IMF Cyclone Ditwah Recovery Support for Sri Lanka

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Dec 05, 2025 09:52

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IMF exploring support for Sri Lanka after Cyclone Ditwah. Assessment underway, board meeting on Dec 15. Sixth tranche expected.
IMF Cyclone Ditwah Recovery Support for Sri Lanka
Photograph: Dinuka Liyanawatte/Reuters
Colombo, Dec 5 (PTI) The IMF is exploring ways to support Sri Lanka in its recovery process following Cyclone Ditwah, which has caused widespread destruction in the island nation and left over 450 dead.

At a press briefing on Thursday, International Monetary Fund (IMF) spokesperson Julie Kozack said that the Washington-based global lender is "continuing to support Sri Lanka's recovery, reform, and resilience under the Extended Fund Facility arrangement."

"Staff and the Sri Lankan authorities reached a Staff–Level Agreement on the Fifth Review back in October, before the cyclone. And right now, Staff is looking into options to further support Sri Lanka in the recovery process," she said.

Sri Lanka is grappling with widespread flooding, landslides and severe infrastructure collapse triggered by Cyclone Ditwah, which left several districts isolated and severely straining the country's disaster-response capacity.

Kozack said an IMF Board meeting which on December 15 will look into options to further support Sri Lanka.


“We will be providing additional details as the assessment of economic needs and damages moves forward, and as we have more information that can inform our own thinking around the options for how we can further support Sri Lanka,” she added.

Sri Lanka is expected to draw its sixth tranche of the nearly USD 3 billion IMF bailout, and the nation's authorities are hopeful of its early release.

The island nation is in the process of estimating the cost of Cyclone Ditwah devastation. According to initial estimates, USD 6-7 billion would be required as the loss would be around 3-5 per cent of the GDP.

The 48-month extended fund facility deal with the IMF in March 2023 carried hard reforms to Sri Lanka's welfare-based governance.

It was signed after Sri Lanka plunged into an unprecedented economic meltdown with its first-ever sovereign default.

Since the cyclone, calls for concessions from the IMF have come to the fore from both the government and the opposition.
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