IMF Staff Country Reports

Panama: Selected Issues

March 28, 2013

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Format: Chicago

International Monetary Fund. Western Hemisphere Dept. "Panama: Selected Issues", IMF Staff Country Reports 2013, 089 (2013), accessed 12/7/2025, https://doi.org/10.5089/9781484344477.002

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Summary

Panama’s extensive trade and financial linkages make it vulnerable to adverse external shocks, and this would have a sizable impact on Panama’s real activity. In the absence of monetary policy, macroprudential policy tools could usefully complement microprudential tools. A macroprudential supervisory body must possess the ability or power to collect and analyze firm-, market-, and global-level data to detect risks before they develop into full-blown crises. This study analyzes Panama’s tax structure, performance, and administration in order to identify priority areas for further strengthening

Subject: Banking, Financial institutions, Financial sector policy and analysis, Financial sector stability, Loans, Macroprudential policy, Macroprudential policy instruments, Revenue administration

Keywords: banking center, canal traffic, Central America, CR, external shock, Financial sector stability, Global, ISCR, Loans, Macroprudential policy, Macroprudential policy instruments, output fluctuation, output response, Panama, Panama canal, revenue, VAT, Western Hemisphere