IMF Executive Board Concludes 2010 Article IV Consultation with Latvia
OREANDA-NEWS. August 18, 2010. The Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) concluded the 2010 Article IV consultation with the Republic of Latvia and completed the Third Review of the country’s performance under an economic program supported by a Stand-By Arrangement (SBA).1 Completion of the review makes available an amount equivalent to SDR 90 million (about €105.8 million or USD 135.6 million), bringing total disbursements under the SBA to SDR 982 million (about €1.15 billion or USD 1.48 billion).
Background
Strengthened policy implementation since mid-2009, including sizeable fiscal adjustment, as well as financial and policy support from international program partners have helped stabilize Latvia’s economy and restore a measure of balance after the crisis. Domestic interest rates and external measures of risk have both come down dramatically since 2009. Deposits, which fell sharply early in the crisis, have returned to near pre-crisis levels, which along with a sharp improvement in the current account and international support have boosted foreign exchange reserves and restored confidence in
Executive Board Assessment
Executive Directors commended the authorities for undertaking difficult fiscal and financial sector reforms, which have helped stabilize the economy and contributed to a rebound after last year’s deep recession. Although near-term vulnerabilities have declined substantially, the recovery is still fragile and significant medium-term challenges remain toward the goal of euro adoption. Directors underscored the importance of sustained fiscal adjustment, restoration of financial sector health, and continued structural reforms aimed at reorienting growth toward the tradable sector, boosting employment and competitiveness, and improving the business environment.
Directors emphasized that considerable fiscal adjustment is still needed, especially on the expenditure side, to preserve debt sustainability and lower the deficit in line with the
Directors welcomed the substantial improvement in competitiveness since early 2009, attributable in part to the marked decline in unit labor costs. Additional wage and price adjustment, together with structural reforms, would help close any remaining competitiveness gap, further enhance confidence in the quasi-currency board exchange rate regime, and reorient the economy toward the export sector.
Directors commended efforts to address
Directors welcomed the progress in strengthening financial sector regulation and supervision, bank resolution procedures, and credit and liquidity risk management rules. They emphasized the need to ensure that banks fully comply with regulations and maintain adequate provisioning against nonperforming loans. Given high levels of private sector debt, further steps would also be needed to facilitate market-based debt restructuring, streamline insolvency and foreclosure procedures and reduce costs, and address tax disincentives. Directors called for rapid action to restructure the two state-owned banks, including preparation of a restructuring plan for Mortgage and Land Bank.
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