Sri Lanka’s economy has stabilised over the past nine months after the country secured a US$2.9 billion bailout from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), brought inflation levels under control and embarked on rebuilding its foreign exchange reserves.
Sri Lanka’s reserves grew 26 per cent to a 19-month high of US$3.8 billion in July, helped by stronger remittances and tourism earnings. The currency has risen about 13.5 per cent this year, central bank data showed.
Despite the easing of the crisis, the country still needs to complete debt talks with creditors by September, in time for its first IMF programme review, and implement key economic reforms to put its recovery on a sustainable path.
Sri Lanka’s economy is expected to shrink about 2 per cent this year, according to central bank estimates, after a 7.8 per cent contraction last year.