Uruguay's central bank is charting a course for significant interest rate reductions throughout the coming year. The strategy aims to stabilize inflation around the 4.5% target—a goal that's been elusive lately. How? By simultaneously pushing economic growth while allowing currency depreciation to work its magic.



Chairman Guillermo Tolosa laid out this framework during a Friday briefing in Montevideo. It's a classic dual-mandate play: stimulate domestic activity through lower borrowing costs while letting a weaker currency boost export competitiveness. The thinking is straightforward—cheaper money fuels spending and investment, while a softer peso makes Uruguayan goods more attractive internationally.

For macro watchers, this signals a potential shift in regional monetary policy. As developed economies maintain higher rates, emerging markets like Uruguay are moving the opposite direction. This divergence matters for asset allocation and capital flows, especially for those tracking how traditional policy shifts might reverberate through risk assets.
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LonelyAnchormanvip
· 4h ago
Lower interest rates and depreciation, sounds like a tug of war... This trick in South America is an old story.
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Degen4Breakfastvip
· 4h ago
The interest rate cut strategy is back again. This time, is Uruguay trying to rely on devaluation to boost exports? Feels like the same trick as Thailand last year...
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potentially_notablevip
· 4h ago
Lower interest rates + devaluation, Uruguay's move is quite interesting... Just worried that imported inflation will come back to bother us then.
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BearMarketHustlervip
· 4h ago
This combination of interest rate cuts and devaluation feels a bit like gambling... The biggest fear for crypto people is this kind of central bank move, which could easily lead to inflation rebounding. Tolosa's logic sounds good, but can emerging markets really control their exchange rate devaluation? It feels like it could easily spiral out of control later. The strategy of stimulating consumption through interest rate cuts has been tried many times in emerging markets... and how did it end up? I'm curious to see if Uruguay's latest move will end up shooting itself in the foot. South American central banks really love playing this "counter-operation" trick—tightening when developed countries loosen, and vice versa. It sounds cool, but it's actually a trap.
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