මාතෘකා
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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රාජ්ය මූල්ය දත්ත හා විශ්ලේෂණයන් සඳහා
නිදහස් හා විවෘත ප්රවේශය
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සෞඛ්යය
සෞඛ්යය
මහජන සෞඛ්ය අංශය සඳහා කරන ලද රජයේ වියදම්වල මෑත කාලීන ප්රවණතා.
Sanitary Napkins: Subjected to Unreasonably High Taxes
The total tax burden on Sanitary napkins is 47.1%, this is significantly higher than the tax burden of selected non-essentials items, gold jewelry, raw silk, golf clubs and golf balls and military artill...
පීඑෆ් වයර් පුවත්
මූලාශ්රය:
Island
Germany pledges to convert EUR 13 MN loan into gra...
Strengthening the long-standing close partnership between Germany and Sri Lanka, the German government proposed to convert the supplementary loan obtained from the German KfW bank for completing the New Maternity Hospital (Teaching) Galle into a grant, Finance Ministr...
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මූලාශ්රය:
Daily News
Rs.76 b spent so far on COVID vaccine imports
The Government has spent Rs. 76 billion this year alone to import COVID-19 vaccines, says State Pharmaceuticals Corporation Chairman Dr. Prasanna Gunasena.
වැඩිදුර කියවන්න
මූලාශ්රය:
Daily News
Australia provides Rs. 952 m to strengthen COVID t...
The Australian Government has donated Rs.952 million worth of essential respirators to strengthen COVID treatment services. A stock of essential medical equipment including oxygen cylinders was handed over to the Minister of Health Pavithra Wanniarachchi yesterday...
වැඩිදුර කියවන්න
විදසුන් කියවන්න: සෞඛ්යය
Sanitary Napkins: Subjected to Unreasona...
The...
ඉටුකම කොවිඩ්-19 අරමුදලෙන් රජය වැය කර ඇත්...
2020 මාර්තු 2...
රෝහල් සංවර්ධන ව්යපෘති සඳහා 2021 අයවැය ප...
රෝහල් සංවර්ධන...
සෞඛ්ය අංශයේ වියදම (2010 – 2019)
2021 අයවැය තුලින් ලබා දුන් සෞඛ්ය අංශයට...
‘ජාතික ප්රතිපත්ති රාමුව: රට හද...
2021 අයවැය: සෞඛ්යය
2021 අයවැය කථාවෙන් සෞඛ්ය ක්ෂේත්රයට ...
Health Sector Allocations, 2018 to 2021
The 2021 Sri Lankan Budget has allocated LKR 223,285 Mn to...
Have Governments Fulfilled their Health-...
Have consecutive governments stuck to th...
ඉටුකම කෝවිඩ්-19 සෞඛ්ය සේවා හා සමාජ ආරක්...
2020, මාර්තු මස...
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වීශේෂාංග
ශ්රී ලංකාවේ ගෘහස්ථ ණය ප්රතිව්යුහගත කිරීමේ සුවිශ...
දේශීය ණය ප්රතිව්යුහගතකරණය (DDR) සඳහා ශ්රී ලංකාවේ ප්රවේශය එහි ක්රමවේදය තුළ කැපී පෙනේ. සැලකිය යුතු ලෙස, විශ්රාම අරමුදල් සහ මහ බැංකව සතුු හෝල්ඩින්ග්ස් ප්රතිව්යුහගත කිරීම මත කේන්ද්රගත වී ඇත. 1998 සිට...
වැඩිදුර කියවන්න
Purification Corrupted
Find out how a much-needed water purification project in Sri Lanka became riddled with corruption and abuse of power due to the lack of a national procurement law.For more...
වැඩිදුර කියවන්න
ශ්රී ලංකාවේ ප්රමුඛතම අපනයන ක්ෂේත්රය, ඇමරිකාවේ න...
අප්රේල් 02 වන දින ඇමරිකානු ජනාධිපති ඩොනල්ඩ් ට්රම්ප් ශ්රී ලංකාව එරටට අපනයනය කරන භාණ්ඩ මත අමතර සියයට 44 ක තීරු බදු පැනවීය. මෙම අපනයනවලින් සියයට 64 ක් ඇඟලුම් කර්මාන්තය හරහා සිදු කෙරෙන අතර - 2023 දී එහි වටිනාකම ඇමරිකානු ඩොලර් බිලියන 1.8 කට ආසන්න වුණි. මෙම අ...
වැඩිදුර කියවන්න