It was said by Mr. John Lipsky, First Deputy Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in a statement issued in Washington.

He welcomed the Mexican authorities' indication that Mexico was interested in renewing its one-year precautionary arrangement under the IMF's Flexible Credit Line (FCL) for 1,000 percent of quota (SDR 32 billion or about US$48 billion).

He said,'Given the uncertainties that remain in the global environment, and noting the success of the current FCL arrangement, I share the authorities' view that a successor FCL arrangement can play an important role in continuing to support Mexico's policy strategy and in maintaining external confidence. The IMF's Management therefore intends to move ahead rapidly in seeking approval by the Fund's Executive Board of Mexico's request for an FCL arrangement.”

It may be mentioned here that the FCL is an instrument established on March 24, 2009 that is available to Fund member countries deemed to possess very strong fundamentals, policies, and track records of policy implementation. Access to FCL resources is based on the requesting country having met these criteria, rather than on fulfilling ex-post performance criteria.

Mexico's Flexible Credit Line was approved on April 17, 2009.