Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Ecuador's Fiscal Shock Therapy And The Gamble Behind Noboa's Calm


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Daniel Noboa has done something unusual in Latin America. In just two years, he pulled Ecuador away from a fiscal meltdown without defaulting, printing money or blaming everything on“the system.”

He did it the hard way: higher taxes, more expensive fuel and a promise that discipline now will mean stability later.

When Noboa took office in late 2023, the state was almost broke. The government owed billions of dollars to suppliers, local authorities and the social security system.

Officials worried about whether they could pay salaries on time. For a small, dollarized country, that was a red flag. Ecuador cannot devalue its currency. If dollars run out, the country simply stops.

To stop that slide, Noboa raised VAT from 12% to 15%. That tax now brings in most of the state's income.


Ecuador's Fiscal Shock Therapy And The Gamble Behind Noboa's Calm
Oil, once the main pillar, has lost weight in the budget. Families noticed the change in every supermarket bill.

Small businesses felt squeezed. Yet the government's cash flow improved and arrears started to fall.

Then came the real political test. In 2025, Noboa scrapped the diesel subsidy that cost the state more than a billion dollars a year.

Prices at the pump jumped. Indigenous groups and transport unions blocked roads for over a month. Past presidents had caved under similar pressure.

Noboa held the line, arguing that subsidies fed smuggling and illegal mining more than they helped the poor.

This toughness impressed markets and lenders. Ecuador secured a new IMF program, more multilateral loans and better treatment from ratings agencies.

Bond prices recovered. Talk of an imminent default faded. For investors and expats, the message is clear: the risk of sudden collapse has dropped.

But the deeper story is less comfortable. Growth is still weak. Many Ecuadorians work in the informal sector. Big investment has not yet arrived.

On social media, one camp cheers“order and seriousness,” while another sees a government that asks ordinary people to sacrifice while the state itself changes too slowly.

Ecuador has become a live experiment. Can strict fiscal medicine and tougher security really deliver a safer, more predictable country before voters lose patience with the pain?

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The Rio Times

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