The former Minister of Economy and former director of the OPP pointed out the existence of private reports that showed that the situation of the debtors was not real.
The former minister of Economy and Finance (MEF) and former director of the Office of Planning and Budget (OPP), Isaac Alfieassured that the recently approved law for the debtors in Adjustable Units (UR) of the Mortgage Bank of Uruguay (BHU) is “unfair” and “doesn’t like it at all.”
The content you want to access is exclusive to subscribers.
Until a few days ago, the head of the OPP referred to the debtors law this Monday in an interview with radio Carve, and stated that, on a personal level, the law does not like anything”. “Neither much nor little, nothing,” she remarked.


alfie was aligned with the critical statements against the law that he recently made the president of the BHU, Casilda Echevarría, but said he did not share the leader’s thoughts regarding a potential risk to the public bank’s assets. “It doesn’t seem like it puts the BHU at risk,” she said.
“There were a number of private reports that did the calculations and showed that the argument (of the debtors in UR) was not what was said,” the former minister indicated in this regard.
Echevarría: “The law will cost the BHU 400 million dollars”
Echevarria declared in recent days that the law will cost the public bank in the order of 400 million dollars, and will impact increases in interest rates. mortgage credits for future clients.
“(The law) is not even focused on those who need it most,” he commented Echevarria to Telemundo. The regulations established an extinction of credit for those debtors that have at least 35% of the payment amortized over a period of 40 years.
Through her debtors Had everyone paid the debt several times? Queer”.
The leader insisted that what was originally claimed by the debtors in UR was that the initial loan had been paid several times, and that “now we are saying that there are going to be people who are harmed because they did not pay even 35% of the original loan.”
Source: Ambito