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Lankan July trade gap shrinks

Wednesday, 19 September 2007


COLOMBO, Sept 18 (AFP): Sri Lanka's trade deficit in July narrowed 35.1 per cent from a year earlier to 225 million dollars in July as clothes and tea exports surged, according to official data today.
July imports rose 6.2 per cent to 915.5 million dollars year-on-year while exports climbed 33.9 per cent to 690.5 million dollars, driven by higher sales of clothes, tea and vegetable cooking oil, the Central Bank of Sri Lanka said.
For the January-to-July period, the deficit has shrunk 15.6 per cent from a year earlier to 1.8 billion dollars, helped by a 3.9 per cent drop in the island's import oil bill, the bank said.
The fall in the oil bill in the seven-month period has been helped by price hedging which the government introduced in February.
A jump in international oil prices has strained the economy which has no crude oil reserves of its own.
The island had a balance of payments of 151 million dollars for the seven-month period, mainly thanks to remittances from Sri Lankans employed abroad, the central bank said.
Remittances, principally from Sri Lankans working in the Gulf and Asian countries, climbed 19.0 per cent to 1.5 billion dollars in the period to end July.
The island's gross official reserves stood at 2.7 billion dollars at the end of July, enough to finance three months of imports, the bank said.