Washington, DC: The Executive Board of the International
Monetary Fund (IMF) concluded the Financial Sector Assessment Program
(FSAP) [1]with
Ecuador on August 29, 2023 without convening formal discussions.
[2]The
Financial Sector Stability Assessment [SD1](FSSA)
report was completed on July 31, 2023. The report is based on the work of
joint IMF/World Bank FSAP missions to Ecuador during November-December 2022
and April-May 2023.
Ecuador’s financial system is dominated by banks and credit cooperatives.
While dollarization provides an important anchor for the Ecuadorean
economy, systemic liquidity risks are high due to the limited capacity of
the central bank to provide liquidity. The financial sector is overall
resilient to adverse macrofinancial shocks but some institutions have
meaningful solvency and liquidity vulnerabilities. To preserve confidence it
is key to enhance capitalization, promptly recognize loan losses, and
address unviable institutions.
The FSSA concluded that institutional framework for financial sector
oversight is complex, uncoordinated, and prone to political intervention.
Reforms are needed to enhance supervisory independence, prioritize safety
and soundness, separate prudential supervision from other functions, and
substantially strengthen the supervisory approach. The macroprudential
framework needs further progress by developing stronger financial
sector-wide analytical capacity, improving information sharing and
coordination, and clarifying the roles between multiple agencies.
Similarly, the legal framework for bank resolution should be enhanced by
establishing clearer responsibilities for the involved agencies, expanding
the resolution toolkit, and ensuring that resolution decisions are not
reversed. The deposit insurer’s access to information and back-up funding
should be improved, and the existing arrangements should be reviewed to
provide more flexible emergency liquidity assistance. Governance and
internal controls of public banks also need urgent strengthening and
interest rate caps should migrate to a usury rate.
[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.