HomeEmergencyColombia's Petro calls for economic emergency, fresh financing law

Colombia’s Petro calls for economic emergency, fresh financing law

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BOGOTA, April 7 (Reuters) - Colombian President ‌Gustavo Petro said on Tuesday evening that his government would submit ​an economic emergency decree and a new tax reform bill to Congress to balance the 2026 budget.

The president said ⁠that if Congress did not approve his economic proposals, he would enact them by decree.

"If necessary, we will declare a new economic emergency in Colombia because what we must save is the ​standard of living, which is now much higher than at any time in history," Petro said in a televised ‌address.

The president also asked his interior minister to submit a tax reform bill to Congress in a bid to finance the unbalanced 2026 budget, but did not specify the amount expected to be ⁠collected.

Petro's announcement comes amid a standoff with the central bank. Finance Minister German ⁠Avila resigned from the central bank's board last week following disagreements over the bank's decision to raise the benchmark interest rate by 100 basis points to 11.25%.

However, analysts say it is unlikely that the current Congress, whose term ends in June, will approve Petro’s economic proposals.

Colombia elected a ‌new Congress in March, which will be sworn in on July 20 and assume its duties ⁠once the winner of the upcoming presidential election is determined.

Colombians ‌will go to the polls in late May to elect ​Petro’s successor. If no candidate secures more than half of the votes, a runoff election will be held in June. 

Late last year, Petro declared an economic emergency after Congress rejected a tax ‌reform bill aimed at raising 16.3 trillion pesos ($4.45 billion).

Congress approved ​a 2026 spending budget of 546.9 trillion ⁠pesos, not enough to cover the country's fiscal needs, which led the government ‌to declare an economic emergency after the legislature ⁠refused to approve a reform to raise certain taxes.

However, in January, the constitutional court provisionally suspended the economic emergency under which the Petro administration sought to raise 11 trillion pesos ($3 billion) to finance ​part of its 2026 budget.

Latin ‌America’s fourth-largest economy is experiencing a deterioration in its fiscal accounts, which forced the government in June ⁠to suspend a fiscal rule under which ​the Ministry of Finance raised the fiscal deficit target.

(Reporting by Luis Jaime Acosta, Editing by ​Christian Schmollinger, Himani Sarkar and Kate Mayberry)

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