World

Bolivia's president avows economic sovereignty, rebuffs IMF proposals

Sep 17, 2022

La Paz [Bolivia], September 17: Bolivian President Luis Arce on Friday declined recommendations from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) aimed at redirecting Bolivia's economy, and reaffirmed the independence and efficacy of the economic model followed by his government.
"Our 'Economic, Social, Communitary, Productive Model' is sovereign and continues to demonstrate its success in reducing social and economic inequalities," Arce posted on social media.
"That is why we do not accept the proposals of the #IMF, which would be detrimental to the people, especially the working class," Arce added.
In a report released Thursday, the IMF recommended Bolivia reassess the exchange rate between its national currency and the U.S. dollar, which has remained the same since 2011, and government subsidies of fuel and certain economic sectors.
Bolivian Minister of Economy and Public Finance, Marcelo Montenegro, on Thursday said the IMF's recommendations regarding subsidies were contradictory and the government had no plans to follow them.
He dismissed the IMF's formulas as outdated, saying they were applied in past decades by neoliberal governments, but are no longer viable today, especially in Bolivia.
The stable exchange rate is due to the national currency's strength, said Montenegro, stressing that each country must formulate and apply its own economic and financial policy in a sovereign manner, unfettered by the IMF.
Source: Xinhua