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China Hesitates on Bailing Out Sri Lanka, Pakistan as Debt Soars

China Hesitates on Bailing Out Sri Lanka, Pakistan as Debt Soars​

Bloomberg News
Wed, April 13, 2022, 6:24 PM·5 min read
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(Bloomberg) -- Over the past few years, the U.S. has accused China of using “debt diplomacy” to make developing nations across the world more dependent on Beijing.

Yet the cases of Sri Lanka and Pakistan -- both friends of China facing dire financial situations as inflation soars -- show that President Xi Jinping’s government is becoming more reluctant to pull out the checkbook. China still hasn’t made good on a pledge to re-issue loans totaling $4 billion that Pakistan repaid in late March, and it hasn’t responded to Sri Lanka’s pleas for $2.5 billion in credit support.

While China has pledged to help both countries, the more cautious approach reflects both a refining of Xi’s signature Belt and Road Initiative as well as a hesitancy to be seen interfering in messy domestic political situations. Pakistan got a new prime minister on Monday after parliament booted out former cricket star Imran Khan, and Sri Lanka’s leader is facing pressure from protesters to step down.

“Beijing has for the past couple of years been rethinking its external lending because their banks realized they were carrying a lot of debt with countries whose prospects of paying back were quite limited,” said Raffaello Pantucci, a senior fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies at Nanyang Technological University. “This came on top of a tightening economic situation at home which also required a lot of spending, so there was less appetite to just throw money around wantonly.”

China is currently facing its own economic troubles, with lockdowns to contain the country’s worst Covid outbreak since early 2020 shutting down the technology and financial hubs of Shanghai and Shenzhen. Premier Li Keqiang on Monday told local authorities they should “add a sense of urgency” when implementing policies as analysts warn the official growth target of a 5.5% is now in jeopardy.


China has become the world’s largest government creditor over the past decade, with its state-owned policy banks lending more to developing countries than the International Monetary Fund or the World Bank in some recent years. The opacity around the terms and scale of some of that lending has been criticized, especially as the pandemic exacerbates debt problems in poorer countries.

Sri Lanka was downgraded deeper into junk by Fitch Ratings, which said on Wednesday the nation’s decision to suspend payments on its foreign debt has kicked off a sovereign default process. S&P said Sri Lanka’s next interest payments are due on April 18 and the failure to cover them will likely result in default, as would an outright debt restructuring.

Sri Lanka’s top diplomat in Beijing this week said he was “very confident” that China will come through with credit support, including $1 billion for the country to repay existing Chinese loans due in July. In an interview with Bloomberg, Ambassador Palitha Kohona said the process often takes months and he didn’t see any delay.

“Given the current circumstances, there aren’t that many countries that can step out to the pitch and do something,” he said. “China is one of those countries that can do something very quickly.”

Still, China’s role in helping to resolve ongoing crises in South Asia may be limited despite its status as a major creditor. A Shanghai-based scholar who researches China’s overseas lending said new credit lines are harder to approve as authorities emphasize risk management at financial institutions including policy banks. The scholar asked not to be named due to rules for speaking with the media.

Xi highlighted the importance of a more cautious approach at a high-level Belt and Road symposium in November. “It is necessary to implement risk prevention and control systems,” Xi said. He called on participants to make “small but beautiful” projects a priority for foreign cooperation and “avoid dangerous and chaotic places.”

Earlier this month, Jin Liqun, president of the China-backed Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, encouraged Sri Lanka to turn to the IMF for help in a meeting with Kohona.

‘Sinking Ships’

China’s development banks are acting to preserve returns and it “would be difficult for them to easily accede to Sri Lanka’s requests for deferrals,” said Matthew Mingey, a senior analyst at Rhodium Group’s China Macro & Policy team who researches economic diplomacy.

“Credit conditions back in China aren’t making things any easier for them,” he added. “Ultimately, Sri Lanka needs the IMF.”

Sri Lanka said Tuesday it would expedite talks with the IMF after it halted payments on foreign debt to preserve dollars for essential food and fuel imports. Pakistan’s new government also plans to work with the IMF to stabilize the economy, according to Miftah Ismail, a former finance minister and a senior ruling party leader.

China’s ability to assist either country with a balance-of-payments crisis is limited, particularly as Beijing’s financial assistance is almost always tied to specific projects, said Muttukrishna Sarvananthan, principle researcher at the Point Pedro Institute of Development in Sri Lanka. China’s policy of non-interference in internal affairs prevents it from offering the type of advice needed for countries to emerge out of a financial crisis, he added.

“Even the IMF appears to be moving very slowly -- if not abandoning -- the requests of both Pakistan and Sri Lanka for their assistance,” Sarvananthan said. “Which sane bilateral donor country or international financial institution would pour money into sinking ships in both Pakistan and Sri Lanka.”

(Updates with Fitch downgrade in seventh paragraph.)

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You do understand Sri Lanka deep society issue is due to civil war, and India interference, don't you?

It was China helped Sri Lanka to end the bloody civil war and get Tamil Tigers eliminated, which is a terrorist org.

The recent issues were caused by Rajapaksa family mismanagement.

If you don't understand the background, please ignore me.
A good case is when Sri Lanka embarked on a new International Airport next to the port leased to the China, was it China doing?

These new projects appeared to have an India DNA. China was neither consulted nor a part of it.

They were not financed by China banks.

China port is strictly for maritime cargo vessels and not planes.

IMO the rot begins after a new Sri Lanka Government headed by President Sirisena came to power.

He waste a lot of time and people money by disrupting many already ongoing projects due to his opposition to the former President. And then introduced many unwanted and useless projects of his own to cronies.

These politicking drove many foreign investors away. Now another President has pick up the pieces.

That is Sri Lanka.

Why blame the bankers?
 
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A good case is when Sri Lanka embarked on a new International Airport next to the port leased to the China, was it China doing?

These new projects appeared to have an India DNA. China was neither consulted nor a part of it.

They were not financed by China banks.

China port is strictly for maritime cargo vessels and not planes.

IMO the rot begins after a new Sri Lanka Government headed by President Sirisena came to power.

He waste a lot of time and people money by disrupting many already ongoing projects due to his opposition to the former President. And then introduced many unwanted and useless projects of his own to cronies.

These politicking drove many foreign investors away. Now another President has pick up the pieces.

That is Sri Lanka.

Why blame the bankers?
Sirisena is a regime change backed by U.S. and India.
 
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Now they are speculating whether China will lend the USD 2.1 billion to Sri Lanka, she needed badly to survive for the day. .

I believe China will if Sri Lanka can gather herself and worked out a reform on how she will managed her economy and repay back her loans including thosw from the EU banks.

But then there is a political factor in here to consider that may deter China and that is political instability in the country caused by political activists funded from oversea.

Sri Lanka may need to reform her entire government and parliamentary system to reflect them more closely to those of the people and get rid of the narcissism by the powerful oligarchs. She needs to introduce law to curb foreign interference by NGOs.

In absence, the only course is towards bankruptcy.
 
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The seeds of dissent has been sown onto many countries in this region - color revolutions. A Cambridge Analytica creation using pyschometric.

Myanmar prempted it with a military coup and the Puppet Master who resides far away is unhappy.

In Bangkok, General General Prayut Chan introduced a new law thst threatened to jail interfering foreign NGOs and they fled immediately after making a flurry of harsh remarks about Human Right in Thailand.

These NGOs are funded by NED- NDI OSI etc NED or the friendly face of CIA is currently headed a warmonger Damon Wilson.

Same in Hong Kong, China dealt a decusion blow to this by introducing the National Security Law and the US immediately sanction Hong Kong leaders. Unprecedented buy it is true.

Now it is Pakistan's turn.

Couldn't works in China due to the Bamboo Fire and other critical factors.

Can Sri Lanka be saved?
 
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Defaults of Dollar denominated debts help China in the long run... it is obvious that China does not want to save Dollar based debts... essentially accrued by countries for foreign import bills... primarily fuel and staples.

This is foremost the failure of current regime setup to prevent just this outcome...
both IMF and World Bank have been unable to keep states under their thumb and keep chugging along.
As states such as Russia, Sri Lanka and others default on their Dollar obligations they'll be forced to renegotiate bilateral terms of trade and perhaps a different clearing mechanism, rates and obviously currency to do their future transactions. This gives enough rope for Dollar based global order to slowly loose market share... instead of what could be described as a hot potato Dollar... where all big and small holders try to get rid of their Dollar holdings simultaneously.
In case of Russia, because of it's huge resources in ore, rear earth, crude and also staples such as cereals and grains... it can offer a better deal in it's currency with in house or Chinese clearing house.

Expect more defaults and don't expect Chinese showing up for rescue... Not when China holds and nurtures it's alternative to current mechanism!
 
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The seeds of dissent has been sown onto many countries in this region - color revolutions. A Cambridge Analytica creation using pyschometric.

Myanmar prempted it with a military coup and the Puppet Master who resides far away is unhappy.

In Bangkok, General General Prayut Chan introduced a new law thst threatened to jail interfering foreign NGOs and they fled immediately after making a flurry of harsh remarks about Human Right in Thailand.

These NGOs are funded by NED- NDI OSI etc NED or the friendly face of CIA is currently headed a warmonger Damon Wilson.

Same in Hong Kong, China dealt a decusion blow to this by introducing the National Security Law and the US immediately sanction Hong Kong leaders. Unprecedented buy it is true.

Now it is Pakistan's turn.

Could works in China due to the Bamboo Fire and other critical factors.

Can Sri Lanka be saved?
Should Sri Lanka be saved?

The one who want to save himself, is possible to be saved. Sri Lanka did everything he can to screw himself up, so who can save Sri Lanka?
The Sri Lanka government itself, and the Sri Lanka people, should try to do their best to save himself first.

They should throw US/India sponsored NGOs/media outlets out of Sri Lanka first, and put those traitors, including the top officials, behind the bar. Then other countries may believe, yes, Sri Lanka is worth to save.
 
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China will now hesitate with a lot of thing regarding Pakistan and it will be evident in coming months. We all know the reason for it.
 
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Chinese debt trap is well known. Look at Pakistan! nobody even knows the details of CPEC.
 
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China will now hesitate with a lot of thing regarding Pakistan and it will be evident in coming months. We all know the reason for it.


Bro in ko mazboot itihadi chaeahy jo in ka poora khiyal rkhy to phr us ithidai ki mazboot moashi difai or sifarti sarprasti kry jis trha mashriq wusta m aik mulk k ley tavun kia jaata hai

In ko hamari ashad zaroorat hai Hamay itni nae . Sard kandha or baniya approach hamaray sath chalay gy to acha nae
 
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Commentary: Sri Lankans seem to think their economic crisis was caused by China's 'debt-trap diplomacy'​

Sri Lanka defaulted on its foreign debts for the first time since independence, and the country’s 22 million people are facing crippling 12-hour power cuts and an extreme scarcity of food, says this professor.
Commentary: Sri Lankans seem to think their economic crisis was caused by China's 'debt-trap diplomacy'
Sri Lankans brave day-long queues under sweltering heat to obtain kerosene. The government has conceded the current economic crisis is the worst since the country's independence in 1948. (Photo: AFP/Ishara S. KODIKARA)


R Ramakumar
16 Apr 2022 06:04AM (Updated: 16 Apr 2022 06:04AM)
MUMBAI: The island nation of Sri Lanka is in the midst of one of the worst economic crises it’s ever seen. It has just defaulted on its foreign debts for the first time since its independence, and the country’s 22 million people are facing crippling 12-hour power cuts and an extreme scarcity of food, fuel and other essential items, such as medicines.
Inflation is at an all-time high of 17.5 per cent, with prices of food items such as a kilogram of rice soaring to 500 Sri Lankan rupees (US$1.56) when it would normally cost around 80 rupees (US$0.25). Amid shortages, one 400g packet of milk powder is reported to cost over 250 rupees (US$0.78), when it usually costs around 60 rupees (US$0.19).

On Apr 1, President Gotabaya Rajpaksha declared a state of emergency. In less than a week, he withdrew it following massive protests by angry citizens over the government’s handling of the crisis.

The country relies on the import of many essential items including petrol, food items and medicines. Most countries will keep foreign currencies on hand in order to trade for these items, but a shortage of foreign exchange in Sri Lanka is being blamed for the sky-high prices.

IS SRI LANKA CRISIS BECAUSE OF CHINA RELATIONS?

Many believe that Sri Lanka’s economic relations with China are the main driver behind the crisis. The United States has called this phenomenon “debt-trap diplomacy”.

This is where a creditor country or institution extends debt to a borrowing nation to increase the lender’s political leverage – if the borrower extends itself and cannot pay the money back, they are at the creditor’s mercy.

However, loans from China accounted for only about 10 per cent of Sri Lanka’s total foreign debt in 2020. The largest portion – about 30 per cent – can be attributed to international sovereign bonds. Japan actually accounts for a higher proportion of their foreign debt, at 11 per cent.
 
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Continued..

Defaults over China’s infrastructure-related loans to Sri Lanka, especially the financing of the Hambantota port, are being cited as factors contributing to the crisis.

But these facts don’t add up. The construction of the Hambantota port was financed by the Chinese Exim Bank. The port was running losses, so Sri Lanka leased out the port for 99 years to the Chinese Merchant’s Group, which paid Sri Lanka US$1.12 billion.

So the Hambantota port fiasco did not lead to a balance of payments crisis (where more money or exports are going out than coming in), it actually bolstered Sri Lanka’s foreign exchange reserves by US$1.12 billion.


So, what are the real reasons for the crisis?

IMF LOANS COME WITH CHALLENGING CONDITIONS

Post-independence from the British in 1948, Sri Lanka’s agriculture was dominated by export-oriented crops such as tea, coffee, rubber and spices. A large share of its gross domestic product came from the foreign exchange earned from exporting these crops. That money was used to import essential food items.

Over the years, the country also began exporting garments and earning foreign exchange from tourism and remittances (money sent into Sri Lanka from abroad, perhaps by family members). Any decline in exports would come as an economic shock and put foreign exchange reserves under strain.

For this reason, Sri Lanka frequently encountered balance of payments crises. From 1965 onwards, it obtained 16 loans from the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

Each of these loans came with conditions including that, once Sri Lanka received the loan, it had to reduce its budget deficit, maintain a tight monetary policy, cut government subsidies for food for the people of Sri Lanka and depreciate the currency (so exports would become more viable).

But usually, in periods of economic downturns, good fiscal policy dictates that governments should spend more to inject stimulus into the economy. This becomes impossible with the IMF conditions. Despite this situation, the IMF loans kept coming, and a beleaguered economy soaked up more and more debt.

The last IMF loan to Sri Lanka was in 2016. The country received US$1.5 billion for three years from 2016 to 2019. The conditions were familiar, and the economy’s health nosedived over this period. Growth, investments, savings and revenues fell, while the debt burden rose.

DID SRI LANKA GOVERNMENT MAKE FATAL MISTAKES?

A bad situation turned worse with two economic shocks in 2019. First, there was a series of bomb blasts in churches and luxury hotels in Colombo in April 2019. The blasts led to a steep decline in tourist arrivals – with some reports stating up to an 80 per cent drop – and drained foreign exchange reserves.

Second, the new government under President Gotabaya Rajapaksa irrationally cut taxes.

Value-added tax rates (akin to some nations’ goods and services taxes) were cut from 15 per cent to 8 per cent. Other indirect taxes such as the nation-building tax, the pay-as-you-earn tax and economic service charges were abolished.

Corporate tax rates were reduced from 28 per cent to 24 per cent. About 2 per cent of the gross domestic product was lost in revenues because of these tax cuts.
 
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Continue..

In March 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic struck. In April 2021, the Rajapaksa government made another fatal mistake. To prevent the drain of foreign exchange reserves, all fertiliser imports were completely banned.

Sri Lanka was declared a 100 per cent organic farming nation. This policy, which was withdrawn in November 2021, led to a drastic fall in agricultural production and more imports became necessary.

But foreign exchange reserves remained under strain. A fall in the productivity of tea and rubber due to the ban on fertiliser also led to lower export incomes. Due to lower export incomes, there was less money available to import food and food shortages arose.

Because there is less food and other items to buy, but no decrease in demand, the prices for these goods rise. In February 2022, inflation rose to 17.5 per cent.

In all probability, Sri Lanka will now obtain a 17th IMF loan to tide over the present crisis, which will come with fresh conditions.


A deflationary fiscal policy will be followed, which will further limit the prospects of economic revival and exacerbate the sufferings of the Sri Lankan people.

R Ramakumar is a Professor of Economics at Tata Institute of Social Sciences. This commentary first appeared in The Conversation.
 
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Lesson for those who want to do every project in CPEC without cost anaylsis
Yeah sure skiming top 20% is good for you but keep debt limits in mind
As if Pakistan debt is CPEC fault? More like incapable and corrupted Pakistan create the mess themselves.

China will now hesitate with a lot of thing regarding Pakistan and it will be evident in coming months. We all know the reason for it.
Pakistan is an endless deephole. Not worth bail out these unstable country who already sell them out to USA.
 
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The reason for this problem is Sri Lankan idiots sitting at the top. Blaming China, India or anyone else is just another way to hide their incompetence and corrupted leaders.
 
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