Washington, DC: The Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) completed
today the first review of the extended arrangement under the Extended Fund
Facility (EFF) for Ecuador. The Board’s decision allows for an immediate
disbursement of SDR 1.42 billion (about US$2 billion), bringing Ecuador’s
total disbursements for budget support under the arrangement to about US$4
billion.
Ecuador’s 27-month EFF arrangement was approved by the Executive Board on
September 30, 2020 (see
Press Release No. 20/302) for SDR 4.615 billion (about US$6.5 billion or around 661 percent of
Ecuador’s quota). The program aims to support Ecuador’s policies to
stabilize the economy and protect lives and livelihoods, expand the
coverage of social assistance programs, ensure fiscal and debt
sustainability, and strengthen domestic institutions to lay the foundations
for strong, job-rich, and long-lasting growth that benefits all
Ecuadorians.
Following the Executive Board discussion on Ecuador, Ms. Antoinette Sayeh,
Deputy Managing Director and Acting Chair, issued the following statement:
“The Ecuadorian economy is showing nascent signs of economic recovery after
bottoming out in the second quarter. New COVID-19 infections and deaths
have moderated compared to the high levels seen in the Spring, reflecting
the authorities’ decisive actions to contain the outbreak. Economic
activity is now projected to contract by 9½ percent in 2020, which is an
improvement over the 11 percent contraction anticipated at program
approval.
“The authorities’ vigilant approach leading up to program approval helped
cushion delays in external financing. All end-September quantitative
performance criteria and indicative targets were met with large margins.
Moreover, the authorities continued to expand and improve well-targeted
social assistance, bringing in more than 270,000 low-income families into
the social safety net since July, ahead of their end-December goal, and
helping to mitigate the impact of the crisis on the most vulnerable groups.
“The authorities have continued to advance their reform agenda in key
areas. On governance and transparency, the National Assembly has approved
near unanimously the amendments to significantly enhance the
anti-corruption framework, and the authorities have expanded public access
to asset declarations of politically exposed persons. They have taken
important steps to strengthen the foundations for dollarization by aligning
the central bank’s internal audit function to best international standards
and finalizing the amendments to the organic monetary and financial code
(COMYF) for submission to the National Assembly. The authorities have also
adopted regulations on fiscal rules and the medium-term fiscal framework
under the organic budget code and developed a financial plan for next year.
These steps will improve public financial management and support fiscal
sustainability.
“Going forward, further reprioritization of spending as the recovery takes
hold will buttress fiscal sustainability and reduce public debt as a share
of GDP. Furthermore, a credible medium-term fiscal strategy that includes
an ambitious and progressive tax reform, and better aligns Ecuador’s
spending levels to regional peers would reduce the debt burden on future
generations.
“Swiftly enacting the reform amendments to COMYF will strengthen the
underpinnings of the dollarized system; as would the rebuilding of buffers.
Continuing to prudently apply regulatory and supervisory tools will help
the financial system withstand economic stress in the post-pandemic period.
Vigilantly monitoring credit risk accumulation and ensuring the liquidity
fund has the resources to provide emergency liquidity as intended will be
important. These arrangements should be complemented by strengthening
further the legal framework for the financial system, including enhanced
contingent arrangements.
“The EFF-supported program continues to face considerable risks. Globally,
uncertainty about the depth and duration of the pandemic still lingers.
Domestically, building a broad-based consensus and buy-in across the
political spectrum for key program objectives and policies would help
mitigate significant program implementation risks. With continued capacity
development and close coordination across public sector agencies, the
authorities can achieve their objectives and deliver a robust, job-rich
recovery that benefits all Ecuadorians.”