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Sri Lanka kept 60 of 73 Commitments due by November, Reneged on 13
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has published its evaluation of Sri Lanka’s performance in the first phase or ‘first term’ of the ongoing Extended Fund Facility (EFF) programme, which commenced in March 2023.
Verité Research updated its ‘IMF Tracker’, based on all information available, including in the IMF evaluation titled ‘First Review under the Extended Arrangement of the Extended Fund Facility.’ Sri Lanka had ‘met’ (with some delays) 60 of the 73 commitments due by end-November 2023.
The 13 remaining commitments were ‘not met’. Of these 13, eight have been carried forward into the second term, or the period leading up to the second review. Five were irreversibly ‘not met’, and therefore, cannot be carried forward.
Additional Commitments in the Second Term
The IMF has now modified, or extended, the due dates of the 27 commitments which were due after end-November. These have been classified as ‘pending’ in the IMF Tracker, along with the eight commitments carried forward.
In addition to these 35 (27 + 8) commitments, Sri Lanka and the IMF added 75 new commitments to the programme. Therefore, the second term began with 110 commitments ‘pending’ on Sri Lanka’s IMF programme.
Governance and Transparency Commitments
The first review was focused on commitments that were due by June. Yet, there are four governance and transparency related commitments that were ‘not met’ even by the end of November.
Foremost among these is
The IMF Tracker is the only platform that is publicly tracking Sri Lanka’s commitments under its 17th IMF programme. It is available on the Parliament Monitoring Platform, “manthri.lk” of Verité Research, on https://manthri.lk/en/imf_tracker.