Stagflation threat looms over Sri Lanka as rupee slides, inflation climbs, and growth stalls. What happens next?
Picture this. You walk into a grocery store in Colombo, and the price tag on a bag of milk powder has jumped overnight. The pharmacist tells you that imported medicine costs more this week than last. The petrol queue is getting longer, and your paycheck buys noticeably less than it did six months ago.
This is not a flashback to 2022. This is Sri Lanka in May 2026 — and the warning signs look uncomfortably familiar.
The Sri Lankan rupee recently slid to Rs. 354 per US dollar, triggering sharp debates in Parliament, urgent presidential addresses across the country, and a growing fear among economists that the island nation could be walking straight into a stagflation trap — a dangerous economic condition where prices rise sharply even as economic growth slows down.
Understanding what stagflation means, why it matters, and how Sri Lanka arrived at this moment is not just important for economists. It matters for every family trying to put food on the table.
What Is Stagflation — And Why Should You Care?
Before diving into the crisis, let’s break down one critical word: stagflation.
Stagflation happens when three bad things occur at the same time:
- Stagnation — the economy stops growing or grows very slowly
- Inflation — prices keep rising
- Unemployment — people lose jobs or cannot find work
Normally, governments fight inflation by raising interest rates, which slows down the economy. But in stagflation, slowing the economy makes unemployment worse, while doing nothing lets prices spiral out of control. It is a trap with no easy exit.
Sri Lanka is not fully inside that trap yet. But the door is open, and several warning signs suggest the country is dangerously close.
How Did We Get Here? The Five-Alarm Fire
1. The Middle East Conflict Lit the Fuse
The immediate trigger for the current rupee pressure is the ongoing conflict in West Asia. When the conflict first escalated, Sri Lankan authorities believed the country could absorb the shock. They were wrong.
As the conflict dragged on, global oil prices surged, and shipping costs rose dramatically. The impact on Sri Lanka’s fuel import bill was staggering. Fuel import costs shot up from USD 98 million in February 2026 to USD 522 million in May — a fivefold increase in just three months. This enormous surge in dollar spending drained the country’s foreign exchange reserves and placed crushing pressure on the rupee.
2. The Central Bank Was Late to the Warning
Financial experts point to a critical institutional failure. The Central Bank of Sri Lanka (CBSL) should have modeled worst-case scenarios and alerted policymakers when the dollar was trading at around Rs. 315–320. Instead, decisive action came only after the dollar crossed Rs. 330, by which time the damage was already spreading.
This delay matters enormously. Currency crises do not arrive as sudden surprises. They build up through slow leaks — delayed warnings, institutional disagreements, and missed signals. Experts describe this as a “critical breakdown in institutional warning systems” that compounded the pressure on the rupee.
3. Vehicle Imports Added Fuel to the Fire
Back in July 2025, Treasury officials reportedly warned the Central Bank about rapid currency pressure building from surging vehicle imports. The CBSL denied receiving that warning. By the time the government intervened, USD 1.8 billion worth of Letters of Credit had already been opened for vehicle imports — a sum that placed enormous stress on foreign exchange supplies.
Had those vehicle imports been restricted earlier, Sri Lanka would likely be in a far stronger position today. Instead, the lack of coordination between the Treasury and the Central Bank left a gap that the market exploited.
4. Tourism Collapsed at the Worst Possible Time
Tourism is one of Sri Lanka’s most important sources of foreign currency. But tourist arrivals fell 29% compared to April of the previous year, directly cutting the flow of dollars into the economy. This could not have come at a worse time. When dollar earnings from tourism fall while dollar spending on fuel rises, the gap in the country’s foreign exchange balance widens rapidly.
5. Exporters and Remittance Senders Are Holding Back
When currency confidence weakens, something predictable and damaging happens. Exporters delay converting their foreign earnings into rupees, hoping to get a better rate later. Sri Lankans working overseas hold back on sending remittances home, waiting to see if the rupee falls further before they lock in a conversion rate.
Both behaviors reduce the supply of foreign currency in the formal market, pushing the rupee down even further — a self-reinforcing cycle that is very difficult to stop once it begins.
The Stagflation Threat in Plain Terms
Inflation has already spiked to 5.4% in April from 2.2% the previous month, largely due to sharp fuel price increases and their spillover effects across the economy.
This is the stagflation danger. Rising fuel costs push up the price of transport, which pushes up the cost of food, medicine, and household goods. Meanwhile, global demand for Sri Lankan exports has weakened due to the broader international economic slowdown — meaning businesses earn less revenue, potentially leading to job cuts or stagnant wages.
If prices keep rising while economic growth slows, Sri Lanka will have entered classic stagflation territory. And stagflation is particularly punishing for low and middle-income families, who spend a larger share of their income on essential goods like food, fuel, and medicine.
When the cost of living cannot be controlled, tax burdens rise, job opportunities decline, and uncertainty about the future grows — public confidence begins to collapse. The 2022 Aragalaya was a powerful example of this dynamic in action.
Is This 2022 All Over Again?
President Anura Kumara Dissanayake has been direct and forceful in his answer: no.
Speaking at a public event in Nintavur, the president stressed that Sri Lanka today holds close to USD 7 billion in foreign reserves — compared to barely USD 50 million at the peak of the 2022 crisis. The country also operates within the framework of an International Monetary Fund Extended Fund Facility (EFF) programme, providing financial discipline and an external safety net that simply did not exist in 2022.
The IMF’s own mission chief for Sri Lanka, Evan Papageorgiou, acknowledged that recent global developments have brought renewed pressures, but added that Sri Lanka’s policy framework today is “considerably stronger than in the past.”
The Executive Board of the IMF was scheduled to review the combined fifth and sixth reviews of Sri Lanka’s EFF programme on May 27, 2026 — a decision that could unlock approximately USD 700 million in new financing. Market confidence responded positively even before that decision, with the rupee recovering sharply and posting its biggest single-day gain since March 2023.
Yet economists and opposition politicians warn that the underlying structural vulnerabilities have not disappeared. Sri Lanka has just three years to prepare for debt repayments due starting in 2028, with around USD 3–4 billion needed annually from that point. That repayment clock keeps ticking regardless of how the current crisis resolves.
What the Government Is Actually Doing
The government has announced a set of measures to manage the pressure:
Reducing fuel consumption — President Dissanayake called on all citizens to personally reduce how much fuel they use, framing it as a national responsibility during the dollar shortage.
Raising vehicle import duties — The surcharge on customs duties for vehicle imports was increased to 50%, a measure designed to reduce dollar outflows. The government confirmed that Letters of Credit for 1,782 vehicles were opened on the day before the gazette announcement — though opposition parties alleged insider trading, which the Deputy Finance Minister firmly denied.
No broad import controls — Deputy Finance Minister Anil Jayantha Fernando repeatedly stressed that the government will not impose the kind of sweeping import restrictions that choked the economy during the 2022 crisis. The government wants to signal openness while managing the pressure selectively.
Calling on the diaspora — NPP ministers and MPs have urged Sri Lankans living and working abroad to continue sending remittances home, describing overseas workers as vital contributors to national economic stability.
What the Opposition Is Demanding
Opposition Leader Sajith Premadasa called on the government to immediately begin negotiations for a successor IMF programme, warning that Sri Lanka currently meets only 50% of the IMF’s target for foreign reserves. The current programme ends in March 2027, and Premadasa argues that waiting until the last moment will leave the country negotiating from a position of weakness.
Former Finance Minister Ravi Karunanayake proposed a structural overhaul of the country’s financial governance through a three-pillar system: a Monetary Authority focused on price stability and reserves management; a Prudential Regulation Authority focused on early-warning supervision and risk detection; and a Financial Conduct Authority focused on consumer protection and market transparency.
The opposition also requested a special parliamentary debate — a three-day session to address the crisis comprehensively.
The Bigger Picture: Structural Vulnerability
Sri Lanka’s current difficulties highlight a deeper truth that goes beyond any single crisis. The country’s economic model carries structural weaknesses: high external debt, overreliance on foreign financing, policy inconsistency, and weak fiscal buffers that leave the country susceptible to both domestic and external shocks.
Every time global oil prices spike, every time a conflict disrupts shipping lanes, every time tourist arrivals fall — Sri Lanka feels the pain more sharply than more diversified economies. The answer, as economists and politicians across the political spectrum agree, is to build a more production-based, export-oriented economy that earns more foreign currency than it spends.
Sri Lanka’s skilled workforce continues to leave the country in large numbers. In the first six months of 2025 alone, 144,379 people departed for foreign employment. Each departure represents both a short-term boost in remittances and a long-term loss of the human capital that Sri Lanka desperately needs to build those new industries.
The Road Ahead: Three Scenarios
Best case: The IMF approves the USD 700 million disbursement, global oil prices ease as the West Asian conflict stabilizes, tourists return in growing numbers, and the rupee stabilizes. The stagflation pressure eases without triggering major economic pain.
Middle case: The rupee stabilizes but at a weaker level than before. Inflation settles around 6–7%, squeezing household budgets. The economy grows slowly. The IMF successor programme negotiations begin but are drawn out. Life gets harder for ordinary Sri Lankans, but no systemic collapse occurs.
Worst case: The Middle East conflict intensifies, oil prices spike further, tourist arrivals remain depressed, and exporter confidence collapses. The rupee continues sliding, inflation accelerates past 10%, and the government faces the choice between painful austerity measures and a deeper crisis. Public confidence erodes, and the political consequences follow.
The Bottom Line
Sri Lanka is not in 2022 yet. The reserves are real. The IMF framework is real. The policy tools available to the government today are genuinely stronger than they were four years ago.
But the warning signs are also real. The fuel import surge is real. The institutional coordination failures are real. The structural economic vulnerabilities are real.
The difference between containing this crisis and allowing it to spiral will depend on one thing above all others: whether policymakers act decisively in the coming weeks — not months.
For every Sri Lankan family watching their grocery bills rise and their rupees buy less, the stakes could not be more personal.