IMF Signals Expanded Support as Sri Lanka Faces Severe Economic Shock After Cyclone

Economic implications, recovery priorities, and fiscal outlook Sri Lanka is once again confronting economic turbulence this time not from external debt markets or inflationary pressures, but from nature itself. The recent cyclone and severe flooding have disrupted daily life, forced mass displacement, damaged infrastructure, and halted business activity across several provinces. Early estimates from disaster-management […]
Sri Lanka’s Cyclone Ditwah Response: Infrastructure, Aswesuma & Mahapola Welfare, and the Urgency of Systemic Reform

Cyclone Ditwah has emerged as one of the most devastating climate events in Sri Lanka’s recent history. As of early morning December 4, 2025, official figures report 479 deaths, 356 people missing, and over 1.58 million individuals affected across all 25 districts. The government has declared 22 districts as national disaster-affected areas, triggering emergency protocols […]
Floods, Landslides & Urban Chaos: Why Sri Lanka Must Reinvent Its Disaster Infrastructure

Cyclone Ditwah has done more than disrupt daily life. It has exposed the fragility of Sri Lanka’s infrastructure a system that buckles under pressure, collapses under intense rainfall, and leaves communities stranded when they most need protection. Flooded highways, submerged neighbourhoods, collapsing bridges, and paralysed transport networks are no longer occasional disasters; they are predictable […]
Rebuilding After the Cyclone: Why Recovery Must Start With People, Not Projects

When a cyclone tears through a country, the immediate images are always the same; fallen trees, flooded homes, damaged roads, boats pushed inland, families sheltering in schools. But long after the water recedes and the news cycle shifts, the real recovery quietly begins in kitchens, shops, fields, classrooms, and tea stalls. It is a slow, […]
After Cyclone Ditwah: What Sri Lanka’s Disaster Readiness Really Reveals

Cyclone Ditwah will be remembered not only for the devastation it caused, but for what it exposed: Sri Lanka’s disaster-management machinery is still far from ready for a climate era defined by intense storms, unpredictable rainfall, and rapid-onset emergencies. The cyclone’s toll lives lost, homes destroyed, roads submerged, communities displaced reveals a reality that cannot […]