Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

MP Kiriella lethargic on Sri Lanka’s lethargy in debt-restructur­ing

- LAKSHMAN KIRIELLA Member of Parliament

“No other country in the world has taken 2.5 years like this [Sri Lanka] for debt restructur­ing. Every country completed that process in 1 or 1.5 years”.

Parliament Youtube Page, 22 May 2024

In parliament, MP Lakshman Kiriella claimed that (a) no country has taken as long as Sri Lanka (2.5 years) to complete the debt restructur­ing process, and (b) every country completed it within 1.5 years. To verify this claim, Factcheck.lk consulted the most comprehens­ive dataset on Debt Restructur­ing Episodes (associated with a paper by Christoph Trebesch) and the updates to it by Verité Research.

The time taken to restructur­e is calculated as the time between the date of suspending repayments and the date to finalise the debt exchange. At the time of the statement, it was 2.1 years since Sri Lanka suspended debt repayments. Factcheck.lk evaluated the MP’S 2.5-year frame as a (reasonable) forward-looking view of when Sri Lanka will complete its debt restructur­ing.

Historical­ly, restructur­ing debt was a slow process. As systems and structures have evolved, the process has become faster. The dataset shows:

■ Between 1975 and 1995, there were 156 debt restructur­ing episodes, averaging 3.7 years to complete.

■ Between 1995 and 2015, there were 28 episodes, averaging 1.4 years.

■ Between 2015 and 2020, there were 9 episodes, averaging 1.1 years.

Since 2014, out of 15 episodes (excluding Sri Lanka) of debt restructur­ing, 3 have taken 2.5 years or longer, and only 10 were completed under 1.5 years. Even if the MP was referring to recent years, his claim is incorrect on both counts: only 66% of the episodes were completed within 1.5 years, and 20% took 2.5 years or longer.

Therefore, we classify the MP’S claim as FALSE.

Additional note 1: On June 26, 2024, in a special address to the nation, President Ranil Wickremesi­nghe made the opposite claim to MP Kiriella, stating that no country in recent history has achieved an ‘exceptiona­l victory’ within this timeframe. The same data was used to show that this claim was also incorrect. Sri Lanka is neither the slowest nor the fastest, but within the last 10 years, it has been in the bottom 25% in terms of speed to restructur­e.

Additional note 2: The IMF publishes data on the duration to restructur­e measured from the date of the IMF staff level agreement. Even on those durations time taken by Sri Lanka evaluates about the same: not the slowest, but not among the fastest either. But it’s not a standard measure, as countries can restructur­e debt without an IMF agreement, and can also enter an IMF agreement prior to suspending debt payments.

*Factcheck.lk’s verdict is based on the most recent informatio­n that is publicly accessible. As with every fact check, if new informatio­n becomes available, Factcheck. lk will revisit the assessment.

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