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China stalling IMF relief for debt grip Sri Lanka: Report

China stalling IMF relief for debt grip Sri Lanka: Report

Meanwhile the IMF has said that the further relief aid requires the completion of financing reviews after analysing the country’s record since the first injection of 330 million US dollars, approved in late march.

Published Date – 05:43 PM, Wed – 4 October 23


China stalling IMF relief for debt grip Sri Lanka: Report



Colombo: Sri Lanka’s is facing a big challenge from its largest bilateral lender, China to secure a concrete debt relief framework, as it is blocking access to desperately needed cash bailout of 3 billion US dollars’ from International Monetary fund, Nikkei Asia reported.

Last month’s visit by IMF officials to the crisis-recovering nation seems like a hope for the country. But IMF which has insisted on “financing assurances” from bilateral lenders as a key pillar, gave Sri Lanka a failing grade in the first review of the bailout, denying it a second tranche of $330 million in aid.

According to the Nikkei Asia, the chances of the relief for Sri Lanka is rising for an unexpected mid-october visit to China by Lankan President Ranil Wickremesinghe to attend a 10th anniversary summit of the Belt and Road Initiative, Beijing’s regionwide infrastructure building program where he will meet the Chinese President to discuss debt relief.

Meanwhile the IMF has said that the further relief aid requires the completion of financing reviews after analysing the country’s record since the first injection of 330 million US dollars, approved in late march.

Nekkei Asia reported quoting IMF team, headed by Peter Breuer, senior mission chief for Sri Lanka said, “These financing assurances reviews will focus on whether adequate progress has been made with debt restructuring to give confidence that it will be concluded in a timely manner and in line with the program’s debt target.” China is one among other nations to join lendors like Japan and India early this year to offer initial financial assurances that met the IMF’s conditions to approve the March bailout, an Asian diplomat revealed.

“Beijing offered a two-year moratorium for the Sri Lankan debt and talked of providing new loans to pay for existing debt,” Nikkei Asia reported.

Notably, Sri Lanka has invited China to join a committee of country’s bilateral creditors chaired by Japan, India and France, aimed at drafting an external debt restricting framework, which China rejected in April this year. And opted to directly deal with the Sri Lankan government.

“The other lenders were OK with this arrangement and were prepared to let Colombo deal with Beijing at a bilateral level,” the diplomat added. “But there cannot be any special deals favoring Chinese debt terms, such as no haircuts, yet expecting haircuts from the other countries.” Sri Lankan President Wickremesinghe who assumed the charge after the former president had fled from the country amid protests driven by public anger over the collapsed economy has promised to deal with all the bilateral lendors to treat them equally.

“We will not have separate deals,” Wickremesinghe told Nikkei Asia in an interview in Tokyo in May. “We won’t give advantage to one party, we will work on the same principles.” A meeting of Sri Lanka’s creditor nations held online in May was attended by 26 countries. Many were from the Paris Club, a network of wealthy nations that have a history of resolving external debt crises in developing countries to which they have given loans. China stood by only as an observer.

Within the group of countries besides China, diplomatic sources familiar with the talks revealed that concrete progress on a blueprint and timeline is still elusive. “Nothing has moved concretely within the Japan-India-French creditor committee because of no progress from China,” said one source. “So we will be following President Ranil’s visit to China closely.” Consequently, the scope of Sri Lanka’s debt to China remains under scrutiny.

Sri Lanka ran out of foreign reserves at the end of 2021 to pay for its imports and faced pressure to service a $7 billion external debt the next year, pushing it to the brink of the worst economic crisis since independence in 1948.

By 2021, public debt stood at 114% of gross domestic product — 47% of it in the form of foreign loans, with private creditors who had bought international sovereign bonds topping that list, followed by bilateral lenders led by China.

In May 2022, Sri Lanka became the first Asian lower-middle income country to default on its sovereign debt this century.

Chinese loans had financed a spree of large infrastructure projects, including highways, an airport and a port. “China will have to play a major role in Sri Lanka’s debt restructuring process, with $7.4 billion or 19.6% of outstanding public debt owed to China at the end of 2021,” wrote Umesh Moramudali and Thilina Panduwawala, two Sri Lankan economists, in “Evolution of Chinese Lending to Sri Lanka since the mid-2000s — Separating Myth from Reality.” Chinese lending to Sri Lanka mainly came from two major policy banks, China Exim Bank, which accounted for $4.3 billion, and China Development Bank, which gave $3 billion.

By contrast, interest-free loans provided directly to Sri Lanka as part of official aid from the Chinese government amounted to only $16 million by the end of 2021, said the Sri Lankan economists Moramudali and Panduwawala in an e-mail interview. “We have not come across EXIM or CDB loans that are interest-free.”

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