WB’s IFC to provide Sri Lanka with $400 mn financing

Date:

COLOMBO, Feb 27 (Reuters) – The International Finance Corporation (IFC), the World Bank’s investment arm, said it will provide Sri Lanka a $400 million cross-currency swap facility to help fund essential imports.

Three private banks, which together deal with over 30% of Sri Lanka’s remittances and exports, will receive the facility to fund essential imports, including medicine, food and fertiliser, the IFC said in a statement on Monday.

The funds will provide a much needed foreign exchange cushion for Sri Lanka, which is grappling with its worst financial crisis in over seven decades partly triggered by a severe shortage of dollars.

The island nation’s economy is estimated to have contracted by 9.2% in 2022 and is expected to shrink a further 4.2% in 2023, according to World Bank data.

“We expect this financing to boost confidence in the investor community, attract fresh capital inflows to support the Sri Lankan economy,” said Joon Young Park, IFC’s Portfolio Manager, Financial Institutions Group for South Asia.

IFC is also working on further plans to support client banks with other long-term funding and advisory services in the future, the statement added.

Sri Lanka signed a preliminary agreement with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for a $2.9 billion bailout last September but has to put its debt on a sustainable repayment track before the funds can be disbursed.

Source: The Reuters

Share post:

spot_imgspot_img

Popular

More like this
Related

Dairy Industry Slumps Despite Surging Demand  Milk Farmers Face Crisis

The Sri Lankan dairy industry is at a crossroads....

Exporters Urged to Prepare for New VAT Refund Regime

With Sri Lanka’s long-running Simplified VAT (SVAT) scheme now...

Economic Recovery Stalls as Policy Reversals Undermine Reform

Sri Lanka’s path to recovery remains woefully unfinished. While...

SL Construction Sector Gains Momentum, but Relief Delay Stalls Broad Recovery

Sri Lanka’s construction industry, long battered by economic turbulence,...