The central bank president, José de Gregorio, has
claimed that he and his fellow policymakers had steered the economy through the
financial crisis in September and October without incurring too much damage.The
bank was quick to reverse its policy of buying dollars to keep
the exchange rate competitive and to start selling dollars to banks
so that they could have sufficient liquidity to avoid problems. The bank
also refused to increase interest rates at its 9 October meetings, holding them at
8.25%, despite a poor inflation figure for September. It expects the
economy to grow faster in the second half of this year than
in the first half. It noted that domestic demand was continuing to grow
comparatively fast, which was leading to higher imports and a stable outlook for unemployment. On
11 October the bank decided to inject US$5bn into the domestic money
markets to improve liquidity. The move was similar to those announced by industrialised
countries in North America; Europe and Asia. The move should also take some of
pressure off the peso because the bank is selling dollars for pesos. The money
will inject gradually, at weekly auctions of US$500m. The swaps (of pesos for
dollars) will alternate between 60 days and 90 days.
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