Sri Lanka announces $1b relief as anger grows over food costs
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SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 05, 2023
Sri Lanka announces $1b relief as anger grows over food costs

World+Biz

TBS Report
04 January, 2022, 07:20 pm
Last modified: 04 January, 2022, 07:25 pm

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Sri Lanka announces $1b relief as anger grows over food costs

TBS Report
04 January, 2022, 07:20 pm
Last modified: 04 January, 2022, 07:25 pm
People queue outside a state-run supermarket to buy essential food items in Colombo, Sept. 3 Photographer: Ishara S. Kodikara/AFP
People queue outside a state-run supermarket to buy essential food items in Colombo, Sept. 3 Photographer: Ishara S. Kodikara/AFP

Sri Lanka announced a $1 billion relief package in an attempt to temper growing public anger over the soaring prices of essential food and medical items. 

The move came at a time when the country is going through a shortage of foreign exchange to pay for imports, reports Bloomberg.

The government of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa will increase civil servants salaries and pensions, scrap some taxes on food and medicine and provide cash for its poorest citizens. Critics, however, say it won't help Sri Lanka's state of finances and growing inflation. 

The package accounts for 1.2% of gross domestic product, and will be re-allocated from the 3.9 trillion rupees budgeted to be spent in the whole of 2022, Rajapaksa's brother and Finance Minister Basil Rajapaksa told a briefing in Colombo late Monday. There are no plans for new taxes, he added. 

The relief covers about 2 million people who are on income support and is a clear signal the government is seeking to prevent a backlash over the the rising prices of wheat, sugar and milk power. Sri Lanka is struggling to purchase these key staples from abroad due to worsening foreign exchange shortages. 

The escalating food prices also stem from domestic crop losses that have emerged after a government directive to stop chemical fertilizer use. The administration has included a plan to buy crops at higher-than-market rates from farmers who have been protesting for much of last year. 

Sri Lanka's main opposition slammed the relief package, saying it doesn't address the issue of external liquidity and domestic inflation, which accelerated to 12.1% in December, the second-fastest pace in Asia after Pakistan. 

"They are not addressing either of the problems. If they accommodate these wage increases by printing money inflation may go up further," said Harsha de Silva, a lawmaker from the Samagi Jana Balawegara and former minister of economic reforms. 

Sri Lanka's financial problems emerged with the start of the pandemic that has largely shuttered the tourism sector, a key source of foreign exchange earnings. In recent weeks, this has stoked debate among policymakers about whether it should seek a bailout from the International Monetary Fund or rely on bilateral emergency support from nations including China and India.

The country has $500 million of dollar bonds maturing Jan. 18 and another $1 billion in July. It has $3.1 billion of foreign exchange reserves, roughly enough to pay for two months of imports, based on extrapolations from previous government calculations. 

Basil Rajapaksa said at Monday briefing that the government hasn't made a decision on going to the IMF for support. In the past few weeks, Sri Lanka has held discussions with India for $1.9 billion in economic aid and used a $1.5 billion currency swap facility from China to build up its reserves.

Sri Lanka's sovereign dollar bonds were mostly steady to higher on Tuesday. Notes due March 2020 were trading at 51.1 cents on the dollar, while those maturing in July 2022 were at 70.5 cents.

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Sri Lanka / Relief / Food price

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