Country Risk
Key Facts
—The warning. On 9 July, Peru’s independent Fiscal Council said the country’s public finances should not be read complacently.
—The trigger. The government proposed a budget top-up of about 9.6 billion soles, near $2.5bn, the largest such expansion in five years.
—The rule breach. Non-financial spending grew 4.9% in real terms in the first half, against a fiscal rule allowing just 1.7% for the whole year.
—The pile-up. By the council’s count, laws passed since September 2025 add permanent costs near 23 billion soles a year, about 1.9% of GDP.
—The inheritance. Keiko Fujimori’s incoming government will receive a budget with little room to set new priorities.
—The rebuttal. The finance ministry says the top-up is fully consistent with the fiscal rules, with the deficit at 1.75% of GDP, inside the 1.8% limit.
Peru fiscal discipline has long been the country’s calling card with investors. Its own independent watchdog now says that discipline is under quiet strain, just as a new government prepares to take over.
Peru runs a Fiscal Council, an independent technical body that scrutinises the state’s finances. Its job is to sound the alarm before problems become crises.
This week it did exactly that. In a technical report, it warned against a complacent reading of the public accounts.
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What the Peru fiscal warning says
The immediate target is a proposed budget top-up. The government wants to add roughly nine point six billion soles, near two and a half billion dollars, to this year’s budget.
The council’s objection is about how that money is being used. Rather than saving an unexpected rise in tax revenue, the state is choosing to expand spending.
That matters because the revenue boost may not last. Using temporary income to fund permanent spending, the council warned, is a critical risk to the country’s finances.
The numbers show the strain plainly. Non-financial spending grew almost five percent in real terms in the first half of the year, even though the fiscal rule allows a maximum of one point seven percent for the whole year.
Why the Peru fiscal squeeze keeps tightening
The deeper problem is a flood of new laws. The council counts hundreds of measures passed since 2021 that raise public spending, many of them permanent.
The recent wave is the heaviest. Laws passed since September 2025 alone add permanent costs of around twenty-three billion soles a year, close to two percent of the economy.
Much of that is pensions and public-sector pay. Two laws stand out, one raising teachers’ pensions and another granting labour benefits to a category of state workers, together adding billions in annual cost.
The council’s president has described the pile-up in stark terms. He called it a tsunami of unfunded spending, warning that Peru risks breaching its fiscal framework for a fourth straight year.
The inheritance problem
The timing is what turns this from an accounting note into a political one. Peru is weeks from a change of government, with Keiko Fujimori due to take office.
The council’s message is that she will inherit a budget already committed. The growing weight of fixed obligations leaves the next administration little room to reallocate money toward its own priorities.
There is a climate risk layered on top. The council noted forecasts of a strong El Niño event around the turn of the year, for which the current budget sets aside no clear cushion.
Its prescription is to rebuild savings now, while commodity prices are high. Spending a windfall from copper and gold on permanent commitments, it argues, leaves the state exposed when the next shock arrives.
The government’s defence
The finance ministry rejects the alarm. It insists the top-up was built on sound technical grounds and is fully consistent with the fiscal rules.
Its central number is the deficit. The ministry projects a shortfall of one point seven five percent of output this year, just inside the one point eight percent ceiling, with room to spare.
For a foreign investor, that gap between watchdog and ministry is the signal. Peru’s rules are still being met on paper, but the independent body whose job is to guard them is flashing a warning about what comes next.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the supplementary credit Peru is debating?
It is a proposed budget top-up of about nine point six billion soles, near two and a half billion dollars, the largest nominal expansion in five years. The government says it will fund public investment and existing obligations, while the Fiscal Council warns it worsens the country’s spending pressures.
Why is the Fiscal Council concerned?
It argues Peru is using temporary revenue to fund permanent spending, with non-financial spending growing far faster than the fiscal rule allows. It warns this leaves little room for the incoming government and no clear cushion for a possible strong El Niño event.
Does the government agree there is a problem?
No. The finance ministry says the top-up has sound technical backing and respects the fiscal rules, pointing to a projected deficit of one point seven five percent of GDP, inside the one point eight percent limit.
View original source — Rio Times ↗