Bolivia's President Rodrigo Paz speaks during a press conference to announce the creation of a truth commission to investigate corruption in the hydrocarbon sector, at the Attorney General's Office in El Alto on December 15, 2025. (Photo by Jorge BERNAL / AFP)
Bolivia’s new president announced on Wednesday that the country will eliminate its fuel subsidies, ending 20 years of fixed prices under the Latin American nation’s previous leftist leaders.
“With the publication of this decree, the new prices for hydrocarbons will be announced,” President Rodrigo Paz, a pro-business conservative elected in October, said in a televised address while flanked by his ministers.
“Removing poorly designed subsidies from the past does not mean abandonment. It means order, justice, clear redistribution,” Paz added.
The Bolivian government centralises gasoline and diesel imports, purchasing them at international prices and reselling them at a loss.
The country has experienced its worst economic crisis in four decades, as the subsidy policy has drained the treasury’s international dollar reserves.
Since 2023, there have been recurring fuel shortages at service stations, where lines of vehicles waited hours — and sometimes days — for gas.
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Paz said diesel will be removed from the list of substances controlled by the government and put on the free market, to facilitate imports by the private sector.
He added that the subsidies would no longer be abused to “hide the looting” and prices would stabilize and “make it possible to generate additional fiscal resources.”
AFP
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