Los Angeles Times: "USA
le presta 1,5B a Uruguay"
U.S. Lends $1.5 Billion to Uruguay
Latin America: The emergency move is a bid to ease the formerly
stable
nation's banking crisis and avoid an Argentina-style collapse.
Los Angeles Times Headlines
By CHRIS KRAUL,
WASHINGTON -- The Bush administration made an emergency $1.5-billion
loan
to Uruguay on Sunday in a bid to halt the country's banking crisis
and
limit the possibility of another Argentina-style economic collapse.
The loan was described as a "bridge" or short-term loan
until the
International Monetary Fund and other multinational lenders can
act on
Uruguay's behalf later this week.
Considered until recent months to be so stable and secure that it
was
described as the "Switzerland of South America," Uruguay
experienced an
outbreak of social unrest last week after the government closed
all banks
Tuesday to stop a run on the banking system.
Banks have remained shut since. The U.S. loan is intended to make
it
possible to reopen banks today.
The action appeared to mark a departure for the administration,
which has
generally opposed bailouts. But failure to act might have led to
financial
problems elsewhere in Latin America, where Argentina and Brazil
are
already facing trouble.
Although Uruguay has just 3.3 million people, it acts as a banking
center
for many South American nations, especially Argentina, whose citizens
have
come to rely on Uruguayan bank deposits as their own country's banking
system remains tightly restricted in the aftermath of a January
devaluation and a partial banking freeze that began in December.
A steady withdrawal of funds from Uruguay this year by cash- hungry
Argentines has accelerated in recent weeks as rumors swirled that
Uruguay
would follow Argentina's example and impose a freeze of its own.
The bank
holiday imposed Tuesday was the realization of those fears.
Foreign reserves have dwindled to $655 million from $3 billion a
year ago.
Violence erupted last week as depositors vented their outrage at
being
unable to access their funds.
In confirming the loan late Sunday, the Treasury Department praised
Uruguayan President Jorge Batlle for "courageous commitments
to ensure
that Uruguay remains a strong financial center."
"We are confident that this enhanced program will help Uruguay
address the
intense external pressures it has faced in recent months,"
Treasury
Secretary Paul H. O'Neill said in a statement. He arrived in Brazil
on
Sunday and will visit Uruguay and Argentina later in the week.
The U.S. acted after Uruguay's Congress approved emergency legislation
that blocked access to long-term deposits, similar to certificates
of
deposit, for three years in exchange for higher rates of interest.
Checking and savings accounts will not be affected.
Analysts noted parallels between the action on behalf of Uruguay
and
policies of the Clinton administration.
"The Bush administration has been critical of President Clinton's
willingness to respond to the Mexican and Southeast Asian crises,
saying
that too much money had been used to bail out countries suffering
because
of bad policy or because foreign investors had made bad decisions,"
UCLA
economics professor Sebastian Edwards said. "The key question
is whether
this [loan] signals a change in U.S. attitude with respect to currency
crises and whether the U.S. will be willing to give other large
aid
packages to countries in financial difficulties."
Other than a $10-billion assistance package to Turkey in April 2001,
the
Uruguay loan is the only sizable financial bailout President Bush
has made
since taking office.
But Uruguay poses a danger of financial contagion in Latin America.
Argentina, mired in a a four-year recession, continues to plead
for a
bailout from the IMF and World Bank. Brazil may soon need assistance
because of debt and a weakening currency.
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