The
Bangladesh Bank has stepped in to assist Sri Lanka in
an immediate response, to help the sufferings of the people
due to the economic crisis made by the government led by President
Gotabaya Rajakasa by taking back
firing decisions ignoring the economic fundamentals.
The Bangladesh Bank on Sunday
extended the loan repayment tenure for crisis-stricken Sri Lanka by one year as
the island nation is in default on its entire $ 51 billion foreign loans.
The decision on the extension was
made at a board meeting of the central bank held on Sunday, with its governor
Fazle Kabir in the chair, sources said.
In August 2021, Bangladesh
extended the credit facility amounting to $ 200 million under a currency
swap deal with Sri Lanka.
The loans were released in three
phases August 19, August 30, and September 21 in 2021.
Under the initial conditions, Sri
Lanka was allowed to use the loans for up to one year with a renewal clause in
three-month intervals.
So Sri Lanka was supposed to clear
the loans in three phases by September, 2022.
Under Sunday’s board decision, the
island nation would get one year on top of the repayment deadline of August,
October and November of 2022.
As per the currency swap
agreement, Bangladesh will receive 2 per cent plus LIBOR as interest on the
loan amount.
If the instalment principal
remains unpaid even after six months, the applicable interest rate was set at
2.5 per cent plus LIBOR.
The loan was sanctioned to Sri
Lanka when the Bangladesh Bank’s reserve reached a record high of $ 48.06 billion
in August 2021.
The country’s reserve, however,
eroded by more than $ 6 billion in the past eight months, with the asset
dropping to $ 41.9 billion amid an unusual surge in import payments in the
first nine months of the current fiscal year of 2021-2022.
The gradual decline in the
country’s reserve also deteriorated the country’s import payment capacity.
With the reserve in August 2021,
Bangladesh was capable of paying import bills for 8.39 months, but the drop in
reserve worsened the country’s capacity in recent months.
The Bangladesh Bank data showed
that the country in March this year was capable of paying import bills for 6.1
months when its foreign exchange reserve was $ 45.15 billion.
On the other hand, the Sri Lankan
government is facing massive public protests due to its failure to finance
imports of basic goods and commodities, forcing the authority to announce an
emergency to tackle the situation.
The country was also seeking
finance from international donor agencies and friendly countries to tackle the
situation. The country’s foreign exchange reserve was hovering around $ 2
billion with its due loan payment of around $ 8 billion in 2022.
Meanwhile, the central bank at
Sunday’s meeting also rejected a plea of Eastern Bank Limited to reconsider a
BB decision that slapped Tk 5 lakh in fine on the bank.
The Bangladesh Bank slapped the
penalty for issuance of loans by the EBL in violation of the single borrower
exposure limit.



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