Sunday 19 May 2024

Costa Rica Rating Cut Prompts Government to Seek Legislative Talks

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18 May 2024 - At The Banks - Source: BCCR

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COSTA RICA NEWS (Bloomberg) – Costa Rica’s government said it will hold talks with legislative parties this week after the country was cut to junk status by Moody’s Investor’s Service, citing political difficulties in narrowing the budget deficit.

One of the buildings that make up the current legislative complex.
One of the buildings that make up the current legislative complex.

The government began meeting different factions in the Legislastive Assembly Friday, according to a statement sent from Casa Presidencial. Solis took office in May vowing to reduce the deficit by fighting tax evasion, freezing new hires and, beginning in 2016, raising some levies. His YS$14.7 billion budget for next year forecast a deficit of 6.6 percent, up from 6 percent this year.

The failure of multiple Costa Rican governments to address the widening deficit and pass new tax legislation prompted Moody’s to lower Costa Rica’s rating to Ba1 from Baa3 this week, putting the $50 billion economy in the same high-yield, high-risk category as Morocco and Portugal.

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Yields on Costa Rica’s 2023 bonds have jumped 56 basis points, or 0.56 percentage point, to 5.49 percent this month.

Opposition legislator Otton Solis, who chairs the finance committee, said yesterday that the downgrade may prompt the Legisaltive Assembly to speed up efforts to address the deficit.

“There are some in  the Legislature enthusiastic about reducing the deficit,” Solis, who isn’t related to the president, said in a phone interview. “Legislators had accepted the plan to discuss fiscal reform through the middle of 2016 and I think this could create the climate to accelerate that.”

Source: Bloomberg; Casa Presidencial

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