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Showing posts from March, 2025

Last Treasury bill auction. An early warning of debt market manipulation?

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  Article's purpose This short article is to alert a possibility of Treasury bill market irregularities that can cost to the government and its debt sustainability. This is revealed from the unusual pattern of acceptance of bids at the last Treasury bill auction held on 26 March and recent auction trends. Auction results   Yields rates were kept unchanged at the previous week's levels by accepting significantly below the funding requirement, especially for 91D bills. Selected early warnings and concerns over the auction results Acceptance of a negligible amount of 91D bills (Rs. 4,809 mn) way blow the announced amount (Rs. 20,000 mn) and bids (Rs. 21,383 mn) which is a deviation to the recent trend. The trend of lower acceptance of 91D bills was observed from several auctions prior to this although the normal tendency has been to accept bids of 91D much more than the amount announced for the auction. Acceptance of sizable amounts from other two longer maturities while this ten...

Do we need this monetary policy? Does new Parliament have an alternative? or Not interested in anyway?

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  Article's Purpose This article is to provide quick comments on the irrelevance of the monetary policy statement released today as part of the Central Bank's media activisms (Read the policy statement here) . The Monetary Policy Board (MPB) has announced of keeping its operating policy interest rates unchanged at 7.50% (Standing Deposit Facility Rate) and 8.50% (Standing Lending Facility Rate) despite the persistent deflationary trap confronted by the economy since August 2024 that requires a considerable policy rate cut to arrest the deflationary trap to return to the statutory inflation target of 5% on a quarterly basis. The policy statement has become unusually short-cut due to the non-availability of macroeconomic facts supporting such unchanged interest rates despite the deflationary course of 6 consecutive months which the MPB predicts to continue until mid-2025 and settle in the targeted levels (i.e., 5% with a margin of 3%-7% of highly inflated economy) by end of 2025....

Culprits behind Sri Lankan economic crisis. What more evidence needed?

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  Article's purpose and background This article is to present key points published in the Daily Mirror, 14 March 2025 (Press here to read the article) , based on a public lecture made by  Dr. Indrajit Coomaraswamy, Central Bank Governor 2016-2019, on 10 March 2025 in celebration of the 75th Anniversary of the Central Bank of Sri Lanka. This blog article reveals the importance of the contents of the Daily Mirror article to provide a key source of information critical for investigating into those who are responsible for the economic crisis that the country has been confronting since late 2020 if relevant authorities are interested in conduct of a technical investigation. It is the general practice seen in many countries that official reports are published after economic crises to inform the public of causes, impact and resolution measures of such crises and reform agenda proposed to prevent the recurrence of such crises. However, whole blame for the crisis in Sri Lanka has ...

Sri Lankan crisis. Real roots and unsustainable recovery. Let us listen to experts. Still not late.

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  Article's purpose This article provides a summary of the interview I happened to watch on 8 March 2025 in the social media conducted by Ada Derana Hydepark with Professor Asoka Bandarage largely based on her book "Crisis in Sri Lanka and the World" released in 2023. (Watch  Interview   here) ( Book Link ) I was interested in reading the book to search materials that I may have missed in my book on the crisis published in 2023 ( 2022 ශ්‍රී ලංකා ආර්ථික අර්බුදය, ආර්ථික විද්‍යා ඇසකින්. අර්බුදය වැලැක්වීමටත්, නිරාකරණයටත්, අප අසමත් වූයේ ඇයි? අර්බුදයේ දෙවන වටයට සූදානම් වෙමු ද? )( Book Link ).  Books on any crisis differ as the approach and information covered in each book or article are different, given the fact that the exact nature and causes of crises are not known black and white. Some perceptions of the books are as follows. The book analyses colonial and neoliberal origins as structural roots of the crisis and explores its emergence in Sri Lanka in 2022 in the contex...