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Sri Lanka Regains Upper-Middle Income Status After Economic Recovery

Published on: 02 Jul 2026, 07:18 AM
Sri Lanka Regains Upper-Middle Income Status After Economic Recovery

The World Bank has upgraded Sri Lanka's status to an upper-middle-income economy, three years after the country faced its worst economic crisis that pushed it to the brink of collapse.

In its latest income classification update released on Wednesday (July 1, 2026), the World Bank reclassified Sri Lanka from the lower-middle income category after the economy expanded by 5% in 2025.

The expansion has been supported by a broad-based recovery across industries, along with growth in tourism and financial services.

Describing the country as 'a story of recovery', the World Bank stated: 'Just three years after a severe economic crisis brought the country to the brink of collapse in 2022, real GDP grew by 5% in 2025, driven by a rebound across industries and growth in financial and tourism services. The reclassification is a marker of resilience, though the country only narrowly crossed the threshold.'

The World Bank classifies countries into four income groups: high, upper middle, lower middle, and low. The milestone serves as a symbolic marker of the nation's economic rebound following its recent financial crisis.

The classifications are based on gross national income per capita estimates from the previous calendar year. This year's edition covered 218 countries, and the results will serve as a global reference until the end of June 2027.

The Easter Sunday attacks in 2019, the COVID-19 pandemic, and the subsequent balance-of-payments crisis culminated in the country's sovereign default in 2022, pushing the economy into its deepest downturn in decades.

The reclassification indicates progress made since then under a far-reaching economic stabilisation effort backed by the International Monetary Fund (IMF), alongside fiscal consolidation, monetary reforms, and external debt restructuring.

The recovery is attributed to a revival in tourism, stronger worker remittances, improving external sector performance, and a return to economic growth following two years of contraction.

Sri Lanka first entered the upper-middle-income category in 2019 before falling back to lower-middle-income status as economic growth slowed and income levels deteriorated amid mounting domestic and external pressures.

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