The truth about Asian investment banking
China’s $1.7 trillion hangover

China’s $1.7 trillion hangover

Up to 40% of China’s $1.7 trillion LGFV loans are at high risk of default. What’s a panicking Beijing to do?

April 2008

Sri Lanka: Hearts and jobs in Sri Lanka


"What keeps me awake is not the obvious things that outsiders might think but the same things common to other central banks: food prices, inflation"
Ajith Cabraal

Chatting with Ajith Cabraal, the amiable governor of the Central Bank of Sri Lanka, in his lofty eyrie above Colombo, one could be forgiven for thinking that he’s presiding over some approximation of a Switzerland-sur-tropique.

Although his Indian Ocean homeland is besieged by a civil war escalated by an ambitious president with an advancing personality cult, "things aren’t nearly as bad as they might appear on CNN," Cabraal says.

Lankans labour under lending rates and inflation both hovering around a crippling 20% but Cabraal claims "our economy has always been very resilient, services are doing well and our industries are buoyant". A chartered accountant two years into the governorship after a stint as economic adviser to the populist president, Mahinda Rajapakse,...


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