IMF to start talks with Sri Lanka on loan request in coming days

(Reuters / Dinuka Liyanawatte)
The International Monetary Fund will initiate discussions with Sri Lankan authorities on a possible loan program in coming days, IMF spokesperson Gerry Rice said on Thursday (March 31), as the Asian country seeks to stave off a severe economic crisis.
Rice said the discussions would continue during the visit of Sri Lankan Finance Minister Basil Rajapaksa in Washington for the spring meetings of the IMF and World Bank next month.
A 70% drop in foreign exchange reserves since January 2020 has left Sri Lanka struggling to pay for essential imports, including food and fuel, leading to growing unrest and even military deployments at gasoline stations.
“The Sri Lankan authorities have expressed interest in an IMF-supported financial program,” Rice told a regular IMF briefing. “We plan to initiate those program discussions with the Sri Lankan authorities… pretty much in the coming days.”
Rice said the IMF would update its forecast for Sri Lanka when it releases its new World Economic Outlook next month, but gave no further details.
He confirmed that Rajapaksa would visit Washington next month for talks with IMF officials, as reported by Reuters last week.
Sri Lanka – which must pay about $4 billion in debt this year – will also seek World Bank assistance after it enters into an IMF program, Reuters reported, citing two sources familiar with the matter.
(Reuters)

Latest Headlines in Sri Lanka
- UN pledges support for Sri Lanka’s industrial and SME development March 13, 2025
- Former Boossa Prison Superintendent shot dead in Akmeemana March 13, 2025
- Police search Sagala Ratnayaka’s residence amid hunt for IGP Deshabandu Tennakoon March 13, 2025
- Another Middeniya triple murder suspect arrested at BIA while fleeing March 13, 2025
- Court of Appeal to rule on IGP Tennakoon’s arrest warrant on March 17, 2025 March 12, 2025