Sri Lanka names new ministers as old team quits amid crisis

Published Mon, Apr 4, 2022 · 08:16 AM

    [COLOMBO] Sri Lanka has named a new finance minister as President Gotabaya Rajapaksa began reworking his Cabinet amid the nation's worst economic and political crisis in decades.

    Ali Sabry will take over from Basil Rajapaksa as the head of finance, and G. L. Pieris will continue as the foreign minister, said Sudewa Hettiarachchi, director-general of the Presidential Media Division, on Monday (Apr 4).

    Sabry is among the key decision makers as the president prepares for a bailout from the International Monetary Fund (IMF). The reshuffle comes amid Sri Lanka's struggle with a severe dollar shortage, prompting capital controls and import curbs. With the government eventually running out of funds to pay for purchase of essentials such as food and fuel, the island nation is now staring at a default of its debt, even as inflation has accelerated at the fastest pace in Asia and the rupee has collapsed.

    Sabry and Pieris are part of a team that will oversee debt restructure, key to obtaining support from the IMF. Central bank governor Ajith Nivard Cabraal, who has opposed aid from the multilateral lender, offered to quit separately.

    The political shakeup follows the government's attempt to quell growing social unrest by imposing emergency rule, barring gatherings and ordering Internet service providers to restrict social media access. Inflation is running at almost 19 per cent and citizens have had to endure daily power cuts of as long as 13 hours as diesel runs out due to a foreign exchange crisis.

    Citizens across the island on Sunday defied a curfew and staged protests on streets, calling for the ouster of the president due to soaring living costs. Social media groups are now calling for a "Black Monday," asking people to wear the color to show unity and anger over the current situation.

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    The central bank governor's offer of resignation came a day before the authority was due to announce its interest rate decision. Cabraal, a veteran policy maker who was named governor of the Central Bank of Sri Lanka in September, has added to rate hikes - raising by a total 200 basis points from the pandemic-era low - to combat inflation that's pushing toward 20 per cent amid risks from Russia's war in Ukraine.

    "The resignation has led to a lot of volatility in the market but this also opens up a new way forward for policy and strategy," said Dimantha Mathew, head of research at First Capital Holdings. "The monetary authority will need to, on priority, look at stabilising both exchange rate and inflation by raising interest rates."

    The IMF last month said Sri Lanka faces a "clear solvency problem" due to unsustainable debt levels, as well as persistent fiscal and balance-of-payments shortages.

    The island nation, whose trade deficit doubled to US$1.1 billion in December, had about US$2.3 billion of foreign-exchange reserves in February and faces a $1 billion dollar bond repayment in July.

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