SriLankan to be sold? IMF? Cabinet meeting next Monday

Hasitha22

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  • Aug 28, 2021
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    Amid reports that cash-strapped Sri Lanka’s ruling coalition is split down the middle over an International Monetary Fund (IMF) bailout, another cabinet minister on Wednesday (29) spoke in favour of IMF assistance, even going as far as to hint at the sale of the country’s national carrier.

    “We will have to go to the IMF. There is nothing wrong with that… since we have no other option,” Environment Minister Mahinda Amaraweera said speaking to reporters on Wednesday (29).

    Amaraweera is a member of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP), which is increasingly at odds with the ruling Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP). State Minister Dayasiri Jayasekara, the SLFP’s general secretary, had also recently advocated going to the IMF.

    “Of course, we need to not accept every condition put forward by the IMF,” said Amaraweera.

    “We have been informed that the central bank governor and the Treasury Secretary will be joining the cabinet meeting next Monday (03). I think we will be able to reach a final consensus then,” he added.

    Co-cabinet spokesman and Media Minister Dullas Alahapperuma on December 21 told reporters that the cabinet had “exchanged views” on an IMF bailout for the second week in a row but no decision had been made.

    Minister Amaraweera, meanwhile, also commented on SriLankan Airlines, the national carrier, and other under-performing state owned enterprises (SOEs).

    “At this point, we may have to let go of certain institutes. For example, SriLankan suffers losses in the billions. These losses are borne by people who have never even touched [an aircraft],” he said.

    A day before Sri Lanka raised fuel prices last week, Trade Minister Bandula Gunawardena told reporters that the IMF would ask to cut the bloated public sector, reduce the budget deficit, make state enterprises profitable, and raise fuel and electricity prices.

    A few days earlier, State Minister Jayasekera said after last week’s cabinet meeting that the IMF imposes conditions such as making state enterprises profitable.

    “It is a good thing to do that,” Jayasekera said.

    Finance Minister Basil Rajapaksa had already said the state workers and state enterprises were a big burden on the economy.

    Older IMF baiout programs typically involve cutting the deficit with tax hikes (revenue based), trimming expenses (spending based) expressed as a net domestic finance target, a foreign reserve target and a reserve money target.

    However Sri Lanka’s last failed extended fund facility from IMF program where money was printed within the program to create forex shortages and worsen foreign debt, an inflation target was given and the budget target was defined as a primary deficit.

    Instead of a measurable reserve money or ceiling on central bank credit an inflation target was given, allowing the trigger happy central bank to print money and trigger a currency crisis within the program.

    Under revenue based fiscal consolidation, state spending soared and the currency collapsed from 151 to 183 under a so-called flexible exchange rate where the exchange flipped from pegged to floating rapidly and interventions were sterilized on top of it.


    Economynext
     

    Bitter Truth

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    Cat GIF
     

    tharakaf

    Well-known member
  • Oct 19, 2020
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    Amid reports that cash-strapped Sri Lanka’s ruling coalition is split down the middle over an International Monetary Fund (IMF) bailout, another cabinet minister on Wednesday (29) spoke in favour of IMF assistance, even going as far as to hint at the sale of the country’s national carrier.

    “We will have to go to the IMF. There is nothing wrong with that… since we have no other option,” Environment Minister Mahinda Amaraweera said speaking to reporters on Wednesday (29).

    Amaraweera is a member of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP), which is increasingly at odds with the ruling Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP). State Minister Dayasiri Jayasekara, the SLFP’s general secretary, had also recently advocated going to the IMF.

    “Of course, we need to not accept every condition put forward by the IMF,” said Amaraweera.

    “We have been informed that the central bank governor and the Treasury Secretary will be joining the cabinet meeting next Monday (03). I think we will be able to reach a final consensus then,” he added.

    Co-cabinet spokesman and Media Minister Dullas Alahapperuma on December 21 told reporters that the cabinet had “exchanged views” on an IMF bailout for the second week in a row but no decision had been made.

    Minister Amaraweera, meanwhile, also commented on SriLankan Airlines, the national carrier, and other under-performing state owned enterprises (SOEs).

    “At this point, we may have to let go of certain institutes. For example, SriLankan suffers losses in the billions. These losses are borne by people who have never even touched [an aircraft],” he said.

    A day before Sri Lanka raised fuel prices last week, Trade Minister Bandula Gunawardena told reporters that the IMF would ask to cut the bloated public sector, reduce the budget deficit, make state enterprises profitable, and raise fuel and electricity prices.

    A few days earlier, State Minister Jayasekera said after last week’s cabinet meeting that the IMF imposes conditions such as making state enterprises profitable.

    “It is a good thing to do that,” Jayasekera said.

    Finance Minister Basil Rajapaksa had already said the state workers and state enterprises were a big burden on the economy.

    Older IMF baiout programs typically involve cutting the deficit with tax hikes (revenue based), trimming expenses (spending based) expressed as a net domestic finance target, a foreign reserve target and a reserve money target.

    However Sri Lanka’s last failed extended fund facility from IMF program where money was printed within the program to create forex shortages and worsen foreign debt, an inflation target was given and the budget target was defined as a primary deficit.

    Instead of a measurable reserve money or ceiling on central bank credit an inflation target was given, allowing the trigger happy central bank to print money and trigger a currency crisis within the program.

    Under revenue based fiscal consolidation, state spending soared and the currency collapsed from 151 to 183 under a so-called flexible exchange rate where the exchange flipped from pegged to floating rapidly and interventions were sterilized on top of it.


    Economynext
    You need to privatize most of these things and stop subsidizing shit. Hama huththama nikan deela tama mehema wela tiyenne. The government needs to control the quality of the privaitised services. That is the best thing we can do.
     

    imhotep

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  • Mar 29, 2017
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    You need to privatize most of these things and stop subsidizing shit. Hama huththama nikan deela tama mehema wela tiyenne. The government needs to control the quality of the privaitised services. That is the best thing we can do.
    The first thing to be privatised should be the bloody Parliament... The most corrupt and inefficient establishment in SL.... (y)
     

    tharakaf

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  • Oct 19, 2020
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    The first thing to be privatised should be the bloody Parliament... The most corrupt and inefficient establishment in SL.... (y)
    Itin balapan huththo umbatalath terenne nane. Eka komada ban privatize karanne? Transport wage ewa kelinma privatize karala danna ona. Government service eka efficient karanna ona, digitalize kranna ona. There are lot of things that can be done, But I will not waste my time typing shit here cos I know it will never happen in SL :ROFLMAO: :ROFLMAO:
     

    imhotep

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  • Mar 29, 2017
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    Itin balapan huththo umbatalath terenne nane. Eka komada ban privatize karanne? Transport wage ewa kelinma privatize karala danna ona. Government service eka efficient karanna ona, digitalize kranna ona. There are lot of things that can be done, But I will not waste my time typing shit here cos I know it will never happen in SL :ROFLMAO: :ROFLMAO:
    That's the problem... Isn't it. Then at least don't vote like mental retards. I knew what Gota is capable of, knowing people who were his superiors. Had I said this two years ago, the entire morons in here would not have liked it.
    In any case we learnt one lesson before by granting 2/3rds to JRJ. A democracy doesn;t need 2/3rds - what it needs is a healthy opposition.
    When you cannot privatise the f!@#ing parliament, then you DO NOT vote for 2/3rds of the morons. You balance the morons so that one set of morons will keep check of the other set of morons.
    Yoi cannot make the government service efficient now. That was sadly f@#$ed by Sirimavo. The abolition of the PSC led to the downfall of the CCS (SLAS) in SriLanka. It was NM who said that the omelette has been made and you cannot make the egg out of the omelette.
    You are possibly far too young to realise what went wrong in SL.