The International Monetary Fund says that it is vital for Sri Lanka to continue with it’s program for economic recovery.
Speaking to reporters in Singapore, Krishna Srinivasan, the Director of the Asia and Pacific Department of the International Monetary Fund noted that the IMF program for Sri Lanka is working and is delivering results, however, he warned that the road head is going to get tough.
He was responding to a question raised by News 1st’s Zulfick Farzan following the opening remarks at the press conference on the release of the IMF’s Regional Economic Outlook for Asia and Pacific.
Opening Remarks On IMF’s Regional Economic Outlook for Asia and Pacific:
1. The Asia-Pacific region is marked by both resilient growth and rapid disinflation.
2. Growth is better than previously projected but will slow from 5 percent in 2023 to 4.5 percent in 2024. The region remains inherently dynamic and accounts for about 60 percent of global growth.
3. Drivers of growth are as heterogenous as the region, straddling from resilient domestic consumption in most ASEAN countries, to strong public investment in China and, most notably in, India, and to a sharp uptick in tourism in the Pacific Island countries.
4. Disinflation has advanced throughout the region, albeit at different speeds—in some, it remains above target (e.g., Australia and New Zealand), in others, it is at or close to central bank targets (EMs and Japan), while in some there are deflation risks (e.g., China and Thailand).
5. China is a source of both upside and downside risks. Policies aimed at addressing stresses in the property sector and to boost domestic demand will both help China and the region. But sectoral policies contributing to excess capacity will hurt China and the region. Geoeconomic fragmentation remains a significant risk.
6. Asian central banks should continue to focus firmly on domestic price stability and avoid making policy decisions overly dependent on anticipated interest rate moves by the Federal Reserve.
7.Asian countries are well placed than before to cope with exchange rate movements (fewer financial frictions and better macro-fundamentals and institutional frameworks) and should continue to allow the exchange rate to act as a buffer against shocks.
8. Advancing fiscal consolidation is an urgent priority both to lessen the burden of higher debt levels and interest costs and to rebuild the fiscal space needed to address medium-term structural chal-lenges.
9. Supervisors should continue to vigilantly monitor the buildup of risks associated with the pass-through of tighter monetary policies to corporate and household balance sheets.
10. Industrial policies, which have been on the rise in Asia and the Pacific region and globally, can lead to unintended consequences, such as trade distortions which risk reinforcing fragmentation.