Business

Sri Lanka economy slumps in face of forex crisis

Broad import ban due to pandemic has triggered food, fuel, medicine shortages

Updated 4 years ago · Published on 16 Dec 2021 8:00PM

Sri Lanka economy slumps in face of forex crisis
A third wave of Covid-19 infections that forced a 41-day curfew in Sri Lanka has seen services and industries heavily affected, says the Census and Statistics Department. – Pixabay pic, December 16, 2021

COLOMBO – Sri Lanka’s economy shrank in the third quarter (Q3) as a foreign-exchange (forex) crisis wrecked its recovery from the coronavirus pandemic, official data showed today.

Gross domestic product contracted 1.5% on-year in the three months to September, the Census and Statistics Department said, ending four consecutive quarters of growth. 

The island’s tourism-dependent economy was hammered by the pandemic and authorities responded to falling forex reserves with a broad import ban, triggering shortages including food, fuel, and medicines.

The crisis has spread to affect manufacturing and services, and the department said: “Increased input prices of producers due to import restrictions imposed as a solution for declining foreign money reserves also contributed to the slowdown.”

The Sri Lankan economy had grown 12.3% in Q2, but a third wave of infections that forced a 41-day curfew saw services and industries heavily affected, the department noted.

The figures came hours after Finance Minister Basil Rajapaksa, the youngest brother of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, travelled abroad on an unannounced visit, with social media posters speculating he was heading to the United States, where he holds dual citizenship.

Sri Lanka’s foreign reserves slumped to US$1.58 billion (RM6.65 billion) at the end of November, down from US$7.5 billion when the government of Gotabaya took over two years ago. 

Supermarkets have rationed staples such as milk powder, sugar, lentils, tinned fish, and rice as commercial banks ran out of dollars to finance imports. 

The central bank has been appealing for foreign currency, even loose change people may have after returning from overseas trips, as the government desperately looks for dollars.

The banking regulator has also warned it will freeze accounts of informal money changers who offer higher prices for hard currency than official exchange rates. – AFP, December 16, 2021

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