instructed by the head of their institutions.
[to top of second column]
|
People wait in a line to buy domestic gas tanks near a distributor,
amid the country's economic crisis, in Colombo, Sri Lanka, May 23,
2022. REUTERS/Dinuka Liyanawatte
However, hybrid working models have led to increases
in power consumption in other countries, including in neighbouring
India.
Economists have said fuel and power price hikes would
be necessary to plug a massive gap in Sri Lanka's government
revenues, but agreed that it would lead to short-term pain.
Dhananath Fernando, an analyst for Colombo-based think tank Advocata
Institute, said prices of petrol have soared 259% since October last
year and diesel by 231%. Prices of food and other essential goods
have surged, he said.
"Poor people will be the most effected by this. The solution is to
establish a cash transfer system to support the poor and increase
efficiency as much as possible."
Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, appointed in place of Mahinda
Rajapaksa earlier this month after violence broke out when
government supporters attacked protesters, said last week: "In the
short term we will have to face an even more difficult time period.
There is a possibility that inflation will increase further."
There were no immediate reports of protests or unrest after the
price increases on Tuesday.
The Sri Lankan Navy said on Tuesday it had apprehended 67 people
attempting to illegally flee the country from the northeastern
coast.
(Reporting by Uditha Jayasinghe, Devjyot Ghoshal and Sunil Kataria
in COLOMBO; Writing by Raju Gopalakrishnan; Editing by Edmund
Klamann)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|