Verité Research offers solutions for USD liquidity crisis
View(s):A private think tank institute in Sri Lanka has said Sri Lanka faces bigger challenges ahead in the management of its foreign exchange reserves. “Sri Lanka’s foreign reserve would be completely depleted by the end of 2022 if no surprise inflows materialise and even if they did, the crisis would simply re-emerge in 2023,” revealed Verite Research in an analysis that was shared at an online discussion which it hosted.
“This means that even if Sri Lanka can claim to be technically solvent, it does not have the liquidity to sustainably pay back its foreign debt until the country credit rating is improved by at least two notches,” it added.
Verité Research hosted the online discussion “Steering out of the Debt Crisis: Recipe for Budget 2022” on October 14. The event was anchored around addressing Sri Lanka’s debt and USD liquidity crisis, and featured presentations by Executive Director Nishan de Mel, Research Director Deshal de Mel, and Analyst Anushan Kapilan. An expert panel included Dr. Shantayanan Devaranjan (Georgetown University), Dr. Nandalal Weerasinghe (former Senior Deputy Governor – Central Bank and Dr. Mick Moore (Institute of Development Studies – UK).
In a media release, Verité Research said it presented analysis pertaining to debt management and fiscal measures, including specific proposals to increase government revenue and improve the allocation of expenditure.
Major highlights: Debt Management
▪ The Verité Research analysis showed that Sri Lanka can achieve sustainable debt dynamics by meeting two conditions with regard to its domestic debt, and two further conditions with regard to its foreign debt. The presentation explained that, despite some challenges, achieving these conditions was feasible for Sri Lanka – provided policy makers choose to do so.
▪ The main challenges arise from poorly formulated fiscal/budget measures, coupled with the pandemic induced setbacks which have resulted in successive downgrades of Sri Lanka’s credit ratings. As a result, Sri Lanka has been locked out of global capital markets, and rapidly depleted its foreign reserves, as it has continued to payback foreign bondholders, at the expense of negative feedback on the local economy.
▪ The current path of repaying debt offers a high return to bondholders at the expense of huge pain to domestic businesses and consumers, and makes the credit rating outlook even more precarious. The solution is to share the pain with bondholders by pre-emptively restructuring the debt. This can improve the foreign reserve position more quickly, and thereby improve the country’s credit rating more quickly as well. This alternative path is less painful to the local economy, offers a faster recovery, with a higher probability of success. It is a better path for the Sri Lankan economy than repaying foreign bondholders in full, even if it were able to do so.
▪ A clear distinction needs to be made between a forced restructuring which would occur if a country were to default in a disorderly way without negotiating with creditors, and an orderly pre-emptive restructuring of debt following negotiations with creditors. The sooner Sri Lanka moves to an orderly pre-emptive debt restructure, the easier it would be to do so, and the more favourable it would be for the Sri Lankan economy. Delaying the decision is damaging and can result in outcomes that are highly disruptive, the statement said.
Fiscal reforms
▪ Currently the primary deficit is at 7.4 percent of GDP. At the current GDP growth rate of a little under 4 percent (predicted by Verité Research), it is necessary to reduce the primary deficit to around 2 percent of GDP or less to help stabilise the debt.
▪ The Verité Research analysis showed that in the base case scenario with no policy changes, the debt to GDP Ratio would increase to 123.08 percent by 2025, however with prudent fiscal measures it can be kept down to 108.8 percent by 2025.
▪ The fiscal measures proposed included the reduction of the personal income threshold to Rs.1 million per annum; the reintroduction of PAYE with a threshold of Rs.1.5 million reintroduction of WHT on interest income; increasing the VAT rate to 10 percent in 2022 and to 12 percent in 2023; reducing the VAT free thresholds from Rs.300 million to Rs.150 million in 2022; simplifying the corporate tax regime to a 3-tier regime; and increasing the total taxes on cigarettes and alcohol in line with increases in inflation and GDP according to a tobacco taxation formula introduced in the 2019 budget.