Loan request shows Government’s inability to ease dollar crisis | Solicitud de préstamos muestra incapacidad del Gobierno para aliviar crisis de dólares

Analyst sees loan request agreement as evidence that the Government lacks the ability to alleviate the dollar crisis

Analista ve que acuerdo para solicitar créditos muestra que el Gobierno no tiene la capacidad para paliar la crisis de dólares

The business sector and the Government signed 17 points to address the dollar shortage crisis. Photo: APG

On Friday, after a meeting with business leaders, the government of Luis Arce announced an agreement to seek new external loans from international organizations, a move that analyst and president of the Tarija Economists Association, Fernando Romero, views as evidence that the executive lacks the ability to inject U.S. dollars into the Bolivian market or to resolve the foreign currency shortage in the country.

“This specific measure is, I believe, a clear sign that the Government is acknowledging it does not have the means, mechanisms, or sufficient capacity on its own—whether through income from state-owned enterprises, tax revenue, or raw material exports, which have notably declined, especially in natural gas. The only option to inject dollar liquidity into the public and private sectors and strengthen international reserves somewhat is through external loans,” Romero told Brújula Digital.

Romero’s response came after the Government and the business sector agreed to seek new loans from international organizations to supply the Bolivian market with foreign currency.

“We agreed to seek new external financing from international organizations to bring foreign currency into our economy, and we will work together on the tasks needed to achieve this goal,” said Economy Minister Marcelo Montenegro.

Romero reiterated that this measure clearly indicates the country is facing “foreign currency illiquidity, insolvency in foreign currency, and that the national Government cannot resolve these issues on its own and requires even political support from the private business sector.”

At the economic meeting, the Government and business leaders signed a 17-point agreement, including the proposal in question, and called on the Legislative Assembly to approve the international loans that are currently stalled.

However, Romero described the agreement as “an agreement between friends or an agreement not to lose friendship.”

“I could define it in two ways: an agreement between friends or an agreement not to lose friendship, and the other is that it’s more fluff than substance because these are not structural measures. They are medium- and long-term measures, not the short-term solutions that were expected, as there will be no immediate solutions to issues like fuel shortages, medicine shortages, the dollar scarcity, the high informal exchange rate, and no immediate actions have been taken to combat inflation,” Romero said.

BD/MC/JJC

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