Sri Lanka food prices skyrocket - Khabarhub

COLOMBO: Sri Lanka’s food prices hit record high as inflation went up to 12.1 per cent in December last year, up 2.2 per cent from November in the same year.

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Sri Lanka inflation rate jumps above 70%

Sri Lanka's annual inflation rate surged to more than 70% in August as it struggled with its worst economic crisis in over seven decades. Official data also showed food prices rose by 84.6% compared to a year ago.

Sri Lanka crisis is a warning to other Asian nations

JULY 18: "Countries with high debt levels and limited policy space will face additional strains. Look no further than Sri Lanka as a warning sign," said IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva on Saturday. She said developing nations had also been experiencing sustained capital outflows for four months in a row, putting their dreams of catching up with advanced economies at risk. Sri Lanka is struggling to pay for crucial imports like food, fuel and medicine for its 22 million people, as it battles a foreign exchange crisis. Inflation has soared about 50%, with food prices 80% higher than a year ago. The Sri Lankan rupee has slumped in value against the US dollar and other major global currencies this year. Many blame ex-president Gotabaya Rajapaksa for mishandling the economy with disastrous policies whose impact was only exacerbated by the pandemic. Over the years, Sri Lanka had built up a huge amount of debt - last month, it became the first country in the Asia Pacific region in 20 years to default on foreign debt. Officials had been negotiating with the IMF for a $3bn (£2.5bn) bailout. But those talks are currently stalled amid the political chaos. But the same global headwinds - rising inflation and interest rate hikes, depreciating currencies, high levels of debt and dwindling foreign currency reserves - also affect other economies in the region. China has been a dominant lender to a several of these developing nations and therefore could control their destinies in crucial ways. Buy it's largely unclear what Beijing's lending conditions have been, or how it may restructure the debt. Where China is at fault is, according to Alan Keenan from International Crisis Group, is encouraging and supporting expensive infrastructure projects that have not produced major economic returns. "Equally important has been their active political support for the ruling Rajapaksa family and its policies...These political failures are at the heart of Sri Lanka's economic collapse, and until they are remedied through constitutional change and a more democratic political culture, Sri Lanka is unlikely to escape its current nightmare." Worryingly, other countries appear to be on a similar trajectory. Laos The landlocked East Asian nation of more than 7.5 million people has been facing the risk of defaulting on its foreign loans for several months. Now, a rise in oil prices because of the Russian invasion of Ukraine has put further strain on fuel supplies, pushing up the cost of food in a country where an estimated third of people live in poverty. Local media outlets have reported long lines for fuel, and said some households have been unable to pay their bills. Laos' currency, the kip, has been plunging and is down by more than a third against the US dollar this year. Higher interest rates in the US have strengthen the dollar, and weakened local currencies, increasing their debt burden and making imports costlier. Laos, which is already heavily in debt, is struggling to repay those loans or or pay for imports like fuel. The World Bank says the country had $1.3bn of reserves as of December last year. But its total annual external debt obligations are around the same amount until 2025 - equivalent to about half of the country's total domestic revenue. As a result, Moody's Investor Services downgraded the communist-ruled nation to "junk" grade last month, a category in which debt is considered high risk. China has loaned Laos huge amounts of money in recent years to fund big projects like a hydropower plant and a railway. According to Laotian officials speaking to Chinese state media Xinhua, Beijing has undertaken 813 projects worth more than $16bn last year alone. Laos' public debt amounted to 88% of its Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in 2021, according to the World Bank, with almost half of that figure owed to China. Experts point to years of economic mismanagement in the country, where one party - the Lao People's Revolutionary Party - has held power since 1975. But Moody's Analytics has flagged increased trade with China and the export of hydroelectricity as positive developments: "Laos has a fighting chance of avoiding the danger zone and the need for a bailout," economist Heron Lim said in a recent report. Pakistan Fuel prices in Pakistan are up by around 90% since the end of May, after the government ended fuel subsidies. It's trying to rein in spending as it negotiates with the IMF to resume a bailout programme. The economy is struggling with the rising cost of goods. In June, the annual inflation rate hit 21.3%, highest it has been in 13 years. Like Sri Lanka and Laos, Pakistan also faces low foreign currency reserves, which have almost halved since August last year. It has imposed a 10% tax on large scale industry for one year to raise $1.93bn as it tries to reduce the gap between government revenue and spending - one of the IMF's key demands. "If they are able to unlock these funds, other financial lenders like Saudi Arabia and the UAE [United Arab Emirates] may be willing to extend credit," Andrew Wood, sovereign analyst at S&P Global Ratings told the BBC. Former prime minister Imran Khan who vowed to fix some of these problems was ousted from power, although the faltering economy is not the only reason for that. Last month, a senior minister in Pakistan's government asked citizens to reduce the amount of tea they drink to cut the country's import bills. Again China plays a role here, with Pakistan reportedly owing more than a quarter of its debt to Beijing. "Pakistan appears to have renewed a commercial loan facility vis-a-vis China and this has added to its foreign exchange reserves and there are indications they will reach out to China for the second half of this year," Mr Wood added. Maldives The Maldives has seen its public debt swell in recent years and it's now well above 100% of its GDP. Like Sri Lanka, the pandemic hammered an economy that was heavily reliant on tourism. Countries that depend so much on tourism tend to have higher public debt ratios, but the World Bank says the island nation is particularly vulnerable to higher fuel costs because its economy is not diversified. US investment bank JPMorgan has said the holiday destination is at risk of defaulting on its debt by the end of 2023. Bangladesh Inflation hit an 8-year high in May in Bangladesh, touching 7.42%. With reserves dwindling, the government has acted fast to curb non-essential imports, relaxing rules to attract remittances from millions of migrants living overseas and reducing foreign trips for officials. "For economies running current account deficits - such as Bangladesh, Pakistan and Sri Lanka - governments face serious headwinds in increasing subsidies. Pakistan and Sri Lanka have turned to the IMF and other governments for financial assistance," Kim Eng Tan, a sovereign analyst at S&P Global Ratings told the BBC. "Bangladesh has had to re-prioritise government spending and impose restrictions on consumer activities," he said. Rising food and energy prices are threatening the pandemic-battered world economy. Now developing nations that have borrowed heavily for years are finding that their weak foundations make them particularly vulnerable to global shockwaves. With inputs from BBC

Ukraine war: World Bank warns of 'human catastrophe' food crisis

MAY 19: The world faces a "human catastrophe" from a food crisis arising from Russia's invasion of Ukraine, World Bank president David Malpass has said. He told the BBC that record rises in food prices would push hundreds of millions people into poverty and lower nutrition, if the crisis continues. The World Bank calculates there could be a "huge" 37% jump in food prices. This would hit the poor hardest, who will "eat less and have less money for anything else such as schooling". In an interview with BBC economics editor Faisal Islam, Mr Malpass, who leads the institution charged with global alleviation of poverty, said the impact on the poor made it "an unfair kind of crisis... that was true also of Covid". "It's a human catastrophe, meaning nutrition goes down. But then it also becomes a political challenge for governments who can't do anything about it, they didn't cause it and they see the prices going up," he said on the sidelines of the IMF-World Bank meetings in Washington. The price rises are broad and deep, he said: "It's affecting food of all different kinds oils, grains, and then it gets into other crops, corn crops, because they go up when wheat goes up". There was enough food in the world to feed everybody, he said, and global stockpiles are large by historical standards, but there will have to be a sharing or sales process to get the food to where it is needed. Mr Malpass also discouraged countries from subsidising production or capping prices. Instead, he said, the focus needed to be on increasing supplies across the world of fertilisers and food, alongside targeted assistance for the very poorest people. The World Bank chief also warned of a knock on "crisis within a crisis" arising from the inability of developing countries to service their large pandemic debts, amid rising food and energy prices. "This is a very real prospect. It's happening for some countries, we don't know how far it'll go. As many as 60% of the poorest countries right now are either in debt distress or at high risk of being in debt distress," he said. "We have to be worried about a debt crisis, the best thing to do is to start early to act early on finding ways to reduce the debt burden for countries that are on have unsustainable debt, the longer you put it off, the worse it is," he added. The acknowledgement by the World Bank president that we have to be worried about a developing country debt crisis, is very significant. The combination of massive pandemic debts with rising interest rates, and rising prices is truly toxic. The talk on the sidelines here at the IMF and World Bank meetings is that the rich countries told emerging economies not to worry about borrowing in order to spend to help suppress the pandemic. Now those countries are wondering if these record debts will be written off. Campaigning groups are preparing mobilisations over a pandemic debt jubilee. But there is silence from the rich country lenders, so far. And there is a very new dynamic these days. The bankers to whom these sums are owed are no longer just in the West. China is now, very broadly, owed as much as the entire collection of Western creditors known as the Paris Club. How will it respond to calls for leniency on the repayment of loans? Mr Malpass says of China: "They have different rules, for example, contracts that have non-disclosure clauses, meaning you can't share the terms with other people that makes it very hard to restructure those debts". China has also secured its lending against ports and natural resources. Sri Lanka is a case in point right now. The unwinding of all of this might not be orderly, and could have significant geopolitical consequences. Earlier this month, the United Nations said that the Ukraine war had led to a "giant leap" in food prices, as they hit a new record high in March. It came as the war cut off supplies from the world's biggest exporter of sunflower oil and the cost of alternatives climbed. Ukraine is also a major producer of cereals such as maize and wheat which have risen sharply in price too. The UN said "war in the Black Sea region spread shocks through markets for staple grains and vegetable oils". The UN Food Prices Index tracks the world's most-traded food commodities - measuring the average prices of cereal, vegetable oil, dairy, meat, and sugar. Food prices are at their highest since records began 60 years ago, according to the index, after they jumped nearly 13% in March, following February's record high. Food commodity prices were already at 10-year highs before the war in Ukraine, according to the index, because of global harvest issues.