Sri Lanka Leftist President Takes Office as IMF Worries Grow

Sri Lanka Leftist President Takes Office as IMF Worries Grow · Bloomberg

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(Bloomberg) -- Sri Lanka’s new leftist president was sworn into office Monday after ousting the country’s elites who voters had blamed for bankrupting the nation and imposing harsh austerity measures linked to an International Monetary Fund bailout.

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Anura Kumara Dissanayake, popularly known as AKD, took his oath of office in Colombo on Monday, vowing to work with others to achieve his goals of clean governance.

“We do not believe that this deep crisis can be overcome by a government, a party or an individual,” he said. “I am not a magician, I am an ordinary citizen born in this country. My main task is to absorb skills, absorb knowledge, and take the best decisions to guide the country.”

Dissanayake, 55, defeated opposition leader Sajith Premadasa after two rounds of counting in the country’s first-ever runoff, sweeping Ranil Wickremesinghe, the previous president, out of power in the first round.

The new president has vowed to reopen negotiations with the IMF over its $3 billion bailout, which came with spending cuts and tax hikes that proved deeply unpopular with voters. Some members of his National People’s Power coalition also oppose debt restructuring terms agreed to with the nation’s creditors.

Reviewing the debt plan or reopening IMF talks risks delaying the disbursement of fresh loans from the Washington-based lender, which has said it will hold discussions with the new administration once it’s in place. Under the current bailout program, Sri Lanka will need to meet certain economic targets before the IMF approves the next tranche of funding, estimated at about $350 million.

Sri Lanka’s dollar bonds due in 2027 and 2029 fell by the most in over two years on Monday. The rupee inched higher against the dollar, rising with stocks as investors hope the new leader will stick with the IMF program.

“Sri Lanka has voted for a regime change,” said Avanti Save, head of Asia credit research and strategy at Barclays Bank Plc. Bond trading will be determined by “developments and comments suggesting commitment to the IMF program and macro-linked bond proposal, government appointments, and ability to execute economic policy,” she added.

Earlier Monday, Prime Minister Dinesh Gunawardena resigned from his post, thereby dissolving the previous cabinet and allowing Dissanayake to make his own appointments. The new president is now expected to dissolve the parliament soon and call for fresh elections to choose lawmakers. His coalition currently has only three members in the 225-seat parliament, including himself.