Fee context:
Lazard ~US$6.9m, Clifford Chance ~US$4.6m, total ~US$11.5m.
Procurement:
Cabinet-approved competitive process (RFP; many proposals received).
Scorecard
Necessity (High): Sri Lanka lacked deep in-house sovereign restructuring capacity; crisis conditions demanded specialist modelling + creditor engagement.
Reasonableness vs global norm (Likely Medium–High):
The fee level sits in a plausible band for a multi-year, multi- creditor sovereign workout, though “reasonable” depends on what was delivered and when.
Transparency (Medium): Fees were disclosed via reporting/parliamentary questioning, but a full public breakdown (phases, deliverables, time billed, success metrics) is typically not visible to citizens.
Timeliness / Speed (Mixed): Restructuring timelines depend on creditor politics and IMF conditionalities; advisers can’t force closure, but the public will judge the process by how quickly uncertainty ended.
Outcome linkage (Hard to attribute):
Advisers contribute analysis/strategy; the State owns decisions. Value depends on whether advice was acted on consistently and credibly.
Newsline takeaway:
Fees may be “normal” by global standards, but value for
money is proven only if the State can show
(a) measurable debt relief,
(b) faster market normalisation, and
(c) lessons internalised so the country doesn’t need emergency outsourcing again.
How Sri Lanka’s Advisory Costs Compare (Argentina, Ghana, Zambia)
Sovereign restructurings commonly involve financial advisers (e.g., Lazard/Rothschild/etc.) plus international legal counsel and often specialised local counsel.
Fee structures vary depending on: number of creditor groups, length/complexity of negotiations, whether there are litigation risks,
and whether success fees are embedded.









