Washington, DC: The Executive Board of the International
Monetary Fund (IMF) approved today a successor two-year arrangement for
Peru under the Flexible Credit Line (FCL) in an amount equivalent to SDR
4.0035 billion (about US$ 5.4 billion)
[1]
and noted the cancellation by Peru of the previous arrangement in the
amount of SDR 8.07 billion. The Peruvian authorities stated their intention
to treat the new arrangement as precautionary.
The FCL was established on March 24, 2009, as part of a major reform of the
Fund’s lending framework (see Press Release No. 09/85). It allows its
recipients to draw on the credit line at any time and is designed to
flexibly address both actual and potential balance of payments needs to
help boost market confidence. Drawings under the FCL are not phased nor
tied to ex-post conditionality as in regular IMF-supported programs. This
large, upfront access with no ex-post conditionality is justified by the
very strong policy fundamentals and institutional policy frameworks and
sustained track records of countries that qualify for the FCL, which gives
confidence that their economic policies will remain strong, and they will
respond appropriately to the balance of payments difficulties that they are
encountering or could encounter.
Following the Executive Board’s discussion on Peru, Mr. Kenji Okamura,
Deputy Managing Director, made the following statement:
“Peru’s very strong economic fundamentals and policy frameworks—anchored by
a credible inflation targeting framework, a flexible exchange rate,
effective financial sector supervision and regulation, and a solid
medium-term fiscal framework—have allowed the authorities to deliver a
comprehensive and timely response to the COVID-19 pandemic and promote
growth. As a result, and spurred by robust external demand, favorable terms
of trade, and a surge in construction, Peru’s economy recovered strongly in
2021, registering one of the highest growth rates in the region.
“Nevertheless, the Peruvian economy remains exposed to elevated risks,
including from renewed waves of the COVID-19 pandemic, slowing economic
activity in key trade partner countries, the war in Ukraine, tighter global
financial conditions, and political uncertainty. The new arrangement under
the Flexible Credit Line will continue to play an important role in
supporting the authorities’ macroeconomic strategy by providing insurance
against tail risks and bolstering market confidence.
“The authorities intend to treat the arrangement as precautionary and exit
the arrangement when external conditions allow. The lower level of access
requested—300 percent of quota, down from 600 percent in the FCL approved
in 2020—as part of the authorities’ strategy of gradually phasing out the
use of the facility is a reflection of the country’s very strong
fundamentals, including the additional buffers built with the accumulation
of international reserves, as well as the decline in external financing
needs, since the 2020 arrangement.”
[1]
Dollar amount based on the Special Drawing Right (SDR) quote of 1
USD = SDR 0.74121 on May 27, 2022