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Lanka, China in talks to amend terms of $1.5 bn currency deal

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Sri Lanka is discussing with China to amend the terms and conditions of the USD 1.5 billion currency swap deal with Beijing so that it can be used for imports amidst an unpreceden­ted economic crisis in this island nation, a media report said.

According to the terms and conditions stipulated in the agreement signed with China for the swap arrangemen­t, the amount cannot be used unless Sri Lanka has foreign reserves sufficient for three months. The swap deal was signed last year.

The deal is on hold because Sri Lanka has run short of the required amount of reserves. The swap deal enables Sri Lanka to borrow Chinese currency for payment of imports, the Daily Mirror newspaper reported, quoting a source. However, the Sri Lankan authoritie­s have now requested the Chinese side to amend the particular clause of the agreement to make use of this currency facility extended to Sri Lanka, the report said.

According to the source, the Sri Lankan side informed that the amendment of the clause would be beneficial for China since it would be used for the imports of Chinese products, it said. Sri Lanka signed a 10 billion yuan (about USD 1.5 billion) currency swap deal with China for a three-year period to be used for promoting bilateral trade and direct investment between the two countries, the Central Bank of Sri Lanka announced in March last year. The deal was signed between the Central Bank of Sri Lanka (CBSL) and the People’s Bank of China (PBoC).

The deal came as Sri Lanka was undergoing a difficult time with COVID-19, dealing a severe blow to its economy, especially its USD 4.5 billion tourism industry which was already hit by the Easter Sunday terror attacks in 2019. Sri Lanka is currently facing its worst economic crisis since independen­ce from Britain in 1948.

The economic crisis has prompted an acute shortage of essential items like food, medicine, cooking gas and other fuel, toilet paper, and even matches, with Lankans being forced to wait in lines lasting hours outside stores to buy fuel.

The deal is on hold because Sri Lanka has run short of the required amount of reserves

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