COLOMBO – There is a popular phrase used by doctors when a patient is recovering from a major illness: “The patient is stable, but not out of danger.” This is exactly where the Sri Lankan economy stands today.
In a major announcement out of Washington and Colombo, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) completed its combined Fifth and Sixth Reviews under Sri Lanka’s economic rescue program, known formally as the Extended Fund Facility (EFF).
This technical milestone has immediate, practical benefits: it releases US$ 695 million in direct cash support to the country, and brings the total amount of money Sri Lanka has received from the IMF since its historic debt default in 2022 to US$ 2.4 billion.
On one hand, this news is a badge of honour for the country’s financial managers. It shows that Sri Lanka has strictly followed the difficult rules and structural benchmarks set by the ultimate global lender.
This discipline is the main reason why the economy has staged a visible turnaround from the dark days of 2022, when citizens faced miles-long queues for fuel, hours of daily power cuts, and a complete lack of foreign currency.
On the other hand, the final year of this IMF program is running into a wall of unexpected global and local problems.
The latest IMF Country Report delivers a very clear and grounded message: while the government has successfully rebuilt its financial armour and improved its baseline tax revenues, the economy remains deeply vulnerable to outside shocks.
Two massive disruptions – Cyclone Ditwah, the devastating local natural disaster, and the sudden escalation of the war in the Middle East – have completely altered Sri Lanka’s economic landscape.
These events have forced the IMF and local officials to rewrite their financial targets, alter their rules, and even overlook a major cybersecurity blunder by the government.
For the average citizen, this means that while the country is no longer in financial collapse, the daily struggle with the cost of living is far from over.
Twin Disasters
When the year began, there was a strong sense of optimism in Colombo.
In 2025, the economy grew by a surprisingly robust 5.0%. This growth was driven by a fantastic comeback in tourism, busy shipping and manufacturing logistics, and a sudden wave of tax revenue collected from the resumption of motor vehicle imports.
However, because of the new global and local disruptions, the IMF has slashed its economic growth forecast for Sri Lanka in 2026 down to a modest 3.0%.
This slowdown is not a natural cooling off of the economy. It is the direct result of two distinct, overlapping external shocks that have hit the country’s supply chains and bank accounts at the same time.
The ongoing conflict in the Middle East has hurt Sri Lanka in direct ways. When global tensions rise, crude oil prices shoot up.
Because Sri Lanka’s electricity grid, factory machines, and transport networks run almost entirely on imported oil, high global prices instantly expand the nation’s import bill.
To put this in perspective, Sri Lanka’s fuel import bill skyrocketed to an astonishing US$ 886 million in April this year, compared to just US$ 152 million in December last year.
This massive jump was caused by a combination of higher global prices and a larger volume of oil being brought in to keep the country running.
This extra spending drains precious foreign currency out of the country and causes local prices to rise.
Tourism Deficit
When the world feels unsafe, people stop booking long-distance holidays.
The geopolitical uncertainty in the Middle East has caused international travellers to stay home, dealing a heavy blow to Sri Lanka’s tourism recovery.
In April 2026, tourism revenue plunged by 38.8% compared to the same month last year, bringing in only US$ 157.1 million.
Looking at the first four months of this year, total tourism revenue dropped to US$ 1.11 billion, down from US$ 1.37 billion during the same period last year.
This means the country lost hundreds of millions of dollars in organic cash flow exactly when its fuel bills were rising.
Growth Squeeze
While global events were draining dollars from the economy, nature struck a blow at home.
Cyclone Ditwah brought severe weather patterns across the island, causing widespread physical damage to Sri Lanka’s primary agricultural zones and roads.
This disaster forced the government to immediately spend unbudgeted public funds on emergency relief, food aid, and infrastructure reconstruction.
At the same time, because fields and farms were flooded, localized food supply chains broke down. This temporary shortage of fresh produce caused food prices at the retail level to shoot up, putting extra pressure on family budgets.
When you combine a massive fuel bill and a drop in tourism with a major domestic agricultural disaster, the country’s financial balance sheets break down.
Sri Lanka’s previously stable current account surplus, which means the country was earning more from the world than it was spending, has flipped into a projected deficit of 0.5% of GDP for 2026.
This single shift has completely interrupted eighteen months of rapid financial recovery.
Fiscal Tightrope
One of the most eye-opening parts of the latest IMF report is its detailed analysis of Sri Lanka’s tax revenues.
Throughout 2025, the government’s fiscal performance looked incredibly strong on paper.
However, that strength was built on an unstable foundation: a heavy reliance on a single, short-term tax source, which is the resumption of motor vehicle imports.
While the customs duties collected from people importing cars propped up state coffers temporarily, this strategy proved to be a weak shield when the 2026 energy crisis arrived.
The report also reveals a highly concerning operational detail that required top-level intervention from the IMF Executive Board.
Sri Lanka technically breached one of the strict, legally mandated targets of the program, requiring a formal Waiver of Non-Observance from global lenders.
The cause of this breach was not bad policy, but a successful cybersecurity attack.
Cybercriminals managed to hack into the digital networks of the Ministry of Finance’s External Resources Department using a basic email phishing and network interception scam.
The hackers successfully intercepted and misdirected a US$ 2.5 million portion of a sovereign debt repayment facility that the Sri Lankan government was sending to the Government of Australia.
Because this cash was fraudulently rerouted and temporarily frozen in international banking systems, Sri Lanka technically missed its exact, legally required debt-clearing deadline.
While the IMF treated this incident as an isolated operational error rather than a failure of political will, it highlighted serious gaps in how the country manages its public finances and digital security.
Budget Space
In a surprising departure from its usual reputation for rigid, unyielding austerity rules, the IMF has explicitly stated that fiscal easing in 2026 is appropriate to help the country survive this dual shock.
To give the government room to breathe, the IMF has allowed the central government deficit to widen to 5.1% of GDP (up from 2.3% in 2025).
Concurrently, the target for the primary surplus, which is the amount of tax money the government has left over after covering its basic running costs but before paying interest on its debts, has been scaled down to a modest 1.4% of GDP, down from the exceptional 5.4% achieved last year.
This financial breathing room allows the government to urgently spend money directly on repairing broken roads, bridges, and agricultural networks damaged by Cyclone Ditwah, as well as provide temporary financial assistance to poor and vulnerable families to help them absorb the double blow of high electricity tariffs and weather-driven food costs.
However, the IMF explicitly warns that this flexibility must not be seen as an open invitation to return to careless, populist spending.
The report demands that all financial relief remain strictly well-targeted, properly costed, and time-bound.
If the government hands out money carelessly, the country’s Gross Financing Needs, the total amount of money the state needs to borrow just to stay afloat, will spiral out of control from its already tight level of 19.8% of GDP.
Monetary Policy
For the average consumer, the most urgent question is always about the price of goods and services.
The IMF projects that average inflation will rise to 5.0%, with end-of-year headline numbers expected to touch 6.1% in 2026.
This means the comfortable period of rapidly falling prices has officially ended. The economy must now absorb the massive international energy shock.
Faced with rising inflation and a sharp increase in credit demand from businesses taking advantage of lower interest rates, the Central Bank was compelled to reverse its previous policy of cutting rates.
The IMF’s directive to the Central Bank is firm: interest rate policy must remain strictly data-dependent and agile to keep price stability under control.
The report places heavy emphasis on three monetary rules.
The IMF strongly reiterates that the Central Bank must continue to maintain a complete ban on printing money to fund government budget deficits.
Printing unbacked cash is the primary driver of hyperinflation and currency depreciation.
By maintaining this ban, reserve money growth is targeted to remain at a controlled 9.8% this year.
The IMF has also backed the legal and operational independence of the Central Bank and said it must be fiercely protected from political leaders who frequently demand short-term interest rate cuts to win popularity.
The IMF is very clear: if local shop owners and corporate executives begin raising prices in anticipation of future fuel hikes, the Central Bank must step in immediately with hawkish liquidity management tools to tighten the money supply.
Private sector credit growth is projected to moderate to 14.5% by the end of this year, down significantly from a high of 25.2% in 2025.
When adjusted for inflation, real private credit growth will sit at a restrictive 9.5%.
By making loans harder and more expensive to get, the Central Bank purposefully cools down domestic demand, ensuring that businesses do not flood the market with local cash to buy imported goods, which would place destructive pressure on the exchange rate.
Defending Rupee
For a country that recently went through a sovereign default, rebuilding its global financial safety net is a matter of survival.
Despite the balance-of-payments issues caused by the Middle East war, the IMF has set a strict target for Sri Lanka to expand its Gross Official Reserves to US$ 8,645 million by the end of 2026.
This is a critical psychological buffer, equivalent to roughly 3.9 months of prospective imports.
To achieve this goal without causing massive cash shortage in the local economy, the IMF report emphasizes on flexible exchange rate and phasing out pre-crisis era bans.
The IMF explicitly cautions the government against any administrative manipulation or artificial propping up of the Sri Lankan Rupee (LKR).
The central bank must not spend its hard-earned dollar reserves to artificially defend the currency’s value.
Instead, the exchange rate must act as the primary shock absorber for the economy.
Allowing the currency to move dynamically in response to market supply and demand ensures that Sri Lanka’s foreign exchange reserves are preserved.
The government must also systematically remove the remaining import bans, temporary customs surcharges, and administrative capital controls that were put in place during the height of the 2022 collapse, the IMF says.
While these restrictive practices offered temporary breathing room, they function as long-term distortions. They restrict trade integration, lower overall economic efficiency, and stop foreign companies from making long-term investments in the country.
Cleaning Up the Banking Sector
The IMF notes that Sri Lanka’s financial system still exhibits significant vulnerabilities that require close supervision.
While the massive, tier-one commercial banks have enough capital to survive, the broader credit system is heavily weighed down by a high volume of Non-Performing Loans (NPLs), which are loans that businesses and individuals have failed to repay due to economic hardship.
The IMF has issued explicit instructions to regulators to resolve these legacy bad loan portfolios quickly using rapid asset recovery frameworks and structural corporate debt adjustments.
It has also urged regulators to closely monitor and address capital shortages within small Licensed Finance Companies (NBFIs).
These smaller non-bank institutions are highly exposed to defaults within retail agriculture and small-scale commercial transport, sectors that have been hit hardest by Cyclone Ditwah and high diesel prices.
Structural Reform Blueprint
A defining feature of Sri Lanka’s current IMF program is its focus on structural governance.
Global lenders explicitly acknowledge that systemic corruption, lack of institutional transparency, and massive inefficiencies within state agencies were central drivers of the 2022 collapse.
While the IMF strongly welcomes the publication of the 2026 Government Action Plan on Governance Reforms, it emphasizes that passing laws on paper is meaningless without real, aggressive enforcement.
The report highlights four structural governance priorities, including giving CIABOC the real legal teeth.
The Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery or Corruption (CIABOC) must be provided with complete operational, financial, and legal autonomy from the political executive.
This means equipping the anti-corruption agency with its own specialized teams of forensic accountants, digital investigators, and independent prosecutorial powers so it can target high-level financial crimes without political interference.
It also urges the state to ensure the absolute reliability and public accessibility of its beneficial ownership registry. This measure is specifically designed to eliminate front-company structures, where corrupt individuals hide their identities behind shell companies to win lucrative public contracts, exploit state tenders, and execute illicit capital flight out of the country.
The government must rapidly write and enforce modern laws governing Public-Private Partnerships (PPPs), State-Owned Enterprises (such as the CEB and CPC), public procurement, and public asset management, the IMF has urged.
Every single public project must comply fully with the parameters of the Public Financial Management Act to ensure there are no hidden, off-budget liabilities or irregular contract awards handed out to favoured insiders.
And to move away from basic survival and unlock long-term, inclusive growth, Sri Lanka must stay committed to broader economic modernization, the IMF advises.
This includes sustaining trade liberalization with the rest of the world, accelerating digital government initiatives to eliminate red tape, streamlining business registration for young entrepreneurs, and modernizing outdated labour legislation to make the job market more flexible and dynamic.
To summarize the extensive findings of the IMF’s latest assessment, the structural challenges facing Sri Lankan society can be broken down into three simple analytical pillars.
Fiscal & Debt Sustainability
The core problem is that the government relies too heavily on temporary tax waves from car imports to fill its coffers.
At the same time, the country’s total borrowing needs remain very high (19.8% of GDP), and there are serious security weaknesses in the Ministry of Finance’s digital payment systems.
As a solution, the IMF asks the state to build a permanent, reliable revenue stream by implementing a comprehensive, long-term tax strategy.
Simultaneously, it must strictly enforce legal spending limits across all ministries using the guidelines of the new Public Financial Management Act.
Monetary & External Balance
High global oil prices are pushing up local electricity and transport costs, and that has been Sri Lanka’s main problem.
This energy shock has flipped the current account balance into a 0.5% deficit, making it harder for the Central Bank to build and protect its vital foreign currency reserves.
As a solution, the IMF has suggested that the Central Bank manage interest rates using an agile, data-driven approach.
The country must avoid artificially manipulating the exchange rate, and the government must enforce cost-recovery pricing for fuel and power to prevent state utilities from running up massive losses, the global lender has said.
Structural & Social Stability
Under this, the IMF has projected the economic growth to slow a modest 3.0% by the end of 2026, and public frustration is rising due to the high cost of living.
At the same time, small, localized finance companies are facing a wave of bad loans from struggling farmers and drivers.
The government must rapidly strengthen domestic social safety nets by expanding the reach and accuracy of low-income relief initiatives like the Aswesuma program, as a solution to this problem. Concurrently, financial regulators must force small lenders to restructure their bad loan books before they face a liquidity crisis.
-economynext.com
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