Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Outgoing Socialist Government Leaves Bolivia With High Inflation, Empty Coffers, And Rising Debt


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Bolivia's National Institute of Statistics (INE) reported 18.09% cumulative inflation through August 2025, far above the 7.5% target. The conservative administration now inherits soaring prices, critically low central-bank reserves, and a widening budget deficit.

Monthly inflation eased to 1.01% in August after a 5.21% spike in June and 1.20% in July. Social protests and road blockades disrupted food and fuel deliveries, forcing producers to hike prices.

Unseasonal storms damaged crops, driving up meat, grain, and vegetable costs. Diesel shortages worsened transportation costs until renewed fuel imports, while gasoline supply stabilized by late August.

Yet diesel remains scarce. These shocks exposed Bolivia's fragile food and transport sectors and left consumers paying premiums on everyday goods.

The parallel-market dollar rate peaked at 20 bolivianos in May before returning near 12 bolivianos as informal dollar flows improved.



Meanwhile, Bolivia's central-bank reserves dropped to less than two months of import cover, one of the smallest cushions in the region.

On the fiscal front, the government ran a deficit exceeding 8% of GDP through mid-year, driven by subsidy programs and unexpected social spending. Public debt climbed above 60% of GDP, tightening fiscal space and raising borrowing costs.

The new government must rebuild reserves and close the budget gap while maintaining social peace. It needs to tighten spending, reform subsidies, and bolster revenue without igniting fresh unrest.

Restoring public order will keep supply chains functioning and temper price shocks. Bolivia's inflation crisis underscores its vulnerability to social unrest, climate events, and currency volatility.

For businesses and investors, this highlights the need for robust risk strategies in supply, currency, and fiscal planning. Bolivians will feel relief only when decisive policy measures restore fiscal health and stabilize prices.

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