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Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Sri Lankan Macro-economic trend

 

 

 

 

 

 

This is a chart of trend of gross domestic product of Sri Lanka at market prices by the International Monetary Fund with figures in millions of Sri Lankan Rupees.


Year

Gross Domestic Product

US Dollar Exchange

1980

66,167

16.53 Sri Lankan Rupees

1985

162,375

27.20 Sri Lankan Rupees

1990

321,784

40.06 Sri Lankan Rupees

1995

667,772

51.25 Sri Lankan Rupees

2000

1,257,637

77.00 Sri Lankan Rupees

2005

2,363,669

100.52 Sri Lankan Rupees

For purchasing power parity comparisons, the US Dollar is exchanged at 113.4 Sri Lankan Rupees only.

In 1977, Colombo abandoned statistic economic policies and its import substitution trade policy for market-oriented policies and export-oriented trade. Sri Lanka's most dynamic industries are food processing at the moment. Also secondly textiles & apparel, food & beverages, telecommunications, insurance & banking. By 1996 plantation crops made up only 20% of exports (compared with 93% in 1970), while textiles and garments accounted for 63%. GDP grew at an annual average rate of 5.5% throughout the 1990s until a drought and a deteriorating security situation lowered growth to 3.8% in 1996. The economy rebounded in 1997-98 with growth of 6.4% and 4.7% - but slowed to 3.7% in 1999. For the next round of reforms, the central bank of Sri Lanka recommends that Colombo expand market mechanisms in non plantation agriculture, dismantle the government's monopoly on wheat imports, and promote more competition in the financial sector. A continuing cloud over the economy is the fighting between the Government of Sri Lanka and the LTTE, which has cost 65,000 lives in the past 15 years. Government provides employment for 13% of the work force and follows state enterprise oriented policies. Privatization of such enterprises has stopped and reversed, with several new state enterprises launched.


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