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CBSL Assistant Governor correctly cites flawed reserve reporting

29 Feb 2024 - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}      

 

 

To check this claim, FactCheck.lk consulted the Weekly Economic Indicators of the Central Bank of Sri Lanka (CBSL), IMF’s Balance of Payments Manual sixth edition (BPM6), and IMF Country Report No. 23/12.


The assistant governor’s figure aligns with the CBSL’s weekly economic indicators, which cite the Official Reserve Asset at USD 4.3 billion by the end of December 2023. However, upon closer examination of the criteria for reserve reporting, the accuracy of this figure is contested. 


Since March 2021, the CBSL has had a swap facility with the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) of RMB 10 billion (approximately USD 1.4 billion). However, an examination of the CBSL reports’ footnotes from November 2021 to March 2022 reveals that this facility, which was not previously counted as reserves, has only been counted as part of the reserves since December 2021. The late inclusion of the swap suggests that the criteria used to report reserves had been adjusted.


According to international standards (BPM6), the reserve assets must be under the direct and effective control of the monetary authority and readily available without condition. The PBoC swap, by these standards, does not qualify as a reserve asset due to not fulfilling several of these conditions.


The IMF’s recent staff report distinguishes between reported gross official reserves and usable reserves, highlighting the discrepancy between the two. It also does not recognise the PBoC swap as part of usable reserves. Definitionally, “unusable reserves” is an oxymoron on the basis of the definition of a reserve asset in BPM6. Likewise, even government ministers and President Ranil Wickremesinghe have stated that reserves were close to “zero” in April 2022. In doing so, they have also asserted the international standard (BPM6) under which the PBoC swap does not constitute reserves.


As such, the amount of reserve assets of the CBSL, assessed according to the relevant reporting standards, is only USD 3.0 billion. This figure is significantly below the assistant governor’s claim of USD 4.4 billion. The assistant governor is using the official reporting of the CBSL, even though on the above analysis that reporting is flawed.


Therefore, we classify this statement as PARTLY TRUE.


*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.