The Export-Import Bank of Korea said Tuesday it signed a deal to provide a $50 million loan to Bolivia to assist the country’s development projects.
Eximbank President Kim Yong-hwan signed the deal with Bolivia’s Development Planning Minister Carlos Villegas in Calgary, Canada, to provide the economic development cooperation funds, according to the state-run trade bank.
Kim Yong-hwan (left), chairman and president of the Export-Import Bank of Korea, shakes hands with Viviana Elba Caro Hinojosa, minister of development planning of Bolivia, after signing a contract on the Economic Development Cooperation Fund totaling $50 million in Calgary on Tuesday. (Export-Import Bank of Korea)
The deal came after a bilateral summit meeting in Seoul in August last year, in which President Lee Myung-bak agreed with his Bolivian counterpart Evo Morales to enhance cooperation in resources development.
The loan will be used to help Bolivia finance construction of two new bridges, the local bank said.
“The latest cooperative agreement is expected to expand Korea’s economic ties with Bolivia, which is rich in mineral resources like lithium and tungsten,” an Eximbank official said. “The deal is also expected to assist local firms’ entrance to the South African region and prop up Korea’s resources diplomacy.”
(Yonhap News)