WASHINGTON, DC:
The Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) concluded the
Financial Sector Assessment Program (FSAP)
[1]
with Chile on December 3, 2021 without a meeting.
[2]
The Financial Sector Stability Assessment
[SD1]
(FSSA) report was completed on November 17, 2021. The report is based on
the work of joint IMF/World Bank FSAP remote missions to Chile during
March-April and July-August 2021.
The FSSA concluded that the financial system in Chile functions well
overall within a sound regulatory framework. The report found that the twin
shocks of social unrest in late 2019 and COVID-19 were adeptly managed,
thanks to massive and well-coordinated supervisory and fiscal policy
responses as well as unprecedented liquidity support from the Central Bank
of Chile (BCCh).
Mutual and pension fund redemptions during 2019 and subsequent BCCh crisis
measures that were used to relieve the impact of the shocks highlighted
some structural liquidity risks. Accordingly, the FSSA recommended a
strengthening of the liquidity management framework for mutual funds, the
development of the interbank repo market, and a strengthening of central
bank risk management practices.
The funded pension system that has been instrumental in market deepening is
under threat due in part to a series of withdrawals. The FSSA recommended
that further pension withdrawals and life annuity liquidations be halted.
In addition, pension fund regulation and investment options should be
improved to promote long-term investment and minimize excessive portfolio
switching.
The important reorganization of the financial regulatory authorities has
been finalized, and Basel III will be implemented starting in December
2021. The banking supervisory framework was found to be robust but needs
further improvements in some areas, including consolidated supervision and
some aspects of credit risk.
Banks have remained profitable through the crisis, partially supported by
central bank financing and government-guaranteed SME lending. The FSAP
found that the banking sector is sufficiently capitalized overall and
recommended that banks should ensure continued resilience by transitioning
to Basel III-compliant capital structures and completing announced capital
raises. Pandemic-related measures should be carefully withdrawn when
appropriate. A bank resolution mechanism and deposit insurance should be
introduced, and a risk-based capital framework is needed for insurers.
[1]
The Financial Sector Assessment Program (FSAP), established in
1999, is a comprehensive and in-depth assessment of a country’s
financial sector. FSAPs provide input for Article IV consultations
and thus enhance Fund surveillance. FSAPs are mandatory for the 47
jurisdictions with systemically important financial sectors and
otherwise conducted upon request from member countries. The key
findings of an FSAP are summarized in a Financial System Stability
Assessment (FSSA).
[2]
The Executive Board takes decisions under its lapse-of-time
procedure when the Board agrees that a proposal can be considered
without convening formal discussions.