COLOMBO, July 1 (Reuters) - Sri Lanka's parliament approved a domestic debt restructuring plan on Saturday that is crucial to continue a $2.9 billion bailout from the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
To put its debt on a sustainable footing and pass an IMF review, Sri Lanka unveiled a much-anticipated domestic debt restructuring framework last Thursday that seeks to rework part of the island nation's $42 billion domestic debt.
"This debt restructuring plan is essential for Sri Lanka to meet the target set by the IMF agreement to reduce debt from the current 128% of GDP to 95% of GDP by 2023," State Minister of Finance Shehan Semasinghe told parliament.
Implementing the domestic debt plan is also crucial to push forward negotiations with bondholders and key bilateral creditors China, Japan and India.
Sri Lanka aims to finalise debt restructuring talks by September.
Persons:
Finance Shehan Semasinghe, Sajith Premadasa, Shivangi Acharya, Andrew Cawthorne
Organizations:
International Monetary Fund, Sri, Finance, Thomson
Locations:
COLOMBO, Sri Lanka, China, Japan, India, New Delhi