"the
law’s general
thrust is to
subordinate
financial
sector
activities to
social
objectives
with
instruments
that could
create risks
to financial
stability.
Main features
of the law
include: (i)
provisions to
regulate
lending rates
and set
minimum
lending quotas
for the
productive
sector and
social
housing; (ii)
discretion to
set floors on
deposit rates;
and (iii)
mechanisms to
enhance
consumer
protection and
financial
access in
rural areas."
On February
10, Inner City
Press asked
the IMF's
Mission Chief
for Bolivia
Ana Corbacho
to explain
this
criticism, and
more generally
to reconcile
Bolivia's and
President
Evo Morales'
public
critique of
the IMF
with this
visit.
In response to
a question
from Inner
City Press at
UN
headquarters
in January,
Morales
recounted how
the IMF
dominated
Bolivia in the
past, but now
decision
making
had passed
from the
"Chicago to
the Bolivia
boys."
The IMF Article
IV staff
report says
they met with
"Minister of
Economy and
Public
Finances Arce,
Central Bank
President
Zabalaga,
Minister of
Planning Caro,
other senior
public
officials, and
representatives
of the private
sector. Mr.
Tamez and Ms.
Kroytor (LEG)
provided
inputs on the
new Financial
Services Law
at
headquarters."
The IMF staff
report also
says that "the
instruments
chosen
(interest rate
caps and
minimum credit
quotas) could
reduce the
profitability
and lending
funds of
financial
institutions,
over-leverage
target
beneficiaries,
and complicate
the conduct of
monetary
policy."
Ms.
Corbacho, on
the February
10 embargoed
press
conference
call largely
in Spanish on
which only
three media
asked
questions,
replied that
Bolivia for
example
capping
interest rates
might impact
financial
institution's
profitability
and thus
"financial
stability."
She
said the
government
responded that
financial
inclusion has
not progressed
fast enough
and so they
are taking
these steps.
She the
Article IV
discussion,
which are held
with each IMF
member, were
"very open and
frank" with
Bolivia, and
thus positive.
To
Inner City
Press, the
IMF's
willingness to
criticize
consumer
protection in
Bolivia stands
in contrast to
the IMF's
deference to
the US on the
how to manage
and
communicate
the Federal
Reserve's
tapering, the
debt ceiling
-- anything,
essentially.
On
February 25,
Bolivia's Vice
President
Alvaro Garcia
Linera with
his UN
Permanent
Representative
Sacha Llorenti
translating
also described
this is a key
time for sustainable
development,
and that the
G77 and China
will play a
key role,
since it has
133 members
(2/3 of the UN
membership)
and represents
70% of the world's
population.
Given that, it
was noteworthy
that the
pro-Western
"United Nations
Correspondents
Association"
did not send a
single one of
their 15
Executive Committee
members to the
briefing by Bolivia's
vice president
about the
Group of 77 and
China.
Tellingly,
UNCA last July
used the big
third floor
room the UN
gives them to
host
Saudi-supported
Syria rebel
leader Ahmad
al Jarba for a
faux
"UN briefing."
In the same
room, also
tellingly, the
outgoing UN spokesperson
Martin Nesirky
will hold his
farewell on
March 7. His
deputy Eduardo
del Buey held
his farewell,
more
appropriately,
in the UN
Spokesperson's
office. But
this UN is
going more and
more Gulf and
Western, with
its
spokesperson's
job now
passing to
France.
We'll
have more on
this -- for
now, we will
link to Bolivia's
Vice
President's
comments on
G77, and on
the IMF. Watch
this site.