March 30 (Bloomberg) -- Sri Lanka’s economy  expanded at the fastest pace in five quarters as the government stepped  up spending on new roads and ports after the end of a quarter- century  of civil war in the country.
     Gross domestic product rose 6.2 percent in the  three months ended Dec. 31 from a year earlier after gaining 4.2 percent  in the previous quarter, the statistics department said in a statement  in Colombo today.
     President Mahinda Rajapaksa, who was reelected  for a six- year term in January after defeating the Tamil Tiger rebels  in May, has pledged to spend $1 billion on ports, roads and power plants  in 2010. Reconstruction in the $41 billion South Asian economy is  boosting profit in companies including Tokyo Cement Co. Lanka Plc and  Central Industries Plc.
     “The infrastructure investments will have a  spillover effect in the economy,” Saminda Weerasinghe, research manager  at Acuity Stockbrokers Pvt. in Colombo, said before the report. “It will  help even faster growth in the second half of 2010.”
     Central Bank of Sri Lanka Governor Nivard Cabraal  on March 18 maintained benchmark interest rates at a five-year low to  boost consumer demand and drive growth to as much as 7 percent in 2010.  Sri Lanka’s reverse repurchase rate is 9.75 percent and the repurchase  rate is 7.5 percent.
                          Low Inflation
     Cabraal can afford to keep borrowing costs low  because of tame inflation in the country. Consumer prices in the  capital, Colombo, rose 6.9 percent in February from a year earlier,  almost half the average inflation rate between 2004 and 2009.
     Commercial bank loans rose to 1.196 trillion  rupees ($10.5 billion) in January from 1.195 trillion in December, the  fourth gain in five months, according to the central bank, an indicator  of growing consumer spending.
     Low interest rates are also critical to support  domestic demand as Sri Lanka’s exports may slow in the coming months  after the European Union on Feb. 15 said it will suspend preferential  trade benefits to the island nation because of human rights  “shortcomings” during the war.
     Sri Lankan exports rose 6.4 percent in December  to $723.4 million after a yearlong decline.
     Peace has prompted foreign companies, including  HSBC Holdings Plc and Emirates Telecommunications Corp., to start  operations in the island’s northern and eastern areas that were earlier  under the control of the separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam.
     HSBC Holdings, Europe’s biggest bank, in February  opened the first branch by any foreign bank in Sri Lanka’s northern  Jaffna peninsula.
                         Start Operations
     Etisalat, the United Arab Emirates’ biggest phone  company, started services in Jaffna on Feb. 26 after acquiring Tigo  Pvt., the Sri Lankan unit of Millicom International Cellular SA, for  $155 million in October.
     Demand for building roads and ports after the end  of the war helped lift sales at Tokyo Cement by 79 percent in the three  months ended Dec. 31.
     Sri Lanka plans to invite overseas and local  companies this month to set up business in a new $550 million tax-free  port zone in the island’s south. The country is also seeking foreign  investments to help build a new terminal in Colombo port, Sri Lanka  Ports Authority Chairman Priyath Wickrarma said March 5.

 
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