Banco Central de Bolivia
National monetary authority, currency issuer, reserve manager, payments-system and macro-financial institution
of 100 · declining trend · Some good traits but inconsistent
Standing
54/100
Raw Score
48/85
Confidence
78%
Evidence
Broad
About
Banco Central de Bolivia is Bolivia's national central bank, founded in 1928 and operating since 1929, with responsibility for monetary stability, currency issuance, reserve administration, financial-system functions, and public economic information.
The institution has a clear public-stability mission, long operating continuity, official reporting channels, reserve disclosures, financial statements, transparency pages, and payments-system functions. Its alignment is materially weakened by recent foreign-exchange and reserve stress, extensive central-bank financing of fiscal deficits, and IMF concerns that the policy mix has become unsustainable and harmful to households through inflation, shortages, and real-income pressure.
Five Pillars
Pillar scores (0–100%)
Clear monetary-stability mission, long continuity, public reporting, and reserve-management systems are offset by depleted reserves, FX scarcity, inflation pressure, and central-bank financing of fiscal deficits.
Goodness over time
Starts at 100 at birth, natural decay after accountability age, timeline events adjust the trajectory.
17 Criteria Scores
Individual item scores (0–5) with evidence notes
Core Worldview
Clear purchasing-power and economic-social development mission, weakened by current delivery stress.
Official mission, vision, values, transparency and reporting architecture are visible.
Long-run central-bank role aligns with mission, but recent inflation and reserve stress complicate the match.
Contribution to Others
Currency, payments, reserve and public-information functions have broad social reach.
Public stability benefits vulnerable groups indirectly; IMF stresses adjustment protection remains important.
Primarily national reach with international reserve and debt operations.
Financial-stability mandate is harm-preventive, but FX shortages and inflation create public harm.
Personal Discipline
Reserve-management criteria and legal mandate show restraint; monetary financing pressure weakens it.
No charitable identity; public obligation is indirect through monetary stability and state service.
Transparency, ethics and anti-corruption channels are visible, with limited evidence of internal practice outcomes.
Reliability
Publishes mission, reserve, financial and accountability material, though reserve debates strain trust.
Formal governance exists, but current policy mix and central-bank financing raise reliability concerns.
No major single scandal dominates the record, but current macro-policy harm and transparency concerns lower the score.
Institutional continuity is strong, but purchasing-power stability delivery is under pressure.
Stability Under Pressure
Gold-law and reserve operations show response capacity but have not resolved underlying stress.
Modernization and reporting over time indicate learning, though current policy correction remains incomplete.
Critically low reserves, FX scarcity and IMF warnings show reduced stability under pressure.
Timeline
Key events and documented turning points
Banco Central de Bolivia began operations
Law 632 created the Banco Central de la Nacion Boliviana in 1928; a 1929 banking-law change gave it the definitive name Banco Central de Bolivia, and it began operations on July 1, 1929.
→ Created a dedicated national monetary authority.
highLaw 1670 modernized the central-bank framework
The BCB's official materials identify the 1995 central-bank law as the framework that transformed the institution into a modern central bank and set the objective of preserving the purchasing power of the national currency.
→ Clarified the central bank's stability mandate and modern governance architecture.
highGold law expanded BCB authority to buy and monetize gold reserves
Bolivia approved a gold law amid falling reserves, giving the BCB additional room to buy domestic gold and conduct reserve operations. Reporting framed it as an effort to bolster foreign reserves while noting concerns about reserve depletion and support for the currency.
→ Provided a short-term reserve-management tool under external pressure.
highBCB reported net international reserves of US$1.7086 billion
The BCB's reserve-administration report disclosed net international reserves of US$1.7086 billion at the end of 2023 and said reserves were invested with capital preservation, security, liquidity, diversification, and return criteria.
→ Confirmed very low reserve coverage after a long decline, while maintaining formal reserve-reporting and investment criteria.
highIMF warned that deficits were mostly central-bank financed amid depleted reserves
The IMF's 2025 Article IV assessment said Bolivia faced critically low reserves, foreign-exchange shortages, inflation of 10 percent at end-2024, fiscal deficits mostly financed by the central bank, and urged elimination of monetary financing and a decisive monetary-policy shift.
→ Independent multilateral assessment identified serious stress in the policy framework and risks of disorderly adjustment.
highPressure Tests
Behavior under crisis or scrutiny
Reserve depletion and foreign-exchange scarcity
2023Net international reserves fell to very low levels and the government approved a gold law to strengthen reserve management.
Response: The BCB published reserve reports and implemented gold-reserve operations, but reserve scarcity persisted.
mixed_negative2024-2025 inflation and central-bank deficit financing
2025IMF reported high inflation, critically low reserves, FX shortages, and fiscal deficits mostly financed by the central bank.
Response: The institution continued reporting and policy communication; independent assessment called for a decisive framework shift.
negativeBehavioral Patterns
Positive
- • Durable public monetary mission with official history, mission language, reserve reports, financial statements, public-accountability pages, and payments-system functions.
Concerns
- • Recent monetary and external-sector stress has weakened mission delivery, especially through depleted reserves, FX shortages, inflation, and central-bank deficit financing.
Evidence Quality
6
Strong
3
Medium
0
Weak
Overall: broad
Institutional assessment based only on public evidence; it does not judge hidden intention or private belief.