SL meets 32 commitments – Verité Research IMF Tracker
The latest update of the ‘IMF Tracker’ by Verité Research says that of the 63 commitments due, 32 were classified as ‘met’, 16 as ‘not met’, and 15 as ‘unknown’, meaning data was not available.
But Sri Lanka is still failing on the governance improvements that are foundational for its economic recovery.
On June 12, the IMF board will sign off on Sri Lanka’s third disbursement under the current programme
The prognosis of failing on governance comes from examining the 16 commitments that were ‘not met’. 7 of them were on financial management, 6 on financial transparency, and 3 on anti-corruption measures.
Many of the commitments not complied with at the second disbursement were also related to actions on transparency and anti-corruption. The governance diagnostic assessment (GDA) led by the IMF, published in September 2023, was the first-ever IMF-led GDA for an Asian country. It also aligned closely with a separate GDA published by Sri Lanka’s civil society.
The hope was that this 17th IMF programme would decisively solve Sri Lanka’s economic woes by dealing with the root causes of corruption and mal-governance.
However, the lack of progress on these actions – which are now being repeatedly glossed over in programme renewal – suggests that the IMF is not giving adequate weightage to compliance with the governance commitments. The standard fiscal measures to which the IMF has given higher weight age are those that were present in the 16 previous IMF programmes as well.
What is distinctive about the current programme is the focus on meaningful measures to improve transparency and anti-corruption.
If these measures do not become the foundation of Sri Lanka’s economic recovery, it will be a missed opportunity that then fosters the cycles of the past – which is to return Sri Lanka to yet another IMF programme within five years of completing the previous.
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