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SL Political parties unable to comprehend rapidly changing global economy – CP

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Dr. Weerasinghe

General Secretary of Communist Party Dr. G. Weerasinghe has alleged that major political parties in Sri Lanka are either clueless or silent about the far reaching changes in the global economy. He has found fault with the ruling NPP for its failure to renegotiate the agreement with the IMF in spite of repeatedly pledging to do so in the run-up to presidential and parliamentary polls last year.

The following is the text of the statement issued by Dr. Weerasinghe: On 2 April 2025, US President Donald Trump declared ‘Liberation Day’ as he unleashed a wave of protectionist tariffs. These tariffs have hit some of the poorest countries in the world, including a 44% tariff on Sri Lanka.

Since Sri Lanka’s leaders have made the economy overly dependent on the US, these tariffs will affect the country and its workforce badly. Around 23% of Sri Lanka exports go to the US. Around 38% of Sri Lanka’s biggest export, apparel and garments, goes to the US. Therefore, the 350,000 workers directly employed in this sector will face uncertainty, loss of income, and unemployment.

While such protectionism should have been anticipated by the present government, no amount of negotiating could have changed the tariff rate as it is based on an irrational formula devised by the Trump administration. The US will use these tariffs in order to extract economic and political concessions from the country. All progressive forces must remain vigilant about this.

The only solution is to break from away from economic dependence on the US market, invest in domestic industrial capacity, and contribute to building a new international economic order with the Global South.

Trump’s so-called ‘reciprocal tariffs’ have to be understood in the context of historic transformations happening in the world economy. The balance of economic power is shifting decisively toward the Global South, with China and BRICS at the vanguard of this transformation.

China overtook Japan to become the second largest world economy in 2010. In 2014, it surpassed the US economy in terms of GDP purchasing power parity. It now contributes around 32% of manufacturing output and leads in high-tech sectors such as new energy.

The 2008 financial crisis signalled the weakness of the US-led neoliberal order. This led to the formation of BRICS in 2009, which has now expanded to 10 member states and 9 partner states that together comprise more than 29% of world GDP and 54% of the world population. China responded to the crisis through investment stimulus in the form of the Belt and Road Initiative.

Faced with this reality, the US ruling class have been increasingly unable to rule in the old way, engaging in hybrid wars and unilateral coercive measures. The Biden administration sought to weaken Russia militarily and economically by dragging it into a war in Ukraine. The Global North froze around 300 billion US dollars’ worth of Russian sovereign funds.

The failure of the proxy war in Ukraine has led to Trump proposing a ceasefire and attempting to win over Russia in order to isolate its neighbour and close partner China. However, this tactic has led to heightened contradictions between the US and the European Union.

Despite presenting himself as an anti-war candidate, the Trump administration has been intensifying the genocide in Gaza and enabling attacks on Syria and Yemen, which is a direct provocation for Iran. This is a dangerous situation for Asia. The US has now brought stealth bombers to the Diego Garcia base in the occupied Chagos Islands in the Indian Ocean in order to attack Yemen.

Moves by successive US administrations since 2008 have only served to further undermine US leadership over the global economy and fan the flames of war across the world. Trump’s tariffs are part of this pattern.

Today, the moral bankruptcy of imperialism is plain to see. The writing is written on the wall with the blood of over 50,000 Palestinians murdered by Israel with the support and complicity of the US and EU.

The inability of neoliberalism and the Bretton Woods Institutions to deliver development to the majority of people in the Global South has also become undeniable. According to the UN, developing countries owe a collective 11.4 trillion US dollars in external debt. 3.3 billion people are living in countries that spend more on interest payment than education and health.

In this context, Sri Lanka, which was one of the first guinea pigs of neoliberalism, must decisively break from this system. It is a great disappointment that the present government reneged on its campaign promise of renegotiating with the IMF. It is still not too late to formulate an industrial and investment plan for the country, and speak to partners and institutions in the Global South.

The main political parties in Sri Lanka remain either clueless or silent about the tectonic changes in the global economy and what they mean for the country and its people. The current NPP government also appears unable or unwilling to educate the people about the current historical conjuncture.

The rise of BRICS, the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), and other cooperative frameworks signals the possible emergence of an alternative economic order, challenging the outdated Bretton Woods system dominated by Western financial institutions. Sri Lanka must be a part of this process.

Previous efforts like the Bandung Conference, Non-Aligned Movement, and G77 were constrained by an unfavourable balance of power. Today, the objective conditions are changing. The rise of the Global South is irreversible and we must seize this moment to forge a more democratic world order.”



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No changes to IMF agreement despite Cyclone Ditwah impact

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The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has declared that the Extended Fund Facility (EFF) wouldn’t be amended in view of the impact of Cyclone Ditwah.

The IMF delegation, at the end of its visit to Sri Lanka, informed President Anura Kumara Dissanayake of its decision during a meeting at the Presidential Secretariat yesterday (28). The IMF delegation included Director of the Asia and Pacific Department Krishna Srinivasan, Deputy Director for Asia and the Pacific Sanjaya Panth, Mission Chief Evan Papageorgiou, and Resident Representative Martha Woldemichael.

The 48-month arrangement, approved on 20 March, 2023, during Ranil Wickremesinghe’s tenure as the President, is for SDR 2.286 billion (approximately US$3 billion). In terms of the agreement, repayment of debt has to be resumed in 2028. Sri Lanka unilaterally suspended debt repayment in April 2022.

Close on the heels of Cyclone Ditwah, the main Opposition party, the Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB), repeatedly pressed the government to request the IMF to amend the agreement.

The Presidential Media Division ( PMD) quoted the IMF delegation as having said that the strong fiscal discipline maintained by the government over the past year had been a key factor in addressing the challenges caused by Cyclone Ditwah. They said that the government’s ability to present a supplementary estimate of Rs. 500 billion was made possible by a surplus in the Treasury.

The Government of Sri Lanka was represented by Minister of Labour and Deputy Minister of Economic Development Dr. Anil Jayantha Fernando, Secretary to the Ministry of Finance Dr. Harshana Suriyapperuma, Governor of the Central Bank Dr. Nandalal Weerasinghe, Senior Economic Adviser to the President Duminda Hulangamuwa, along with several others.

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IMF lauds Sri Lanka’s economic turnaround, highlights regional resilience

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Sri Lanka’s economy has “stabilised decisively” under its International Monetary Fund (IMF)-supported programme, with growth rebounding, tax revenues doubling, and inflation sharply declining, a senior IMF official said in Colombo yesterday.

Dr. Krishna Srinivasan, Director of the IMF’s Asia and Pacific Department, delivered the assessment during a public lecture on the IMF Regional Economic Outlook: Asia and Pacific, held at the Central Bank of Sri Lanka. He was joined by Dr. Thomas Helbling, the Department’s Country Director.

Both officials commended the Asia-Pacific (APAC) region’s overall economic resilience in the face of global challenges and advocated for deeper trade and supply chain integration to mitigate vulnerabilities in international trade.

Presenting a country-focused analysis, Dr. Srinivasan outlined how Sri Lanka has performed against the five key pillars of the IMF programme:

Revenue-based fiscal consolidation, supported by tax reforms and strengthened social safety nets.

Restoring debt sustainability through fiscal adjustment and debt restructuring.

Maintaining price stability and rebuilding foreign exchange reserves.

Safeguarding external stability.

Combating corruption via a comprehensive anti-corruption reform agenda.

“Sri Lanka has come out of the crisis stabilising its economy across three dimensions,” Dr. Srinivasan stated referring to Sri Lanka’s Growth, Revenue, and Inflation. He highlighted that growth “bounced back decisively,” turning positive within six months of the programme and recently averaging about 5 percent annually.

On fiscal performance, he noted a “significant turnaround.” Tax revenue has doubled from a critically low 7.3 percent of GDP to 14.8 percent in 2025.

Dr. Krishna Srinivasan / Dr. Thomas Helbling

Furthermore, inflation has dropped “in a very convincing manner” from approximately 70 percent to the current 2-3 percent range. “One would hope that in the next few quarters, it will reach the Central Bank’s target of 5 percent,” he added.

“Overall, the IMF programme for Sri Lanka has delivered on many of its objectives,” Dr. Srinivasan concluded. “There is still a long way to go in terms of securing strong, sustained, balanced growth, but the program is off to a very good start. All of you, the authorities, and the people of Sri Lanka need to be congratulated for the progress made so far,” he said.

In his regional remarks, Dr. Srinivasan projected that Artificial Intelligence (AI) will be a key driver of the Asian economy. He suggested that technology companies in the region would be “better served by the capital markets than from conventional banks,” pointing to a need for evolved financial ecosystems to support innovation.

The lecture underscored the IMF’s constructive outlook for Asia’s continued resilience, while emphasising structural reforms and regional cooperation as vital for future stability and growth.

By Sanath Nanayakkare

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ICT, WNPS unite to protect sea turtles along Colombo coast

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Jan Zhang, Chief Executive Officer of CICT, and Mr. Graham Marshall, President of the WNPS, exchange signed copies of the agreement, formalizing a three-year partnership for sea turtle conservation and coastal ecosystem protection.

Colombo International Container Terminals (CICT) has entered into a three-year partnership (2025–2028) with the Wildlife and Nature Protection Society (WNPS) under the Turtle and Coastal Health United Programme (TACHUP) to protect sea turtles and restore coastal ecosystems along the Colombo Port City–Mount Lavinia coastline.

Sri Lanka is home to five of the world’s seven sea turtle species, all of which nest along this highly urbanised stretch of coastline. The initiative will focus on safeguarding turtle nesting and hatchling success, restoring coastal vegetation, strengthening citizen science and data collection, and engaging local communities, schools, and volunteers in long-term conservation efforts.

The project builds on ongoing conservation work that has already recorded more than 680 turtle visits in a single nesting season and protected over 15,900 eggs with hatching success rates exceeding 80 per cent.

Commenting on the partnership, CICT CEO Jan Zhang said, “As a gateway to global trade, CICT recognises its responsibility to protect the environment that surrounds us. This partnership with WNPS is an investment in long-term ecological resilience, biodiversity conservation, and responsible stewardship of Sri Lanka’s coastal heritage.”

The collaboration enhances Colombo’s global standing as an accredited Ramsar Wetland City and reflects CICT’s continued commitment to sustainability, environmental protection, and responsible port operations.

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