The Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) approved on
July 15 an SDR 149.88 million (about US$207.5million) Stand-By Arrangement
(SBA) and an SDR 74.94 million (about US$103.8 million) arrangement under
the Standby Credit Facility (SCF) for Honduras for a combined SDR 224.82
million (about US$311.3 million or 90 percent of Honduras’ quota). The
authorities intend to treat the arrangements as precautionary. These
arrangements provide support for the Honduran government’s economic and
institutional reform agenda over the next two years.
Following the Executive Board discussion, Mr. Mitsuhiro Furusawa Deputy
Managing Director and Chair, made the following statement:
“The Honduran authorities are implementing a comprehensive economic program
and reforms that aim at maintaining macroeconomic stability, reducing
vulnerabilities, protecting the most vulnerable, and bolstering inclusive
growth.
“Securing the fiscal position while protecting investment and social
spending is at the core of the program
. Adherence to the fiscal responsibility law (FRL) should be coupled with
reforms to address structural challenges in the electricity sector and
further revenue mobilization efforts, including through the revision of tax
exemptions. These reforms will help to reduce the infrastructure gap and
increase social spending, while simultaneously ensuring fiscal
sustainability.
“Reforms in the energy sector aim at enhancing efficiency in the provision
of electricity, boosting investment, and strengthening the financial
position of the public electricity company (ENEE). They will include
changes in the institutional framework, measures to set electricity tariffs
through an independent regulatory body, and governance and operational
reforms in ENEE.
The authorities have introduced subsidies to protect the most
vulnerable from tariff adjustments.
“Priority has been given to enhancing governance and transparency, and to
continue the fight against corruption. Efforts will aim at improving the
macroeconomic framework, increasing the quality of public spending, and
strengthening the rule of law—fundamental to improving the business
environment and fostering investment and employment.
“Monetary policy will continue to focus on controlling inflation. Reforms
will aim at strengthening monetary and financial institutions to support
the transition toward inflation targeting, including by adopting a more
flexible exchange rate regime. Vigilance in the financial sector will need
to continue, given foreign exchange credit growth.
“The program also includes measures to protect the poor and bolster gender
equality. It defines priority social spending that will be protected in
coming years; and comprises a set of high-impact interventions aimed at
alleviating poverty, fostering investment in human capital, and supporting
women entrepreneurship and participation in labor markets, which are
critical for long-term growth.”