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The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has reached a Staff Level Agreement with Sri Lanka on the three-year $1.5 billion support for Sri Lanka via the Extended Fund Facility (EFF).
In a statement yesterday the IMF said following discussions held between IMF staff and the Sri Lankan authorities during the 2016 Spring Meetings in Washington, staff-level agreement was reached on a three-year program to be supported by the IMF’s Extended Fund Facility (EFF).
“I am pleased to announce that, in support of the Government’s economic reform agenda, the Sri Lankan authorities and the IMF have reached a staff-level agreement on a 36-month Extended Fund Facility (EFF) for 185% of Sri Lanka’s quota in the IMF (about SDR 1.1 billion or US$1.5 billion),” IMF mission chief for Sri Lanka Todd Schneider said.
He said this agreement will be subject to completion of prior actions and approval by the IMF’s Executive Board, which is expected to consider Sri Lanka’s request in early June.
“Formal approval of the EFF is expected to catalyse an additional US$650 million in other multilateral and bilateral loans, bringing total support to about $2.2 billion (over and above existing financing arrangements),” Schneider said.
“The EFF supports the authorities’ ambitious economic reform agenda for the next three years. The government’s economic program aims at fundamental changes to tax policy and administration to reverse a two-decade decline in tax revenues and put public finances on a sustainable medium-term footing,” he said.
“Stronger revenue performance will enable smaller fiscal deficits and lower borrowing, reduce the overhang of public debt, and ease pressure on the balance of payments—while at the same time preserving room for the Government’s key social and development spending objectives,” the IMF official added.
State owned enterprise (SOE) reform will reduce fiscal risk, increase transparency and facilitate commercially viable operations. The macroeconomic stability and renewed market confidence from this fundamental re-set of policies will reduce vulnerabilities, boost growth, and foster sustainable job creation.
“To this end, the authorities’ program supported by the IMF focuses on a comprehensive set of reforms to Sri Lanka’s tax system—eliminating exemptions, holidays, and special rates to broaden the tax base and create a tax system that is simple, efficient, and more equitable. The Government will seek to raise the tax-to-GDP ratio to near 15% by 2020 by implementation of a new Inland Revenue Act and a reform of the VAT and the customs code. These efforts on tax policy will be complemented by capacity building and reform in revenue administration—making full use of automated systems and information technology to bolster tax collection while also clamping down on corruption and discretionary tax treatment. Together with more efficient management of government expenditure, the program will support a steady reduction of the overall fiscal deficit to 3.5% of GDP by 2020—equivalent to a shift from primary (excluding interest costs) fiscal deficits to primary surpluses that will underpin a much-needed reduction of public debt.
“State enterprise reform will play a key role in both limiting future risk to public finances and enhancing the role of market forces in the economy. The Government is committed to dealing quickly with the legacy of SriLankan Airlines, which continues to represent a drain on public finances after years of mismanagement. Going forward, key state firms—and the government’s financial relations with such firms—will be governed transparently by annually published statements of corporate intent. The Government will also ensure that the pricing of electricity and fuels is guided by the market, with subsidies needed to protect the poor and vulnerable being better targeted and clearly reflected on the Government’s budget. This will avoid the accumulation of un-funded subsidy bills and ensure SOE operations are conducted on a commercially viable basis.
“Important structural reforms will also support growth and competitiveness objectives. The Government plans to review and reform the external tariff structure to reduce effective rates of protection while simultaneously pursuing new trade agreements. The Central Bank will shift toward a flexible inflation targeting regime while also undertaking measures to help deepen foreign exchange markets and a support a durable transition to a flexible exchange rate regime. Strengthening financial sector supervision and increasing the role of private credit and financial intermediation in the economy will remain important objectives.
“With the implementation of these policies, Sri Lanka will support growth and build resilience to future economic shocks. Overall, the EFF will help the Government achieve ‘lift off’ of the economy and fully tap Sri Lanka’s significant economic potential.”