Impact of Climate Finance on Debt Sustainability: An Analysis of Green Climate Finance and Debt-for-Climate Mechanisms in Sri Lanka

dc.contributor.authorRazana, J. F.
dc.contributor.authorPerera, L. A. S.
dc.date.accessioned2025-05-15T10:08:17Z
dc.date.issued2025
dc.description.abstractIntroduction: Unsustainable national debt and growing climate change vulnerability are Sri Lanka's two main problems. This paper explores how climate finance tools like debt-for-climate swaps and green bonds might reduce the nation's debt load while boosting climate resilience. A substantial empirical evidence vacuum about the quantitative effect of climate funding on debt sustainability is filled by the study. Methodology: The study used secondary data from 2015–2023 that was obtained from organizations such as the Central Bank of Sri Lanka, the IMF, and the Green Climate Fund. It did this by using a positivist research philosophy and a deductive technique. The association between debt-to-GDP ratios and climate finance inflows was assessed using statistical techniques such as regression and correlation analysis. Findings: The results showed that while climate financing systems have theoretical potential, there is currently little evidence of their actual influence on debt sustainability. Negligible regression results and weak correlations imply that present inflows are not enough to considerably lower Sri Lanka's burden of debt. The primary barriers were found to be ineffective resource allocation, institutional imperfections and a lack of conformity with national fiscal policy. The study highlights the possibility of expanding these mechanisms and incorporating them into all-encompassing debt management plans despite these barriers. Conclusion: According to the study's findings, climate finance can help address Sri Lanka's environmental and economic problems, but its efficacy is dependent on improved policy coordination, larger funding scales, and strengthened institutional ability. Among the suggestions are improving governance structures, encouraging private sector involvement, and coordinating climate finance instruments with more comprehensive fiscal plans.
dc.identifier.citationRazana, J. F., & Perera, L. A. S. (2025). Impact of Climate Finance on Debt Sustainability: An Analysis of Green Climate Finance and Debt-for-Climate Mechanisms in Sri Lanka. 13th Students’ Research Symposium 2023/2024. Department of Finance, Faculty of Commerce and Management Studies, University of Kelaniya, Sri Lanka.
dc.identifier.urihttp://repository.kln.ac.lk/handle/123456789/29184
dc.publisherDepartment of Finance, Faculty of Commerce and Management Studies, University of Kelaniya, Sri Lanka.
dc.subjectclimate finance
dc.subjectdebt sustainability
dc.subjectgreen bonds
dc.subjectdebt-for-climate swaps
dc.subjectSri Lanka
dc.subjecteconomic resilience
dc.subjectclimate adaptation
dc.subjectinstitutional capacity
dc.titleImpact of Climate Finance on Debt Sustainability: An Analysis of Green Climate Finance and Debt-for-Climate Mechanisms in Sri Lanka
dc.typeArticle

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