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Mexico to slow pace of budget cuts in 2018 -finance minister

Published 06/20/2017, 12:11 PM
Updated 06/20/2017, 12:20 PM
© Reuters. Mexican Finance Minister Jose Antonio Meade attends a conference marking the International Day of Family Remittances 2017 in Mexico City
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MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - Mexico's government should slow the pace of its budget cuts next year and it will not likely see a surplus from the central bank due to the recovery in the peso currency, the country's finance minister said on Tuesday.

Mexico's 2018 budget is likely to see a lower "adjustment" to public finances than in previous budgets, finance minister Jose Antonio Meade said in an interview on local radio.

He said Mexico would still meet a deficit target of 2.5 percent of gross domestic product by the end of 2018.

The collapse in global oil prices (LCOc1) (CLc1) in late 2014 forced Mexico to make sizeable cuts to the federal budget in the past couple of years, and Wall Street credit rating agencies last year warned they could cut Mexico's debt rating.

Mexico's government had previously relied on oil sales by state-run Pemex to fund around a third of its budget, but lower prices and a slump in production have pushed oil income to less than one-fifth of the government's revenue.

Meade also said the ministry was unlikely to receive a surplus transfer next year from the central bank, noting the peso would have to weaken back past 20.50 per dollar by the close of 2017 in order for that to happen. "That, today, does not seem to be the central scenario," the minister said.

The peso, which suffered a significant slump last year, has been the best performing major currency this year, gaining over 15 percent in 2017. It is now trading just above 18 per dollar as fears have eased that the administration of U.S. President Donald Trump will slap tariffs on Mexican-made goods.

© Reuters. Mexican Finance Minister Jose Antonio Meade attends a conference marking the International Day of Family Remittances 2017 in Mexico City

The central bank books a surplus from reserve assets when the peso weakens against the dollar during the year. In March, the central bank transferred 321.7 billion pesos ($18 billion) of its 2016 surplus to the federal government.

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