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ගවේෂණය කරන්න
විදසුන්
Maldives’ reserves continue to dip
The external reserves of the Maldives have been on a declining trend since June 2020. At that time, the gross reserves held by the Maldives Monetary Authority amounted to USD 702.5 million , sufficient to finance 5.2 months of imports. However, by September 2024, the reserves had fallen to USD 371.2 million, covering only 1.1 months of imports. This situation mirrors what happened in Sri Lanka, which faced its worst economic crisis after its usable external reserves plummeted from USD 6,695 million (6.4 months of imports) in June 2020 to USD 308 million (0.18 months of imports) by April 2022. The rapid decline forced Sri Lanka to default on its external debts due to a shortage of foreign exchange. With assistance from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), Sri Lanka is now undergoing debt restructuring, temporarily halting debt repayments and increasing foreign exchange inflows. While the Maldives' reserves are declining at a slower rate—0.08 months of import coverage lost per month compared to Sri Lanka's 0.25 months per month—the trend is still concerning. At this pace, the Maldives could face a similar crisis within the next 2 years. It is crucial for the Maldives to identify these warning signs early. Proactive measures, such as pre-emptive debt restructuring, can be less harmful than dealing with a disorderly default. Early intervention can help stabilise the economy and avoid the severe consequences as experienced in Sri Lanka.
විදසුන්
Maldives’ reserves continue to dip
The external reserves of the Maldives have been on a declining trend since June 2020. At that time, the gross reserves held by the Maldives Monetary Authority amounted to USD 702.5 million , sufficient to finance 5.2 months of imports. However, by September 2024, the reserves had fallen to USD 371.2 million, covering only 1.1 months of imports. This situation mirrors what happened in Sri Lanka, which faced its worst economic crisis after its usable external reserves plummeted from USD 6,695 million (6.4 months of imports) in June 2020 to USD 308 million (0.18 months of imports) by April 2022. The rapid decline forced Sri Lanka to default on its external debts due to a shortage of foreign exchange. With assistance from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), Sri Lanka is now undergoing debt restructuring, temporarily halting debt repayments and increasing foreign exchange inflows. While the Maldives' reserves are declining at a slower rate—0.08 months of import coverage lost per month compared to Sri Lanka's 0.25 months per month—the trend is still concerning. At this pace, the Maldives could face a similar crisis within the next 2 years. It is crucial for the Maldives to identify these warning signs early. Proactive measures, such as pre-emptive debt restructuring, can be less harmful than dealing with a disorderly default. Early intervention can help stabilise the economy and avoid the severe consequences as experienced in Sri Lanka.
විදසුන්
Maldives’ reserves continue to dip
The external reserves of the Maldives have been on a declining trend since June 2020. At that time, the gross reserves held by the Maldives Monetary Authority amounted to USD 702.5 million , sufficient to finance 5.2 months of imports. However, by September 2024, the reserves had fallen to USD 371.2 million, covering only 1.1 months of imports. This situation mirrors what happened in Sri Lanka, which faced its worst economic crisis after its usable external reserves plummeted from USD 6,695 million (6.4 months of imports) in June 2020 to USD 308 million (0.18 months of imports) by April 2022. The rapid decline forced Sri Lanka to default on its external debts due to a shortage of foreign exchange. With assistance from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), Sri Lanka is now undergoing debt restructuring, temporarily halting debt repayments and increasing foreign exchange inflows. While the Maldives' reserves are declining at a slower rate—0.08 months of import coverage lost per month compared to Sri Lanka's 0.25 months per month—the trend is still concerning. At this pace, the Maldives could face a similar crisis within the next 2 years. It is crucial for the Maldives to identify these warning signs early. Proactive measures, such as pre-emptive debt restructuring, can be less harmful than dealing with a disorderly default. Early intervention can help stabilise the economy and avoid the severe consequences as experienced in Sri Lanka.
විදසුන්
Maldives’ reserves continue to dip
The external reserves of the Maldives have been on a declining trend since June 2020. At that time, the gross reserves held by the Maldives Monetary Authority amounted to USD 702.5 million , sufficient to finance 5.2 months of imports. However, by September 2024, the reserves had fallen to USD 371.2 million, covering only 1.1 months of imports. This situation mirrors what happened in Sri Lanka, which faced its worst economic crisis after its usable external reserves plummeted from USD 6,695 million (6.4 months of imports) in June 2020 to USD 308 million (0.18 months of imports) by April 2022. The rapid decline forced Sri Lanka to default on its external debts due to a shortage of foreign exchange. With assistance from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), Sri Lanka is now undergoing debt restructuring, temporarily halting debt repayments and increasing foreign exchange inflows. While the Maldives' reserves are declining at a slower rate—0.08 months of import coverage lost per month compared to Sri Lanka's 0.25 months per month—the trend is still concerning. At this pace, the Maldives could face a similar crisis within the next 2 years. It is crucial for the Maldives to identify these warning signs early. Proactive measures, such as pre-emptive debt restructuring, can be less harmful than dealing with a disorderly default. Early intervention can help stabilise the economy and avoid the severe consequences as experienced in Sri Lanka.
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ආරක්ෂාව හා මහජන සාමය
ආරක්ෂාව සම්බන්ධ රජයේ වියදම්වල මෑත කාලීන ප්රවණතා.
ආරක්ෂක අයවැයේ, නිල ඇඳුම් සහ ආහාර සඳහා පමණක් වන වියදම රුපියල් බිලියන 75 කින් ඉහළ යයි
2024 අයවැය ඇස්තමේන්තු මත පදනම්ව, ආරක්ෂක අංශයේ නිල ඇඳුම් සහ ආහාර වේල් සඳහා වන වියදම් සැලකිය යුතු LKR බිලියන 75 කින් වැඩි වනු ඇතැයි පුරෝකථනය කර ඇති අතර එය 2022 ට සාපේක්ෂව සියයට 258 ක වැඩිවීමකි. වෙනත් වචන වලින් කිවහොත්, පුද්ගලික ආදායම් බදු වැඩිවීමෙන් ලබන ආදායමෙන් 40% ක් නිල ඇඳු...
පීඑෆ් වයර් පුවත්
මූලාශ්රය:
Daily FT
Govt. signs $ 49 m jet upgrade deal with Israel Ae...
The Ministry of Defence in May signed a $ 49 million deal with Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI) to upgrade five Kfir fighter jets of the Sri Lanka Air Force (SLAF) No. 10 Squadron, it has been revealed.
වැඩිදුර කියවන්න
මූලාශ්රය:
Daily News
Widows, parents of fallen soldiers to get Rs. 25,0...
President Gotabaya Rajapaksa has submitted a proposal to the Cabinet to pay a monthly allowance of Rs.25,000 to the living parents of married or deceased military personnel who had died or went missing in operational areas during the conflic...
වැඩිදුර කියවන්න
විදසුන් කියවන්න: ආරක්ෂාව හා මහජන සාමය
Should Sri Lanka spend this much on defe...
In 2023, 15 years after the end of the wa...
ආරක්ෂක අයවැයේ, නිල ඇඳුම් සහ ආහාර සඳහා පම...
2024 අයවැය ඇස්තමේන්තු මත පදනම්ව, ආරක්ෂක අංශයේ නිල ඇඳුම් සහ ආහාර වේල් සඳහා වන වියදම් සැලකිය යුතු L...
ආරක්ෂක අංශය සඳහා ශ්රී ලංකාව කොපමණ මුදලක...
වසර ගණනාවක සිටම සෞඛ්ය අමාත්යාංශ...
පොලිසිය සහ මහජන ආරක්ෂාව වෙනුවෙන් දරන ලද...
ආරක්ෂක අංශයට අදාළව ලබා දුන් ප්රතිපත්තිම...
ජාතික ප්රත...
Budget 2021: Defence
The 2021 Budget Debate for the Ministry of Defence is happening today (3 Dec). This yea...
Expenditure on the Defence Sector (2010...
වීශේෂාංග
2023 මාර්තු මස වන විට, ශ්රී ලංකාව මෙවර ජාත්යන්තර...
ශ්රී ලංකාව අන්තර්ජාතික මූල්ය අරමුදලට ඉදිරිපත් කර තිබෙන සැළසුමෙහි අන්තර්ගත ප්රගතිය මැනිය හැකි එකඟතාවලින් 25%ක්, 2023 මාර්තු මාසය අවසාන වන විට සම්පූර්ණ කර ඇති බවත්, නමුත් එක් ප්රධාන එකඟතාවක් &n...
වැඩිදුර කියවන්න
අධ්යාපනය සඳහා රජය විසින් අඩුම මුදලක් වැය කරනු ලබන...
2022 දී, ශ්රී ලංකාවේ රජය විසින් – පළාත් සහ මධ්යම රජයන් යන දෙඅංශයම – ප්රාථමික, ද්විතීයික සහ තෘතීයික මට්ටම් ද ඇතුළුව අධ්යාපනය සඳහා වෙන් කරන ලද්දේ දළ දේශීය නිෂ්පාදිතයෙන් සියයට 1.5 ක් පමණක් වන මුදලකි. මේ අනු...
වැඩිදුර කියවන්න
Sri Lanka’s new personal income tax structure redu...
In his recent address to Parliament, the President announced proposed reforms to Sri Lanka’s Personal Income Tax (PIT) system. These changes include raising the tax-free monthly income threshold from LKR 100,000 to LKR 150,000, a...
වැඩිදුර කියවන්න