The International Monetary Fund (IMF) will dispatch a fact-finding mission to Sri Lanka from 22 to 28 January to assess the economic fallout from Cyclone Ditwah, amid growing concerns over the country’s ability to keep its reform program on track following fresh shocks.
The visit follows the IMF Executive Board’s approval on 19 December of $206 million in emergency financing under the Rapid Financing Instrument (RFI), aimed at addressing urgent balance-of-payments pressures triggered by the cyclone. While the funding provides immediate relief, it also highlights Sri Lanka’s continued vulnerability to external and climate-related shocks, even after progress under the IMF-supported reform framework.
IMF Communications Director Julie Kozack said the mission will focus on determining the scale of damage, evaluating the policy response, and examining the implications for Sri Lanka’s Extended Fund Facility (EFF), which has already faced delays.
She emphasised that the mission is strictly fact-finding, signalling that any decisions on program adjustments or the timing of the next review will depend on the assessment of post-cyclone fiscal and macroeconomic conditions.
A key area of scrutiny will be electricity pricing, a politically sensitive but central pillar of the IMF program. The Fund reiterated that maintaining cost recovery in the utility sector remains essential to prevent renewed financial losses and fiscal slippage, raising questions over how far the Government can accommodate disaster-related spending pressures without diluting reform commitments.
“There is a commitment under the program to maintain cost recovery in the utility sector, and that’s really important to help ensure fiscal sustainability,” Kozack said, adding that the extent of any policy adjustments would be discussed during the mission.
The IMF’s intervention comes as Sri Lanka attempts to balance disaster recovery with fiscal consolidation, underlining the fragile nature of its economic stabilisation and the limited room for policy reversals. The findings of the January mission are expected to be critical in shaping the next phase of IMF engagement and determining whether Sri Lanka can sustain reform momentum in the face of mounting climate risks.
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