• About us
  • Contact us
Wednesday, June 24, 2026
No 1 epaper in Sri Lanka
  • News
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Foreign
  • Entertainment
  • Business
  • Political Analysis
  • Inside Politics
  • EPAPERPDF
  • සිංහලSINHALA
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Foreign
  • Entertainment
  • Business
  • Political Analysis
  • Inside Politics
  • EPAPERPDF
  • සිංහලSINHALA
No Result
View All Result
Mawratanews.lk | Sri Lanka Latest Sinhala News and Headlines
No Result
View All Result
Home News

Sri Lanka faces liquidity crunch, Pak stares at economic abyss

April 9, 2023
in News
Reading Time: 14 mins read
A A
Sri Lanka faces liquidity crunch, Pak stares at economic abyss
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Pakistan foreign reserves have fallen to USD 4.2 billion, which is enough to cater for one month of import bill. Sri Lanka is facing a liquidity crunch.

Despite Sri Lanka getting the first tranche of a US dollar 362 million loan from the IMF, the island nation is facing a liquidity crunch as the loan conditions stipulate no more printing of Sri Lankan currency to curb the inflation and for prudent fiscal management. On March 20, the IMF cleared the USD 2.9 billion-dollar package for Sri Lanka in eight installments.

It is understood that Sri Lanka has repaid nearly half of US dollar 500 million dollar loan taken for fuel purchases last year, it is quite evident that donor nations including China, Japan and even India will have to take a significant haircut as part of debt restructuring of the island nation.

While Sri Lanka continues to struggle with the ongoing economic crisis after May 20, 2022 default, another Indian neighbour and cat’s paw of China in the Indian sub-continent, Pakistan, is staring at a default with reports indicating that Islamabad will have to cough up USD 77.5 billion in external debt between April 2023 to June 2026 to iron brother China, private creditors and Saudi Arabia. The external debt is one-fourth of Pakistan’s economy of USD 350 billion.

Even though Pakistan finance Finance Minister Ishaq Dar has assured the nearly bankrupt Islamic republic that it will manage a USD 6.5 billion package from IMF, Pakistan is facing a serious economic and political crisis with aggravated insurgencies in Balochistan and in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa regions. With ousted prime minister and PTI chief Imran Khan going for the jugular of the Pakistani establishment to regain power, the judiciary split and PM Shehbaz Sharif facing public wrath over food shortage and rampant inflation, Islamabad has a fully blown crisis at hand with the world focused on Russian actions in Ukraine and Chinese actions on Taiwan.

As the IMF package will come with riders accompanied with raising of taxes and rationalization of power tariff, the political cost of economic pain to the public will lead to further public disenchantment of the politicians and the Rawalpindi GHQ.

The Pakistan foreign reserves have fallen to USD 4.2 billion, which is enough to cater for one month of import bill. The USD-PKR exchange rate is touching 280 Pakistani Rupees to a US Dollar and there are food shortages in all provinces barring Punjab, the core of Pakistan.

According to a report by the United States Institute of Peace this week, the Islamic Republic holds external debt and liabilities of USD 126.3 billion as of December 2022. Nearly 77 per cent of this debt, amounting to USD 97.5 billion, is directly owed by the Pakistan government to various creditors and an additional USD 7.9 billion is owned by government-controlled public sector enterprises to multilateral creditors.

Pakistan owes USD 45 billion to multilateral institutions, USD 8.5 billion to Paris Club of creditor nations, USD 27 billion to China and some USD 7.8 billion as private debt and commercial loans. While Islamabad believes that iron brother China and fellow-Sunni Islamic nations will not let Pakistan default by refinancing loans, the repayment pressure will mount on the Islamic Republic to the tune of USD 24.6 billion in 2024-2025.

Given that Pakistan has virtually moved into the China-Russia axis and depends on Beijing for military hardware, the west, post withdrawal from Afghanistan, is rather indifferent to the woes of the Islamic Republic as it struggles to contain the rise of China. That Pakistan is a lackey of China does not really help its case.

Source: Hindustantimes

Share51Tweet32Send
Previous Post

Daylight kidnapping of a businessman in Kegalla posing as CID; complaint to human rights commission

Next Post

Ambassador Qi Zhenhong called on former Prime minister

MORE NEWS

Social Media Minimum Age Bill Submitted to Parliament to Regulate Access for Children Under 16
News

Social Media Minimum Age Bill Submitted to Parliament to Regulate Access for Children Under 16

June 24, 2026
Korean Diplomat Meets Sajith Premadasa, Extends Invitation to Major Asian Political Conference
News

Korean Diplomat Meets Sajith Premadasa, Extends Invitation to Major Asian Political Conference

June 24, 2026
Colombo Port City Records US$600 Million in Investments During First Quarter of 2026
News

Colombo Port City Records US$600 Million in Investments During First Quarter of 2026

June 24, 2026
US-Iran Talks Face Fresh Hurdles Amid Disputes Over Nuclear Oversight and Regional Security
News

US-Iran Talks Face Fresh Hurdles Amid Disputes Over Nuclear Oversight and Regional Security

June 24, 2026
Confusion and Uncertainty Over Polls Cause Sharp Decline in CSE
News

CSE Platforms Dialogue on IFRS Sustainability Standards as it Concludes Online Workshop

June 24, 2026
While US Envoy Kapur Visits Sri Lanka, Chinese Ambassador Presents Governance Book to Tilvin
My Serendib

While US Envoy Kapur Visits Sri Lanka, Chinese Ambassador Presents Governance Book to Tilvin

June 24, 2026
Load More
Leave Comment

One of the best Sri Lanka Latest News Website and Sinhala language newspaper with Sunday editions, published by Free Media Independent Networks Pvt Ltd.

  • About us
  • Contact us

Copyright © 2019–2025 Free Media Independent Networks Pvt Ltd. All Rights Reserved. Developed by Turn Global.

No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Foreign
  • Entertainment
  • Business
  • Political Analysis
  • Inside Politics
  • EPAPER
  • සිංහල

Copyright © 2019–2025 Free Media Independent Networks Pvt Ltd. All Rights Reserved. Developed by Turn Global.