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Boletines Noticiosos

06 de octubre de 2006

Trinidad and Tobago Central Bank Looks to World Council for Guidance


For the first time since 1971, the government of Trinidad and Tobago will make substantial reforms to its credit union legislation. They have sought World Council of Credit Unions, Inc. to provide technical and legislative advice on the policy proposal.

The legislative initiative will ensure that credit unions have their own act and will become prudentially supervised by the Central Bank of Trinidad and Tobago.

The Central Bank contracted World Council to advise on the proposal following a visit in May when World Council's chairman, Gary Plank of the Arizona Credit Union League met with Trinidad and Tobago's president and Central Bank representatives.

"We knew that World Council had an international perspective on legislation and best practices as it applies to credit unions, and we wanted to draw on that," said Charles de Silva, manager – policy, Financial Institutions Supervision Department. "As a Central Bank, we have an instinct to rely on international organizations we feel have the best grasp on best practices throughout the world and can give us an independent view…World Council is interested in the best legislation and doesn't have a particular ax to grind."

As part of the legislative reforms, the Central Bank will license World Council's PEARLS monitoring system to aid its examiners in monitoring the financial condition of the nation's 127 active credit unions.

"In many years of assisting the credit union movement and national government with forming new legislation for credit unions, I have never come across an example where they relied so heavily on World Council's Model Law for Credit Unions," indicated Dave Grace, World Council senior manager of association services. "We support credit unions being supervised by skilled prudential supervisors and having their own piece of legislation. We applaud Trinidad and Tobago for moving forward on both of these fronts."

As more nations in the Caribbean such as Jamaica, Barbados, and Belize move toward prudential credit union supervision by the Central Bank, the consultative experience in Trinidad and Tobago will become a path for others to follow.



El Consejo Mundial de Cooperativas de Ahorro y Crédito es la asociación gremial y agencia de desarrollo para el sistema internacional de cooperativas de ahorro y crédito. El Consejo Mundial promueve el crecimiento sustentable de las cooperativas de ahorro y crédito y otras cooperativas financieras en todo el mundo a fin de facultar a las personas para que mejoren su calidad de vida a través del acceso a servicios financieros asequibles y de alta calidad. El Consejo Mundial realiza esfuerzos de defensa activa en representación del sistema global de las cooperativas de ahorro y crédito ante organizaciones internacionales y trabaja con gobiernos nacionales para mejorar la legislación y la regulación. Sus programas de asistencia técnica introducen nuevas herramientas y tecnologías para fortalecer el desempeño financiero de las cooperativas de ahorro y crédito y profundizar su alcance comunitario.

El Consejo Mundial ha implementado 290 programas de asistencia técnica en 71 países. A nivel mundial, 51,000 cooperativas de ahorro y crédito en 100 países atienden a 196 millones de personas. Obtenga más información sobre el impacto global del Consejo Mundial en www.woccu.org.



Contacto principal: Jennifer Bernhardt
Correo electrónico: jbernhardt@woccu.org
Teléfono: +1-608-395-2077



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