News / Americas

    Ecuador to Hike Taxes, Sell Assets to Fund Quake Rebuilding

    A man walks amid the debris of a destroyed car and buildings after the devastating earthquake in Pedernales, Ecuador, April 24, 2016
    A man walks amid the debris of a destroyed car and buildings after the devastating earthquake in Pedernales, Ecuador, April 24, 2016
    Reuters

    Ecuador will temporarily increase some taxes, sell assets, and may issue new bonds on the international market to fund a multibillion-dollar reconstruction after a devastating 7.8 magnitude quake, a somber President Rafael Correa said on Wednesday.

    The death toll from Ecuador's weekend earthquake climbs beyond 600 and rescue missions ebbed as the traumatized Andean nation braced itself for long and costly rebuilding.

    "It's hard to imagine the magnitude of the tragedy. Every time we visit a place, there are more problems," Correa said, fresh from touring the disaster zone.

    Ecuadorian President Rafael Correa (L) and his Colombian counterpart Juan Manuel Santos (2nd L) gesture as they visit Manta, after an earthquake struck off Ecuador's Pacific coast, April 24, 2016.
    Ecuadorian President Rafael Correa (L) and his Colombian counterpart Juan Manuel Santos (2nd L) gesture as they visit Manta, after an earthquake struck off Ecuador's Pacific coast, April 24, 2016.

    The leftist leader estimated the disaster had inflicted $2 billion to $3 billion of damage. Lower oil revenue had already left the poor nation of 16 million people facing near-zero growth and lower investment.

    In addition to $600 million in credit from multilateral lenders, Correa, an economist, announced a raft of measures to help repair homes, roads, and bridges along the devastated Pacific Coast.

    "We're looking at the possibility of issuing bonds on the international market," he said on Wednesday afternoon, without providing details.

    Ecuador had been saying before the quake that current high yields would make it too expensive to issue debt. Yields on its bonds are close to 11 percentage points higher than comparable U.S. Treasury debt, according to JPMorgan data, and creditors are likely to be wary after the quake.

    Correa's government in 2008 defaulted on debt with a similar yield, calling the value unfair. His government has since returned to Wall Street and Ecuador currently has some $3.5 billion worth of bonds in circulation.

    In a nationally televised address later on Wednesday, Correa also announced the OPEC nation was poised to shed assets.

    "The country has many assets thanks to investment over all these years and we will seek to sell some of them to overcome these difficult moments," he said.

    He also unveiled several short-term tax changes, including a 2-point increase in the Valued Added Tax for a year, as well as a "one-off 3 percent additional contribution on profits," although the fine print was not immediately clear.

    The VAT tax is currently 12 percent.

    Additionally, a one-off tax of 0.9 percent will be imposed on people with wealth of over $1 million. Ecuadoreans will also be asked to contribute one day of salary, calculated on a sliding scale based on income.

    'Food, Please'

    Briefly pausing talk of reconstruction and hindering rescuers, another quake, of 6.2 magnitude, shook the coast before dawn on Wednesday, terrifying survivors.

    "You can't imagine what a fright it was. 'Not again!' I thought," said Maria Quinones in Pedernales town, which bore the brunt of Saturday's disaster.

    That quake, the worst in decades, killed 570 people, injured 7,000 others, damaged close to 2,000 buildings, and forced over 24,000 survivors to seek refuge in shelters, according to government tallies.

    Local residents hold up a poster along a road near the village of Canoa, April 25, 2016, after an earthquake struck off Ecuador's Pacific coast. The sign reads "help."
    Local residents hold up a poster along a road near the village of Canoa, April 25, 2016, after an earthquake struck off Ecuador's Pacific coast. The sign reads "help."

    Four days on, some isolated communities struggled without water, power or transport, as torn-up roads stymied deliveries.

    Along the coast, stadiums served as morgues and aid distribution centers.

    "I'm waiting for medicines, diapers for my grandson, we're lacking everything," said Ruth Quiroz, 49, as she waited in an hour-long line in front of a makeshift pharmacy set up at the Pedernales stadium.

    On a highway outside the town, some children sat holding placards saying: "Food, please."

    When a truck arrived to deliver water to the small town of San Jacinto, hungry residents surrounded the vehicle and hit it as they yelled: "We want food!"

    Scores of foreign aid workers and experts have arrived in the aftermath of Saturday's disaster and about 14,000 security personnel have kept order, with only sporadic looting reported.

    But rescuers were losing hope of finding anyone alive even as relatives of the missing begged them to keep looking.

    Speaking from the highland capital, Quito, Correa said the death toll would likely rise further, although at a slower rate than in previous days. "May these tears fertilize the soil of the future," he said.

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