IBOV 174,070 ▲ 0.74% IPSA 10,821 ▲ 0.55% IPC MEX 67,060 ▼ 0.02% MERVAL 3,196,900 ▲ 1.26% COLCAP 2,295.72 ▲ 1.57% BVL PERÚ 55,809.71 ▲ 0.30% USD/BRL5.17▼ 0.02% USD/MXN17.46▲ 0.04% USD/CLP 919.75 — 0.00% USD/COP3,332▼ 1.62% USD/PEN3.40▼ 0.07% USD/ARS1,488▼ 0.07% USD/UYU40.21▲ 1.33% USD/PYG6,052▲ 1.45% USD/BOB6.86▲ 1.45% USD/DOP58.77▼ 0.73% USD/CRC450.98▲ 1.80% USD/GTQ7.62▲ 2.23% USD/HNL26.71▲ 4.29% USD/NIO36.62▲ 0.40% USD/VES651.34▲ 11.02% USD/PAB1.00— 0.00% USD/BZD2.00— 0.00% USD/JMD157.29▲ 1.00% USD/TTD6.66▼ 0.04% EUR/BRL5.91▼ 0.42% BRENT 72.13 ▲ 0.46% WTI 68.78 ▲ 0.13% IRON ORE 161.91 — — COPPER 6.22 ▲ 1.79% GOLD 4,187 ▲ 1.81% SILVER 62.82 ▲ 3.58% SOY 1,147 ▲ 1.82% CORN 440.75 ▲ 4.69% WHEAT 600.25 ▲ 1.39% COFFEE 287.45 ▼ 11.36% SUGAR 14.81 ▼ 1.20% ORANGE JUICE 170.70 ▼ 2.40% COTTON 77.52 ▲ 5.79% COCOA 5,123 ▲ 2.34% BEEF 239.03 ▼ 1.16% CATTLE 360.80 ▼ 0.92% LITHIUM 76.53 ▼ 1.85% PETR4 38.25 ▲ 0.76% VALE3 78.84 ▲ 0.77% ITUB4 42.74 ▲ 0.64% BBDC4 18.26 ▲ 2.51% ABEV3 16.29 ▼ 0.06% BBAS3 19.98 ▼ 0.10% B3SA3 14.76 ▲ 1.03% WEGE3 46.48 ▲ 0.48% PRIO3 52.96 ▲ 0.74% SUZB3 40.80 ▲ 0.05% RENT3 41.45 ▲ 0.48% AZZA3 17.14 ▼ 1.15% CSAN3 3.78 ▲ 1.61% RAIZ4 0.39 ▲ 2.63% PCAR3 2.63 ▲ 10.04% GMAT3 3.75 ▲ 3.88% PSSA3 54.19 ▲ 1.37% CVCB3 1.31 — 0.00% POSI3 3.92 ▼ 0.25% SLCE3 12.81 ▲ 1.51% NATU3 8.38 ▲ 1.95% BRKM5 6.24 ▼ 0.79% RANI3 7.92 ▼ 1.00% CSNA3 4.82 ▲ 4.33% CMIN3 4.31 ▲ 1.41% USIM5 8.77 ▲ 2.45% GGBR4 21.44 ▲ 1.37% ENEV3 26.63 ▲ 1.56% NEOE3 33.80 — 0.00% CPFE3 45.69 ▲ 1.31% CMIG4 11.03 ▲ 0.55% EQTL3 39.44 ▲ 0.36% LREN3 14.80 — 0.00% VIVT3 34.75 ▲ 0.40% RAIL3 13.63 ▲ 1.34% KLABIN 17.10 ▲ 0.65% RAIA DROGASIL 17.07 ▲ 1.13% RDOR3 35.75 ▲ 0.62% HAPV3 10.63 ▲ 2.11% FLRY3 15.72 ▼ 0.38% SMTO3 15.52 ▼ 0.58% UGPA3 27.53 ▲ 3.50% VBBR3 30.38 ▲ 1.84% BBSE3 38.65 ▼ 0.05% BPAC11 55.84 ▲ 2.38% CURY3 34.93 ▲ 0.60% AERI3 2.02 ▲ 0.50% VIVARA 22.77 ▲ 0.09% COMPASS 24.77 ▲ 0.49% VAMOS 2.87 ▲ 2.50% SANB11 26.95 ▲ 0.67% ASAI3 8.79 ▲ 1.15% SBSP3 30.37 ▲ 1.54% WALMEX 50.18 ▲ 0.84% GMEXICO 199.35 ▲ 0.92% FEMSA 225.49 ▼ 0.12% CEMEX 21.44 ▲ 0.33% GFNORTE 187.63 ▼ 0.04% BIMBO 56.53 ▲ 0.25% TELEVISA 9.38 ▲ 0.43% AMX 22.48 ▲ 0.27% GAP 438.10 ▼ 0.78% ASUR 310.81 ▲ 0.59% OMA 243.75 ▼ 0.06% KOF 186.86 ▼ 0.35% GRUMA 281.56 ▼ 0.17% KIMBER 38.44 ▼ 0.26% SQM-B 66,990 ▼ 0.73% COPEC 5,811 ▼ 0.40% BSANTANDER 75.05 ▲ 0.24% FALABELLA 5,840 ▲ 0.72% ENELAM 82.46 ▼ 0.53% CENCOSUD 2,090 ▲ 0.82% CMPC 1,041 ▲ 0.68% BANCO CHILE 182.49 ▲ 0.33% LATAM AIR 25.94 ▼ 0.23% YPF 71,575 ▲ 2.14% GGAL 7,975 ▲ 0.82% PAMPA 5,135 ▲ 0.88% TXAR 665.00 ▲ 0.23% ALUAR 993.00 ▲ 0.20% TGS 9,195 ▲ 2.51% CEPU 2,323 ▲ 0.69% MIRGOR 17,300 ▲ 2.82% COME 42.28 ▲ 1.25% LOMA NEGRA 3,673 ▼ 0.34% BYMA 309.25 ▲ 2.32% TELECOM ARG 3,990 ▲ 0.50% ECOPETROL 14.70 ▲ 1.73% BANCOLOMBIA 79.15 ▲ 1.24% GRUPO AVAL 5.06 ▼ 0.39% CREDICORP 391.21 ▲ 1.09% SOUTHERN COPPER 172.01 ▲ 1.90% BUENAVENTURA 29.72 ▲ 1.78% MERCADOLIBRE 1,763 ▲ 1.22% NUBANK 13.61 ▲ 1.64% XP 16.16 ▼ 0.12% PAGSEGURO 9.12 ▲ 0.77% STONE 11.17 ▲ 1.64% GLOBANT 32.51 ▲ 3.57% TECNOGLASS 45.62 ▼ 2.87% GAP AIRPORT 253.71 ▲ 0.51% ASUR 310.81 ▲ 0.59% OMA AIRPORT 111.73 ▼ 0.42% AMX ADR 25.72 ▲ 0.43% FEMSA ADR 129.30 ▲ 0.93% CEMEX ADR 12.29 ▲ 1.32% PETROBRAS ADR 16.11 ▲ 0.75% VALE ADR 14.99 ▲ 0.60% ITAU ADR 8.12 ▼ 0.12% SANTANDER BR 5.19 — 0.00% AMBEV ADR 3.10 ▼ 0.32% CSN 0.90 ▲ 0.55% GERDAU 4.07 ▲ 1.24% LATAM ADR 56.43 ▼ 0.84% BTC 63,123 ▲ 0.93% ETH 1,796 ▲ 2.24% SOL 82.12 ▼ 0.19% XRP 1.18 ▲ 3.95% BNB 576.45 ▲ 0.52% ADA 0.20 ▲ 9.10% DOGE 0.08 ▲ 1.83% AVAX 7.04 ▲ 1.35% LINK 8.10 ▲ 1.79% DOT 0.89 ▲ 1.52% LTC 45.37 ▲ 1.27% BCH 232.20 ▲ 1.29% TRX 0.33 ▲ 0.91% XLM 0.21 ▲ 3.81% HBAR 0.08 ▲ 3.32% NEAR 2.01 ▼ 1.37% ATOM 1.61 ▲ 0.53% AAVE 89.52 ▲ 2.38% SELIC 14.25% EMBRAER 84.83 ▲ 2.08% EMBRAER ADR 64.13 ▲ 1.96% JBS 12.26 ▲ 1.57% JBS BDR 63.00 ▼ 0.69% MBRF3 16.78 ▼ 0.94% MBRFY 3.28 ▲ 2.18% INTER 5.47 ▼ 0.36% EGX 50,533 ▲ 0.09% USD/ZAR16.21▼ 0.14% USD/NGN1,366▼ 0.31% NIKKEI 69,744 ▲ 1.47% CSI300 4,842 ▲ 0.62% HSI 23,350 ▲ 1.28% NIFTY 24,271 ▲ 0.39% KOSPI 8,088 ▲ 5.76% JCI 5,876 ▲ 2.28% USD/JPY161.34▲ 0.15% USD/CNY6.77▼ 0.14% DAX 25,779 ▲ 0.78% CAC 8,508 ▲ 0.39% FTSE 10,679 ▲ 0.25% MIB 52,819 ▲ 0.75% IBEX 19,852 ▲ 0.92% STOXX 652.77 ▲ 0.68% EUR/USD1.14▲ 0.07% GBP/USD1.34▲ 0.08% SPX 7,483 — 0.00% DJI 52,900 ▲ 1.14% NDX 29,329 ▼ 1.61% RUT 2,996 ▼ 0.55% TSX 35,275 ▲ 0.88% VIX 15.81 ▼ 2.11% USD/CAD1.42— 0.00% US10Y 4.4850 — 0.00% IBOV 174,070 ▲ 0.74% IPSA 10,821 ▲ 0.55% IPC MEX 67,060 ▼ 0.02% MERVAL 3,196,900 ▲ 1.26% COLCAP 2,295.72 ▲ 1.57% BVL PERÚ 55,809.71 ▲ 0.30% USD/BRL 5.17 ▼ 0.02% USD/MXN 17.46 ▲ 0.04% USD/CLP 919.75 — 0.00% USD/COP 3,332 ▼ 1.62% USD/PEN 3.40 ▼ 0.07% USD/ARS 1,488 ▼ 0.07% USD/UYU 40.21 ▲ 1.33% USD/PYG 6,052 ▲ 1.45% USD/BOB 6.86 ▲ 1.45% USD/DOP 58.77 ▼ 0.73% USD/CRC 450.98 ▲ 1.80% USD/GTQ 7.62 ▲ 2.23% USD/HNL 26.71 ▲ 4.29% USD/NIO 36.62 ▲ 0.40% USD/VES 651.34 ▲ 11.02% USD/PAB 1.00 — 0.00% USD/BZD 2.00 — 0.00% USD/JMD 157.29 ▲ 1.18% USD/TTD 6.66 ▲ 0.07% EUR/BRL 5.91 ▼ 0.42% BRENT 72.13 ▲ 0.46% WTI 68.78 ▲ 0.13% IRON ORE 161.91 — — COPPER 6.22 ▲ 1.79% GOLD 4,187 ▲ 1.81% SILVER 62.82 ▲ 3.58% SOY 1,147 ▲ 1.82% CORN 440.75 ▲ 4.69% WHEAT 600.25 ▲ 1.39% COFFEE 287.45 ▼ 11.36% SUGAR 14.81 ▼ 1.20% ORANGE JUICE 170.70 ▼ 2.40% COTTON 77.52 ▲ 5.79% COCOA 5,123 ▲ 2.34% BEEF 239.03 ▼ 1.16% CATTLE 360.80 ▼ 0.92% LITHIUM 76.53 ▼ 1.85% PETR4 38.25 ▲ 0.76% VALE3 78.84 ▲ 0.77% ITUB4 42.74 ▲ 0.64% BBDC4 18.26 ▲ 2.51% ABEV3 16.29 ▼ 0.06% BBAS3 19.98 ▼ 0.10% B3SA3 14.76 ▲ 1.03% WEGE3 46.48 ▲ 0.48% PRIO3 52.96 ▲ 0.74% SUZB3 40.80 ▲ 0.05% RENT3 41.45 ▲ 0.48% AZZA3 17.14 ▼ 1.15% CSAN3 3.78 ▲ 1.61% RAIZ4 0.39 ▲ 2.63% PCAR3 2.63 ▲ 10.04% GMAT3 3.75 ▲ 3.88% PSSA3 54.19 ▲ 1.37% CVCB3 1.31 — 0.00% POSI3 3.92 ▼ 0.25% SLCE3 12.81 ▲ 1.51% NATU3 8.38 ▲ 1.95% BRKM5 6.24 ▼ 0.79% RANI3 7.92 ▼ 1.00% CSNA3 4.82 ▲ 4.33% CMIN3 4.31 ▲ 1.41% USIM5 8.77 ▲ 2.45% GGBR4 21.44 ▲ 1.37% ENEV3 26.63 ▲ 1.56% NEOE3 33.80 — 0.00% CPFE3 45.69 ▲ 1.31% CMIG4 11.03 ▲ 0.55% EQTL3 39.44 ▲ 0.36% LREN3 14.80 — 0.00% VIVT3 34.75 ▲ 0.40% RAIL3 13.63 ▲ 1.34% KLABIN 17.10 ▲ 0.65% RAIA DROGASIL 17.07 ▲ 1.13% RDOR3 35.75 ▲ 0.62% HAPV3 10.63 ▲ 2.11% FLRY3 15.72 ▼ 0.38% SMTO3 15.52 ▼ 0.58% UGPA3 27.53 ▲ 3.50% VBBR3 30.38 ▲ 1.84% BBSE3 38.65 ▼ 0.05% BPAC11 55.84 ▲ 2.38% CURY3 34.93 ▲ 0.60% AERI3 2.02 ▲ 0.50% VIVARA 22.77 ▲ 0.09% COMPASS 24.77 ▲ 0.49% VAMOS 2.87 ▲ 2.50% SANB11 26.95 ▲ 0.67% ASAI3 8.79 ▲ 1.15% SBSP3 30.37 ▲ 1.54% WALMEX 50.18 ▲ 0.84% GMEXICO 199.35 ▲ 0.92% FEMSA 225.49 ▼ 0.12% CEMEX 21.44 ▲ 0.33% GFNORTE 187.63 ▼ 0.04% BIMBO 56.53 ▲ 0.25% TELEVISA 9.38 ▲ 0.43% AMX 22.48 ▲ 0.27% GAP 438.10 ▼ 0.78% ASUR 310.81 ▲ 0.59% OMA 243.75 ▼ 0.06% KOF 186.86 ▼ 0.35% GRUMA 281.56 ▼ 0.17% KIMBER 38.44 ▼ 0.26% SQM-B 66,990 ▼ 0.73% COPEC 5,811 ▼ 0.40% BSANTANDER 75.05 ▲ 0.24% FALABELLA 5,840 ▲ 0.72% ENELAM 82.46 ▼ 0.53% CENCOSUD 2,090 ▲ 0.82% CMPC 1,041 ▲ 0.68% BANCO CHILE 182.49 ▲ 0.33% LATAM AIR 25.94 ▼ 0.23% YPF 71,575 ▲ 2.14% GGAL 7,975 ▲ 0.82% PAMPA 5,135 ▲ 0.88% TXAR 665.00 ▲ 0.23% ALUAR 993.00 ▲ 0.20% TGS 9,195 ▲ 2.51% CEPU 2,323 ▲ 0.69% MIRGOR 17,300 ▲ 2.82% COME 42.28 ▲ 1.25% LOMA NEGRA 3,673 ▼ 0.34% BYMA 309.25 ▲ 2.32% TELECOM ARG 3,990 ▲ 0.50% ECOPETROL 14.70 ▲ 1.73% BANCOLOMBIA 79.15 ▲ 1.24% GRUPO AVAL 5.06 ▼ 0.39% CREDICORP 391.21 ▲ 1.09% SOUTHERN COPPER 172.01 ▲ 1.90% BUENAVENTURA 29.72 ▲ 1.78% MERCADOLIBRE 1,763 ▲ 1.22% NUBANK 13.61 ▲ 1.64% XP 16.16 ▼ 0.12% PAGSEGURO 9.12 ▲ 0.77% STONE 11.17 ▲ 1.64% GLOBANT 32.51 ▲ 3.57% TECNOGLASS 45.62 ▼ 2.87% GAP AIRPORT 253.71 ▲ 0.51% ASUR 310.81 ▲ 0.59% OMA AIRPORT 111.73 ▼ 0.42% AMX ADR 25.72 ▲ 0.43% FEMSA ADR 129.30 ▲ 0.93% CEMEX ADR 12.29 ▲ 1.32% PETROBRAS ADR 16.11 ▲ 0.75% VALE ADR 14.99 ▲ 0.60% ITAU ADR 8.12 ▼ 0.12% SANTANDER BR 5.19 — 0.00% AMBEV ADR 3.10 ▼ 0.32% CSN 0.90 ▲ 0.55% GERDAU 4.07 ▲ 1.24% LATAM ADR 56.43 ▼ 0.84% BTC 63,123 ▲ 0.93% ETH 1,796 ▲ 2.24% SOL 82.12 ▼ 0.19% XRP 1.18 ▲ 3.95% BNB 576.45 ▲ 0.52% ADA 0.20 ▲ 9.10% DOGE 0.08 ▲ 1.83% AVAX 7.04 ▲ 1.35% LINK 8.10 ▲ 1.79% DOT 0.89 ▲ 1.52% LTC 45.37 ▲ 1.27% BCH 232.20 ▲ 1.29% TRX 0.33 ▲ 0.91% XLM 0.21 ▲ 3.81% HBAR 0.08 ▲ 3.32% NEAR 2.01 ▼ 1.37% ATOM 1.61 ▲ 0.53% AAVE 89.52 ▲ 2.38% SELIC 14.25% EMBRAER 84.83 ▲ 2.08% EMBRAER ADR 64.13 ▲ 1.96% JBS 12.26 ▲ 1.57% JBS BDR 63.00 ▼ 0.69% MBRF3 16.78 ▼ 0.94% MBRFY 3.28 ▲ 2.18% INTER 5.47 ▼ 0.36% EGX 50,533 ▲ 0.09% USD/ZAR 16.21 ▼ 0.24% USD/NGN 1,366 ▼ 0.15% NIKKEI 69,744 ▲ 1.47% CSI300 4,842 ▲ 0.62% HSI 23,350 ▲ 1.28% NIFTY 24,271 ▲ 0.39% KOSPI 8,088 ▲ 5.76% JCI 5,876 ▲ 2.28% USD/JPY 161.34 ▲ 0.15% USD/CNY 6.7702 ▼ 0.10% DAX 25,779 ▲ 0.78% CAC 8,508 ▲ 0.39% FTSE 10,679 ▲ 0.25% MIB 52,819 ▲ 0.75% IBEX 19,852 ▲ 0.92% STOXX 652.77 ▲ 0.68% EUR/USD 1.1440 ▲ 0.03% GBP/USD 1.3350 ▲ 0.01% SPX 7,483 — 0.00% DJI 52,900 ▲ 1.14% NDX 29,329 ▼ 1.61% RUT 2,996 ▼ 0.55% TSX 35,275 ▲ 0.88% VIX 15.81 ▼ 2.11% USD/CAD 1.4198 ▲ 0.11% US10Y 4.4850 — 0.00%
since 2009
Saturday, July 4, 2026

Markets Bolivia

Bolivia Cuts Import Tariffs to Soften the Blow of a Weaker Currency

By · July 4, 2026 · 5 min read

Daily Brief

The morning intel from across Latin America. Free.

By subscribing you agree to our privacy policy. We never share your email.

Bolivia · Markets

Key Facts

The measure. Bolivia will cut import tariffs by five percentage points across the whole tariff schedule from July 6.

The vehicle. It was set by Supreme Decree 5646, published in the official gazette and running through the end of 2027.

The reason. The government says it aims to shield consumers from the higher import costs caused by a newly floating currency.

The mechanics. Every tariff band drops five points, so goods once taxed at five percent now enter free of the tariff.

The context. Bolivia let the boliviano float on June 29, ending a peg held since 2011 and lifting the cost of imports.

The catch. Value-added tax and other import charges still apply, so relief is real but partial.

Days after letting its currency slide, Bolivia is trying to cushion the fallout at the border. A broad cut to Bolivia import tariffs is the government’s attempt to keep a weaker boliviano from feeding straight through to shop prices.

Bolivia Cuts Import Tariffs to Soften the Blow of a Weaker Currency
Bolivia cuts import tariffs to soften the blow of a weaker boliviano. (Photo internet reproduction)
RT
Ask Rio Times
Latin American markets, currencies and companies.
Open the full Ask Rio Times →

President Rodrigo Paz’s government approved a decree that lowers the import tariff by five percentage points on every category of goods, effective July 6 and lasting until the end of 2027. The measure was published in the official gazette and applies across the entire customs schedule.

The stated goal is to protect ordinary shoppers. By trimming the tax charged on imports, the government hopes to offset part of the price jump that comes with a currency now worth far fewer dollars than it was a week ago.

Why the Bolivia import tariffs cut matters

The move only makes sense against what came just before it. On June 29 Bolivia abandoned a fixed exchange rate that had held since 2011, letting the boliviano float and settle far weaker than the old official rate.

A weaker currency makes everything bought from abroad more expensive, from fuel and food to machinery and spare parts. For a country that imports much of what it consumes, that threatens a fresh wave of inflation on top of an already painful year.

Cutting the tariff is a way to push in the opposite direction. If the currency raises landed prices while the tariff lowers them, the government is betting the two forces partly cancel out, sparing consumers the full shock.

How the cut actually works

The decree slices five points off each existing tariff band. Goods once taxed at forty percent fall to thirty-five, those at ten percent drop to five, and items that sat at the lowest five percent band now enter with no tariff at all.

There is an important limit, though. The relief applies only to the customs tariff itself, not to the value-added tax or the other charges levied at import, so the saving on any given product is meaningful but smaller than the headline five points suggests.

The change is also temporary by design, set to expire at the end of 2027. That gives the government a defined window tied to the currency transition rather than a permanent shift in trade policy.

The bigger picture for Bolivia

The tariff cut is the latest step in a rapid-fire reform drive Paz has run largely by decree since taking office in November. He has already ended fuel subsidies, moved to a floating currency and courted an international lending programme, all while facing a fragmented Congress.

For a foreign resident or importer in Bolivia, the practical effect is that some goods should get a little cheaper at the border even as the weaker currency pushes the other way. The net result will vary product by product and will take time to show up on shelves.

For investors watching the Andes, the decree is a signal of how the Paz team plans to manage the politics of adjustment. The strategy is to pair painful reforms with visible cushions, hoping to hold public patience while the deeper stabilization takes hold.

Whether that gamble works depends on pass-through, the rate at which a weaker currency and a lower tariff actually reach retail prices. Economists caution that importers may pocket part of the tariff saving rather than pass it on, which would blunt the relief the government is promising.

The coming months will show which force wins at the till. If prices stay broadly stable, Paz can argue his sequencing worked; if they jump anyway, the tariff cut will look like a gesture too small to matter against the weight of the currency move.

What are the new Bolivia import tariffs?

From July 6, Bolivia cut the import tariff by five percentage points on every category of goods, under Supreme Decree 5646, running through the end of 2027. Each band drops five points, so goods once taxed at five percent now enter with no tariff.

Why did Bolivia cut tariffs now?

The government wants to soften the price shock from letting the boliviano float on June 29, which made imports more expensive. Lowering the tariff pushes landed costs down to partly offset the weaker currency.

Does the cut make everything cheaper?

Not fully, because the reduction applies only to the customs tariff, while value-added tax and other import charges still apply. The saving is real but partial, and the weaker currency works in the opposite direction.

Connected Coverage

Bolivia’s Floating Exchange Rate Goes Live as IMF Talks Advance

Bolivia’s Economy in 2026: Political Break and Reform Agenda

Bolivia’s Economic Reform Delivers Fragile Calm by Decree

Read More from The Rio Times

The Rio Times · Power Map
See who really holds power in Latin America
Click to open the Power Map

Rotate for Best Experience

This report is optimized for landscape viewing. Rotate your phone for the full experience.