Uruguay financial crisis
remembered.
by MEDIA CONTACT RESOURCES, INC.
The summer of 2007 is the five year anniversary of the resolution
of the 2002 financial crisis in Uruguay. As the crisis developed, the
Financial Times (London) on July 29, 2002 said that Uruguay "will
need a miracle similar to its World Cup victory in 1950 to
survive." According to a presentation given on May 29, 2007 at a
conference in Montevideo by a former United States (US) Treasury
official who was a key player in helping to resolve the crisis, the
Times also said that the odds against a solution were 100 to 1.
The Treasury official recounted to the conference that over the
weekend of July 27-28, 2002, Uruguayan officials were desperately
working with the US Treasury in Washington to avoid default. One
Uruguayan at the Washington meeting said that default would mean
"going back to the stone age" for his country.
The most immediate problem at the time was a run on Uruguay's
banks with consumers worried that the banks would run out of dollars. In
a risky maneuver, the US Treasury analyzed Uruguayan deposits and found
that "with a lot of arm twisting" with other international
players, if dollar checking and savings deposits were backed 100
percent, this would convince consumers to keep their money in the banks.
The solution worked, and as the International Monetary Fund (IMF) said
on December 7, 2006, "Uruguay's recovery from the crisis of
2002 has exceeded all expectations."
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NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.