No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeArchiveChanges Proposed for Financial Regulation Norms

Changes Proposed for Financial Regulation Norms

THE country s financial leaders plan to implement various changes in 2006 to the regulations governing financial systems, with the goal of strengthening the system in order to deal with the changing needs of the market.

The Superintendence of Financial Entities (SUGEF), of Pension Funds (SUPEN) and of Securities (SUGEVAL) are working together on various projects they ve prioritized for this year, according to the daily La Nación.

Oscar Rodríguez, head of SUGEF, told the daily the projects focus on three key points. The first is the approval of a bill to consolidate supervision of financial groups, which would allow SUGEF to monitor businesses that are now outside of its jurisdiction.

The second is a change to the regulations regarding sanctions, to create ranges of fines based on the seriousness of the financial crime at hand.

The third reform would provide greater legal protection to financial crimes prosecutors.

SUPEN head Javier Cascante told La Nación the leaders are also planning reforms to regulations governing pension fund investments for organizations such as the Social Security System (Caja), and modifying the commissions for complementary  pension operators.

Trending Now

Mexico vs South Africa Headlines World Cup 2026 Opening Day

After four years of waiting, the 2026 FIFA World Cup kicks off today, with the biggest and most expanded edition of the tournament in...

Tropical Storm Weakens but Keeps Costa Rica Facing Rain and Dangerous Seas

Tropical Storm Cristina is moving away from Costa Rica, but its effects are still being felt across the country, with rain, rough seas, strong...

World Cup 2026 Opens With Wins for Mexico and South Korea

The 2026 FIFA World Cup opened Thursday with a strong start for Mexico and Korea Republic, as the expanded tournament began its first day...

Guanacaste Faces One of Its Worst Droughts as Rain Hits Much of Costa Rica

Guanacaste is facing one of its worst drought situations in years, even as much of Costa Rica deals with heavy rain, saturated soils and...

El Salvador Tourism Boom Puts Visitor Goal Ahead of Schedule

El Salvador’s tourism growth is moving faster than the country’s own official targets. After years of being seen internationally through the lens of violence...

Cuba’s Tourism Industry Is Collapsing in Real Time

Cuba’s tourism industry is facing one of its sharpest collapses in decades, with visitor numbers plunging, major hotel brands pulling back, airlines cutting service...

Costa Rica’s Landmark Same-Sex Marriage Stands as Court Tosses Annulment Case

A family court has rejected the Costa Rican government's long-running attempt to annul our country's first same-sex marriage, reaffirming the 2015 union of Laura...

Costa Rica’s Route 27 Sinkhole Repair Still Has No Clear Finish Date

Those heading between San José and the Central Pacific will need to keep planning around delays on Route 27, where the permanent repair of...

Costa Rica Clears Way for “Macho Coca” Extradition to U.S.

Costa Rican courts have cleared the final domestic obstacle blocking the extradition of Gilbert Bell Fernández, known as “Macho Coca,” to the United States,...
Avatar
🌴 The Weekly Pura Vida

Costa Rica, Once a Week

The week's top stories, weather & insider tips — delivered every Sunday. One email, zero clutter.

🔒 Free. No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.

Loading…

Latest News from Costa Rica

Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Car Rentals
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Travel