December 27, 2021
2 mins read

Lanka Faces Forex Crisis

Many analysts have said that the current economic crisis is worse than the erstwhile LTTE problem that the nation faced. ..writes Mahua Venkatesh

 In 2019, the year when Sri Lanka’s President Gotabaya Rajapaksa took over, the foreign exchange reserves of the country stood at $7.5 billion. In just a little over two years, the foreign exchange reserves of the island nation have fallen to $1.58 billion-which is just enough to support imports for a month.

While the economic impact of the Covid-19 pandemic was particularly harsh on the tourism industry-dependent Sri Lanka, a large section of society is of the opinion that the problems only aggravated due to the mishandling of the situation by the Rajapaksas. Prices of essential items including food have risen manifold forcing people to reduce their consumption. To add to this an acute shortage of cooking gas has hit households.

The Sri Lankan cabinet now has five members of the Rajapaksa family after Basil Rajapaksa, brother of Gotabaya became the finance minister. Mahindra Rajapaksa is currently serving as Prime Minister while the 78 year-old Chamal Rajapaksa is minister of irrigation. The prime minister’s eldest son Namal serves as the youth and sports minister.

“Among the politicians, the most responsible for the economy are the President, the Prime Minister, and the Minister of Finance. Alas, they all come from the same Rajapaksa family! Can that be a root cause of the economic crisis today? Of course, it is,” Laksiri Fernando, author and political commentator, in a recent column, published by Sri Lanka Guardian said.

Fernando added that when the present President was elected in November 2019, people even in the opposition had some hopes that he would be corrupt-free or straight forward, although his name had already been tarnished with some corruption allegations.

Many analysts have said that the current economic crisis is worse than the erstwhile LTTE problem that the nation faced.

Flag of Sri Lanka.

“The pandemic has hit the economy no doubt but the situation today is going out of hand. The problems are multiplying because of mismanagement. These are unusual times that need unusual resolve and policy making. Definitely none of that is happening,” one of them told India Narrative.

As the country’s foreign exchange reserves deplete steadily and inflation breach the double digit figure, Sri Lanka’s GDP growth rate contracted by 1.5 per cent. ICRA Lanka has now sounded an alarm bell saying that the external sector troubles of Sri Lanka are on the brink of breaking point.

Sri Lanka’s food prices rose by 17.5 per cent and the overall prices rose by 9.9 per cent from a year ago, recording the highest in at least in 10 years, but in reality the prices have climbed in several multiples in the last couple of months than what the official prices suggest, Daily Mirror said.

(The content is being carried under an arrangement with indianarrative.com)

ALSO READ: Lankan President prays at Tirumala temple

Previous Story

SPECIAL: Rupee Forecast 27/12

Next Story

UN In a Fix Over Payment to Haqqani For Security

Latest from -Top News

‘Kill and Dump’ Haunts Balochistan Again

The latest killings have reignited accusations of extrajudicial executions and the use of counterterrorism laws to cover up custodial deaths in Balochistan….reports Asian Lite News Concerns have deepened across Balochistan following the

‘ASEAN Expands, But Keeps Its Soul’

Malaysian Foreign Minister Mohamad Hasan urged ASEAN to uphold its unity and strategic resolve amid intensifying geopolitical tensions and mounting external pressures…reports Asian Lite News Consensus and inclusivity will remain the cornerstones

Bangladesh bends to beat Trump’s blow

Dhaka seeks compromise as Trump’s 35% tariff looms large over key exports; Washington urges worker protections, factory relocation to US…reports Asian Lite News Bangladesh has opened the second round of critical trade

China seethes as US lands F-35s in PH

As US F-35 jets land in the Philippines for the first time, Manila cements its frontline role in Washington’s power play against rising China….reports Asian Lite News The Philippines is rapidly cementing
Go toTop

Don't Miss

Hartal brings Lanka to a standstill, Protests rock Parliament

Public protests were conducted in almost all the cities demanding

India’s grain gift to Lanka for new year

The assistance comes in the wake of India’s External Affairs