Sri Lanka is flirting with default
Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s government is reluctant to go to the IMF
ALMOST THREE years since terrorists blew up hotels along Colombo’s lovely beaches and two years since covid-19 shut down international travel, tourists have begun returning to Sri Lanka, providing sorely needed foreign exchange. The country’s stockmarket has been bounding along, up by more than 80% in 2021, trailing only commodity-rich Mongolia among global bourses. Corporate profits have been strong, too. GDP growth last year was somewhere between 3.5% (by private estimates) and 5% (by the government’s). This suggests a thriving economy. Yet alarm bells are clanging.
This article appeared in the Asia section of the print edition under the headline “Thanks, but no thanks”
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