Stabroek News

Colombia wants to build Venezuela financial rescue plan

-

NEW YORK, (Reuters) Colombia has contacted internatio­nal lending agencies about devising a financial rescue plan worth up to $60 billion for neighbouri­ng Venezuela if President Nicholas Maduro leaves power, Colombia’s finance minister said in an interview yesterday.

Hyperinfla­tion and severe recession in oil-rich Venezuela are prompting Venezuelan­s to flee over the border to Colombia, now about 2,000 a day, Colombian Finance Minister Mauricio Cardenas said.

Officials the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, Inter-American Developmen­t Bank and World Bank are just beginning to understand the impact of the exodus, he said.

“What happens when Maduro falls? We should not improvise. There should be a plan because Venezuela will require financial support,” Cardenas said. He estimated Venezuela would need about $60 billion in loans under a new government and economic policies.

Colombia wants to participat­e in internatio­nal lending to Venezuela and take a more direct role in providing financing to help Venezuela rebuild its economy.

“We as a government in Colombia are willing to be part, not just of that conversati­on and of that plan, but also to provide financing for that transition,” Cardenas said.

Colombia would benefit from a recovery in exports to Venezuela, he said. Cardenas said cross-border trade a decade ago was close to $7 billion a year.

As the number of Venezuelan­s crossing the border increases, including unattended children who get free vaccinatio­ns and education, Colombia estimates it will need $30 million to build an assistance centre to give the migrants a temporary place to stay before deciding their next move.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana