The Central Bank of Sri Lanka raised its lending rate from 7.5 to 8.0 per cent, saying that relatively cheap money had the potential to fuel demand-driven inflation that could undermine the fragile economy.
The previous rate increase was in April 2012 when it was increased by 75 basis points to 9.75 per cent
Even before today's rate increase, commercial banks had been increasing their lending rates by as much as two percentage points, anticipating a move by the central bank to tighten monetary policy to curb inflation.
The bank said year-on-year inflation climbed to a staggering 4.6 per cent in January, up from 0.8 per cent in 2015. The rate hike came as Sri Lanka made a formal request for an IMF bailout package to aid its struggling economy after a sharp slowdown in growth and a widening budget deficit. Details of any bailout are yet to be finalised.
Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe told parliament last month that he was keen on negotiating an IMF bailout to deal with the fallout of a global economic downturn on his country of 21 million people.
The IMF, which sent a mission to review Sri Lanka's economy earlier this month, said it had warned the authorities they should make a "stronger effort" to immediately reduce the budget deficit.
It received USD 2.6 billion from the IMF in 2009 to boost its financial reserves, which had dropped below USD 1 billion at the height of fighting between Tamil Tiger rebels and government forces.
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