With the International Monetary Fund (International Monetary Fund) approving a $206 million Rapid Financing Instrument (RFI), Sri Lanka has formally recommitted itself to fiscal discipline and an open trade and payments regime, even as the scale of economic disruption from Cyclone Ditwah sharpens concerns over the durability of the recovery narrative.
Initial estimates underline the magnitude of the shock. The World Bank has placed direct damage at approximately $4.1 billion, while the International Labour Organisation assesses the wider economic impact at nearly $16 billion. Separately, the IMF has projected that the balance of payments deficit could widen by around $700 million as reconstruction pressures feed through imports and fiscal demand.
These realities are set out in a Letter of Intent dated 10 December, submitted to the IMF and co-signed by President and Finance Minister Anura Kumara Dissanayake and Central Bank Governor Nandalal Weerasinghe. The letter outlines the Government’s assessment of the disaster, its immediate fiscal response, and the policy guardrails within which emergency measures will be pursued.
Notably, the authorities have framed the response as a test of discipline rather than an exception to it. The Government acknowledges that recovery and reconstruction will be financed primarily through expenditure reprioritisation, reallocations within the existing Budget, and the use of contingency provisions, with recourse to a Supplementary Budget deferred until 2026 and only if unavoidable. The emphasis is clear: the shock does not, in the Government’s view, justify a departure from the fiscal consolidation path.
The Letter of Intent further commits that all emergency-related spending will comply with the Public Finance Management Act and established transparency and accountability standards— language clearly calibrated for an IMF audience alert to post-crisis slippage.
On monetary policy, the authorities have reiterated their undertakings under the Extended Fund Facility. The Central Bank will continue to refrain from monetary financing of the deficit, and the Government has explicitly welcomed an early update of the IMF Safeguards Assessment—an implicit acknowledgment that credibility, not liquidity alone, remains the binding constraint.
Equally significant is the reaffirmation of an open external payments regime. The Government has assured the IMF that it will neither introduce new nor intensify existing restrictions on current international transactions, trade, or currency practices, nor enter into bilateral payment arrangements inconsistent with Article VIII of the Fund’s Articles of Agreement. In effect, capital controls and trade distortions are being pre- emptively ruled out as tools of crisis management. Against this backdrop, Sri Lanka formally requested emergency financing of approximately $205 million under the RFI. The Fifth Review under the IMF- supported Extended Fund Facility is expected to commence early next year.
The Government has been explicit that the cyclone has not altered the fundamentals of its reform agenda. Program objectives—restoring fiscal and debt sustainability, maintaining price and financial sector stability, rebuilding external buffers, strengthening governance, and advancing growth- oriented structural reforms—remain unchanged.
The unresolved question, however, is not one of intent, but of execution: whether a fiscal framework already under strain can absorb a shock of this magnitude without diluting reform momentum, or whether the costs of resilience will re-emerge elsewhere in the system.




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