Villar and Ávila debate impacts of monetary policy decisions

Leonardo Villar, general manager of Banco de la República, and Germán Ávila, finance minister, clashed in a political oversight debate on the fiscal impact of recent interest rate hikes. Villar defended the bank's autonomy and criticized government discrediting. Ávila responded by highlighting his guerrilla past and questioning Colombia's rate increases compared to other countries.

The debate took place on April 15 during political oversight on the fiscal, budgetary, and financial impact of Banco de la República's recent monetary decisions.

Leonardo Villar began by recalling the issuer's mandate to preserve the purchasing power of the currency. "The issuer has a very clear mandate and it is to preserve the purchasing power of the currency," Villar said, noting inflation was 32% when independence was established in 1991. He defended the finance minister's presence on the board as a feature that has worked for 35 years but warned it could become a veto on the bank's autonomy.

Villar rejected discrediting of board members, especially women, and criticized President Gustavo Petro's comments against codirector Laura Moisá, whom he called "Marxist." He explained that in 2025 the rate was cut from 12.75% to 9.25%, but inflation stopped falling, leading to a hike to 11.25% with a 4-3 vote.

Germán Ávila responded proudly: "Doctor Villar, I was proudly a guerrilla, I am an M-19 demobilized." He questioned Colombia raising rates when neither Europe nor the US is doing so, and criticized inflation surveys relying on public debt holders from the financial sector.

Villar rebutted that it is "a lie" codirector Olga Lucía Acosta was a guerrilla and stressed sustainably lowering inflation reduces rates. He recalled Ávila left the March 31 meeting over disagreement on the 100 basis point hike.

Makala yanayohusiana

Dramatic illustration of Colombia's central bank boardroom tension as Finance Minister walks out amid 11.25% rate hike vote.
Picha iliyoundwa na AI

Colombia's central bank raises rate to 11.25% in second 2026 hike amid government walkout

Imeripotiwa na AI Picha iliyoundwa na AI

Following its January hike to 10.25%, Colombia's Banco de la República raised its intervention rate by another 100 basis points to 11.25% in a tight 4-3 vote during its second meeting of the year. Finance Minister Germán Ávila walked out of the board meeting and announced the government's withdrawal from the central bank over disagreements. President Gustavo Petro backed the move and criticized the monetary policy.

In the latest clash amid tensions with Banco de la República over rate hikes, Colombia's Finance Minister Germán Ávila held a monetary policy forum without central bank Governor Leonardo Villar—who declined over timing concerns—and slammed the recent 200 basis-point increase for curbing 2026 growth to 2.6% while boosting public debt interest by $1.8 trillion.

Imeripotiwa na AI

Leonardo Villar, manager of Banco de la República, stated the April board meeting cannot proceed if Finance Minister Germán Ávila does not attend. He warned such absence would pressure the central bank's autonomy following a recent disagreement. Villar expressed confidence that common sense will prevail.

President Javier Milei closed the AmCham Summit 2026 defending fiscal and monetary adjustment amid March's 3.4% inflation. He attributed the rise to transitory factors like last year's shocks and promised that 'inflation is going to collapse'. He firmly rejected accepting more inflation to boost growth, calling it 'trash'.

Imeripotiwa na AI

Economist Guillermo Hang warned that Argentina's government's main achievement, falling inflation, is showing signs of wear after an AmCham meeting. Hang said consumption recovery has not materialized and there are doubts about economic activity and family incomes. Monthly inflation stopped decelerating eight or nine months ago.

After the Constitutional Court struck down the December 2025 emergency economic decree, the Colombian government will present a tax reform to raise $16 trillion. Finance Minister Germán Ávila and President Gustavo Petro confirmed the plan in response to the fiscal imbalance. The measure aims to avoid cuts to social spending and address inherited deficits.

Imeripotiwa na AI

Argentina's Central Bank (BCRA) decided to cut bank reserve requirements by five percentage points starting in April, freeing up liquidity for banks to issue more loans amid recession. Led by Santiago Bausili, the move aims to revive economic activity without derailing inflation control. Analysts note the shift to a more expansionary policy after months of monetary contraction.

Jumatatu, 6. Mwezi wa nne 2026, 09:40:26

Galípolo urges caution on interest rates amid Iran war

Ijumaa, 3. Mwezi wa nne 2026, 16:31:14

Petro proposes measures to mitigate interest rate hike

Jumamosi, 28. Mwezi wa tatu 2026, 21:23:28

Banxico cuts benchmark rate to 6.75% in 3-2 vote

Ijumaa, 20. Mwezi wa tatu 2026, 16:50:35

Milei cuts rates despite inflation alarms

Jumamosi, 14. Mwezi wa pili 2026, 10:12:52

Government declares economic emergency due to rains in Colombia

Ijumaa, 6. Mwezi wa pili 2026, 21:55:45

Banxico holds interest rate at 7% and adjusts inflation forecast

Alhamisi, 5. Mwezi wa pili 2026, 19:17:32

Banxico keeps interest rate at 7 percent

Jumapili, 1. Mwezi wa pili 2026, 23:18:02

Luis Carlos Reyes calls for surgical fiscal cuts in Colombia

Ijumaa, 30. Mwezi wa kwanza 2026, 17:56:22

Banco de la República hikes interest rate to 10.25% amid inflation surge and minimum wage controversy

Jumatano, 28. Mwezi wa kwanza 2026, 07:50:01

Financial market expects moderate hike in central bank's interest rate

 

 

 

Tovuti hii inatumia vidakuzi

Tunatumia vidakuzi kwa uchambuzi ili kuboresha tovuti yetu. Soma sera ya faragha yetu kwa maelezo zaidi.
Kataa