Topics
Explore
Featured Insight
The Cost of Inflation: Sustaining 2015 Consumption in 2023
Sri Lanka's is set to experience a 160% increase in nominal GDP from the 2015 levels of LKR 11.6 trillion as projected nominal GDP for 2023 estimated at LKR 30.3 trillion. However, while the real GDP in 2023 remains relatively unchanged from the 2015 levels, the doubling of nominal GDP highlights the need for a corresponding increase in incomes to maintain the same level of consumption as in 2015. In essence, this means that incomes must grow by 160%, in order to maintain the same level of consumption one did in 2015.
Featured Insight
The Cost of Inflation: Sustaining 2015 Consumption in 2023
Sri Lanka's is set to experience a 160% increase in nominal GDP from the 2015 levels of LKR 11.6 trillion as projected nominal GDP for 2023 estimated at LKR 30.3 trillion. However, while the real GDP in 2023 remains relatively unchanged from the 2015 levels, the doubling of nominal GDP highlights the need for a corresponding increase in incomes to maintain the same level of consumption as in 2015. In essence, this means that incomes must grow by 160%, in order to maintain the same level of consumption one did in 2015.
Featured Insight
The Cost of Inflation: Sustaining 2015 Consumption in 2023
Sri Lanka's is set to experience a 160% increase in nominal GDP from the 2015 levels of LKR 11.6 trillion as projected nominal GDP for 2023 estimated at LKR 30.3 trillion. However, while the real GDP in 2023 remains relatively unchanged from the 2015 levels, the doubling of nominal GDP highlights the need for a corresponding increase in incomes to maintain the same level of consumption as in 2015. In essence, this means that incomes must grow by 160%, in order to maintain the same level of consumption one did in 2015.
Featured Insight
The Cost of Inflation: Sustaining 2015 Consumption in 2023
Sri Lanka's is set to experience a 160% increase in nominal GDP from the 2015 levels of LKR 11.6 trillion as projected nominal GDP for 2023 estimated at LKR 30.3 trillion. However, while the real GDP in 2023 remains relatively unchanged from the 2015 levels, the doubling of nominal GDP highlights the need for a corresponding increase in incomes to maintain the same level of consumption as in 2015. In essence, this means that incomes must grow by 160%, in order to maintain the same level of consumption one did in 2015.
Data
Reports
Acts and Gazettes
Insights
Dashboards
Annual Budget Dashboard
Budget Promises
Fiscal Indicators
Fuel Price Tracker
IMF Tracker
Infrastructure Watch
PF Wire
About Us
EN
English
සිංහල
தமிழ்
;
Thank You
Free and Open Access to
Public Finance Data and Analysis
Home
PF Wire
PF Wire
Featured
Sri Lanka moves closer to finalising debt restructuring with Japan
Sri Lanka’s Cabinet approved a debt restructuring agreement with JICA, following bipartisan negotiations and legal clearance, aiming to boost investor confidence and secure further international financial support....
2025-02-06
Daily FT
Read More
Filter By
Topic
Budget 2021
Budget 2022
Budget 2023
Budget 2024
Budget 2025
International Monetary Fund
Maldives
Articles
Revenue
Expenditure
Debt
Employee Provident Fund (EPF)
Financing
Agriculture and Irrigation
Civil Administration
Defence and Public Order
Education
Energy and Water Supply
Environment
Health
Social Protection and Welfare
Transport and Communication
Urban Development and Housing
Improved transparency could lead to higher haircut: Dr. Weerasinghe
If Sri Lanka enhances transparency, reduces corruption, and increases government revenue, the proposed 28 percent bond haircut could rise to 35 percent, with the potential for further adjustments based on economic growth rate...
2024-07-08
Daily Mirror
Read More
Debt sustainability unaffected by potential high payouts
The key point is that Sri Lanka's long-term debt sustainability will not be compromised by any upside payouts triggered by economic over-performance under the economic growth and governance-linked bond deal with bondholders. The negotiated framewor...
2024-07-05
The Morning
Read More
Excise revenue reaches Rs. 105 b
The Excise Department has collected Rs. 105 billion in revenue by 30 June this year, marking a Rs. 17 billion increase compared to the same period last year, despite setbacks from natural disasters and issues at a major pro...
2024-07-04
The Morning
Read More
Sri Lanka closes $12.5 bn bond restructuring deal
Sri Lanka has reached an agreement to restructure US$ 12.5 billion in bonds, featuring a 28 percent cut on face value, 11 percent reduction in past interest, interest payments starting in September 2024, and governance-linked bond features.
2024-07-04
Daily Mirror
Read More
page
27
of
164
‹
1
2
...
27
...
163
164
›