Sri Lanka keen to tighten purse strings further
When Sri Lanka faced a rapidly weakening currency and galloping inflation in early 2001, its central bank raised interest rates.
When Sri Lanka faced a rapidly weakening currency and galloping inflation in early 2001, its central bank raised interest rates. But it found that a tighter policy didn’t yield results until interest rates hit 20%.
Together with a loan from the International Monetary Fund, the central bank managed to drag inflation down to 10.
8% from 16%, but the rupee still ended the year 16% weaker against the dollar.
Three years later, the country is facing the same problems and is looking to apply the same remedy: Higher interest rates.
A combination of this year’s record high global oil prices and a weak rupee drove the country’s inflation, measured by the consumer price index, from a meek 0.
5% in January to 12.1% in October, the last published data.
Inflation is expected to finish the year around 12%, sharply up from 2003’s 5%.
With high oil prices likely to prevail into 2005, inflation is forecast at 7-12% for 2005.
The rupee, meanwhile, has fallen 8.
5% against the U.S. dollar since t
