Obligation Salvadoria 7.375% ( US283875AP70 ) en USD

Société émettrice Salvadoria
Prix sur le marché 100 %  ⇌ 
Pays  Salvador
Code ISIN  US283875AP70 ( en USD )
Coupon 7.375% par an ( paiement semestriel )
Echéance 30/11/2019 - Obligation échue



Prospectus brochure de l'obligation El Salvador US283875AP70 en USD 7.375%, échue


Montant Minimal 100 000 USD
Montant de l'émission 800 000 000 USD
Cusip 283875AP7
Description détaillée El Salvador, le plus petit pays d'Amérique centrale, est une république dotée d'une histoire riche marquée par la colonisation espagnole, des conflits civils et des efforts récents de développement économique et touristique.

L'Obligation émise par Salvadoria ( Salvador ) , en USD, avec le code ISIN US283875AP70, paye un coupon de 7.375% par an.
Le paiement des coupons est semestriel et la maturité de l'Obligation est le 30/11/2019







Offering Circular
The Republic of El Salvador
US$800,000,000 7.375% Notes due 2019
Issue Price: 100% plus accrued interest, if any, from December 1, 2009
Interest Payable June 1 and December 1
The Republic of El Salvador is offering US$800,000,000 aggregate principal amount of its 7.375% Notes due 2019
(the "Notes"). The Notes will mature on December 1, 2019. Interest on the Notes will be payable semi-annually in
arrears on June 1 and December 1 of each year commencing on June 1, 2010. The offering circular constitutes a
prospectus for the purpose of the Luxembourg Law dated July 10, 2005 on prospectuses for securities.
The Notes will contain provisions, commonly known as "collective action clauses," regarding acceleration and
voting on future amendments, modifications and waivers that differ from those applicable to certain of the Republic
of El Salvador's outstanding Public External Indebtedness (as defined herein). Under these provisions, which are
described in the sections entitled "Terms and Conditions of the Notes -- Events of Default" and "-- Modifications,
Amendments and Waivers," the Republic of El Salvador may amend the payment provisions of the Notes and
certain other terms with the consent of the holders of 75% of the aggregate amount of the outstanding Notes.
Except as described herein, payments on the Notes will be made without deduction for or on account of withholding
taxes imposed by the Republic of El Salvador. Application has been made to list the Notes on the Luxembourg
Stock Exchange and to have the Notes admitted to trading on the Euro MTF Market. Application will be made to
list the Notes on the El Salvador Stock Exchange.
The Notes are expected to be delivered to investors in book-entry form through The Depository Trust Company and
its direct and indirect participants, including Euroclear Bank S.A./N.V. and Clearstream Banking, société anonyme,
on or about December 1, 2009.
See "Risk Factors" beginning on page 8 regarding certain risk factors you should consider before investing in
the Notes.
The Notes have not been and will not be registered under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the "Securities
Act"). The Notes may not be offered or sold within the United States or to U.S. persons except to qualified
institutional buyers in reliance on the exemption from registration provided by Rule 144A under the Securities Act
and to certain persons in offshore transactions in reliance on Regulation S under the Securities Act. You are hereby
notified that sellers of the Notes may be relying on the exemption from the provisions of Section 5 of the Securities
Act provided by Rule 144A under the Securities Act.
Joint Lead Managers and Joint Bookrunners
Citi
J.P. Morgan
November 20, 2009


El Salvador
Santa Tecla


IN MAKING AN INVESTMENT DECISION, INVESTORS MUST RELY ON THEIR OWN EXAMINATION OF
THE REPUBLIC AND THE TERMS OF THE OFFERING, INCLUDING THE MERITS OR THE RISKS INVOLVED.
You should rely only on the information contained in this document or to which we have referred you. We have not
authorized anyone to provide you with information that is different. This document may only be used where it is legal to
sell these securities. The information in this document may only be accurate on the date of this document.
This Offering Circular may only be used for the purposes for which it has been published.
________________
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PRESENTATION OF INFORMATION ............................................................................................................................................iii
FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS ..........................................................................................................................................iii
ARBITRATION AND ENFORCEABILITY ..................................................................................................................................... iv
EXCHANGE RATE INFORMATION ............................................................................................................................................... v
OFFERING CIRCULAR SUMMARY ............................................................................................................................................... 1
THE OFFERING ................................................................................................................................................................................. 6
RISK FACTORS ................................................................................................................................................................................. 8
USE OF PROCEEDS......................................................................................................................................................................... 10
THE REPUBLIC OF EL SALVADOR ............................................................................................................................................. 11
THE SALVADORAN ECONOMY .................................................................................................................................................. 15
FOREIGN TRADE AND BALANCE OF PAYMENTS .................................................................................................................. 30
MONETARY SYSTEM .................................................................................................................................................................... 39
PUBLIC SECTOR FINANCES......................................................................................................................................................... 44
PUBLIC DEBT .................................................................................................................................................................................. 51
TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF THE NOTES............................................................................................................................... 56
SUBSCRIPTION AND SALE........................................................................................................................................................... 63
BOOK-ENTRY SETTLEMENT AND CLEARANCE..................................................................................................................... 66
TRANSFER RESTRICTIONS .......................................................................................................................................................... 69
TAXATION ....................................................................................................................................................................................... 71
VALIDITY OF THE NOTES ............................................................................................................................................................ 74
GENERAL INFORMATION ............................................................................................................................................................ 75
_______________
NOTICE TO NEW HAMPSHIRE RESIDENTS
NEITHER THE FACT THAT A REGISTRATION STATEMENT OR AN APPLICATION FOR A LICENSE HAS BEEN
FILED UNDER CHAPTER 421-B OF THE NEW HAMPSHIRE REVISED STATUTES WITH THE STATE OF NEW
HAMPSHIRE NOR THE FACT THAT A SECURITY IS EFFECTIVELY REGISTERED OR A PERSON IS LICENSED IN
THE STATE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE CONSTITUTES A FINDING BY THE SECRETARY OF STATE THAT ANY
DOCUMENT FILED UNDER RA 421-B IS TRUE, COMPLETE AND NOT MISLEADING. NEITHER ANY SUCH FACT
NOR THE FACT THAT THE EXEMPTION OR EXCEPTION IS AVAILABLE FOR A SECURITY OR A TRANSACTION
MEANS THAT THE SECRETARY OF STATE HAS PASSED IN ANY WAY UPON THE MERITS OR QUALIFICATIONS
OF, OR RECOMMENDED OR GIVEN APPROVAL TO, ANY PERSON, SECURITY OR TRANSACTION. IT IS
UNLAWFUL TO MAKE, OR CAUSE TO BE MADE, TO ANY PROSPECTIVE PURCHASER, CUSTOMER OR CLIENT,
ANY REPRESENTATION INCONSISTENT WITH THE PROVISIONS OF THIS PARAGRAPH.
The Notes will be direct, general and unconditional obligations of the Republic. The Notes will, at all times, rank equally
without any preference among themselves and at least pari passu with all other present and future unsecured and unsubordinated
Public External Indebtedness (as defined herein) of the Republic.
The Notes will be issued in registered form only. Notes sold in offshore transactions in reliance on Regulation S under the
Securities Act ("Regulation S") will be represented by one or more permanent global notes in fully registered form without interest
i


coupons (the "Regulation S Global Note") deposited with a custodian for, and registered in the name of a nominee of, The
Depository Trust Company ("DTC") for the respective accounts at DTC as such subscribers may direct. Notes sold in the United
States to qualified institutional buyers (each a "qualified institutional buyer") as defined in, and in reliance on, Rule 144A under
the Securities Act ("Rule 144A") will be represented by one or more permanent global notes in fully registered form without
interest coupons (the "Restricted Global Note" and, together with the Regulation S Global Note, the "Global Notes") deposited
with a custodian for, and registered in the name of a nominee of, DTC for the respective accounts at DTC as such subscribers may
direct. Beneficial interests of DTC participants (as defined under "Book-Entry Settlement and Clearance") in the Global Notes will
be shown on, and transfers thereof between DTC participants will be effected only through, records maintained by DTC and its
direct and indirect participants, including Euroclear Bank S.A./N.V., as operator of the Euroclear System ("Euroclear") and
Clearstream Banking, société anonyme ("Clearstream, Luxembourg"), if applicable. See "Book-Entry Settlement and Clearance."
Except as described herein, definitive Notes will not be issued in exchange for beneficial interests in the Global Notes. See "Terms
and Conditions of the Notes -- Form, Denomination and Title." For restrictions on transfer applicable to the Notes, see "Transfer
Restrictions" and "Subscription and Sale."
The Republic has taken reasonable care to ensure that the information contained in this Offering Circular is true and correct in
all material respects and not misleading as of the date hereof, and that, to the best of the knowledge and belief of the Republic,
there has been no omission of information which, in the context of the issue of the Notes, would make this document as a whole or
any such information misleading in any material respect. The Republic accepts responsibility accordingly.
This Offering Circular does not constitute an offer by, or an invitation by or on behalf of, the Republic or the Joint Lead
Managers to subscribe to or purchase any of the Notes. Each recipient shall be deemed to have made its own investigation and
appraisal of the financial condition of the Republic. The distribution of this Offering Circular or any part of it and the offering,
possession, sale and delivery of the Notes in certain jurisdictions may be restricted by law. Persons into whose possession this
Offering Circular comes are required by the Republic and the Joint Lead Managers to inform themselves about and to observe any
such restrictions. See "Subscription and Sale" and "Transfer Restrictions" for a description of further restrictions on the offer, sale
and delivery of Notes and on distribution of this Offering Circular and other offering material relating to the Notes.
Each person purchasing Notes pursuant to Rule 144A will be deemed to:
represent that it is purchasing the Notes for its own account or an account with respect to which it exercises sole
investment discretion and that it or such account is a qualified institutional buyer (as defined in Rule 144A); and
acknowledge that the Notes have not been and will not be registered under the Securities Act or any State securities laws
and may not be reofferred, resold, pledged or otherwise transferred except as described under "Transfer Restrictions."
Each purchaser of Notes sold outside the United States in reliance on Regulation S will be deemed to have represented that it is
not purchasing Notes with a view to distribution thereof in the United States. Each person purchasing Notes pursuant to Rule 144A
also acknowledges that:
it has been afforded an opportunity to request from the Republic and to review, and it has received, all additional
information considered by it to be necessary to verify the accuracy of the information herein;
it has not relied on the Joint Lead Managers or any person affiliated with the Joint Lead Managers in connection with its
investigation of the accuracy of the information contained in this Offering Circular or its investment decision; and
no person has been authorized to give any information or to make any representation concerning the Republic or the Notes
other than those contained in this Offering Circular and, if given or made, such information or representation should not be
relied upon as having been authorized by the Republic or the Joint Lead Managers.
IN CONNECTION WITH THIS ISSUE OF NOTES, THE JOINT LEAD MANAGERS MAY, THEMSELVES OR
THROUGH THEIR AFFILIATES, OVERALLOT OR EFFECT TRANSACTIONS WHICH STABILIZE OR
MAINTAIN THE MARKET PRICE OF THE NOTES AT A LEVEL WHICH MIGHT NOT OTHERWISE PREVAIL IN
THE OPEN MARKET, TO THE EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE LAWS. SUCH STABILIZING, IF
COMMENCED, MAY BE DISCONTINUED AT ANY TIME.
ii


PRESENTATION OF INFORMATION
Unless otherwise specified or the context requires, references to "US dollars", "$" and "US$" are to United States dollars and
references to the "colón" and "colones" and "¢" are to Salvadoran colones.
References to the "Republic" and "El Salvador" are to the Republic of El Salvador.
References to "FOB" are to exports free on board and to "CIF" are to imports including cost, insurance and freight charges.
Data identified as "preliminary" in the tables included in this Offering Circular reflect an interim calculation and is subject to
change.
References to "maquila" are to the assembly of imported goods for re-export.
References to "Central America" and "Central American countries" are to El Salvador, Costa Rica, Guatemala, Honduras and
Nicaragua.
Certain economic and financial data in this Offering Circular is derived from information previously published by Banco
Central de Reserva de El Salvador (the "Central Bank") and other governmental entities of El Salvador. This data is subject to
correction and change in subsequent publications.
Certain other information in this Offering Circular is derived from information made publicly available by the United Nations.
References to "net international reserves" are to foreign currency reserves. The term "current account surplus (deficit)" as
applied to the balance of payments includes foreign aid, unless otherwise specified.
Certain amounts included in this Offering Circular have been subject to rounding adjustments; accordingly, figures shown as
totals in certain tables may not be an arithmetic aggregation of the figures which precede them.
FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS
This Offering Circular contains certain forward-looking statements (as such term is defined in the Securities Act) concerning
the Republic. These statements are based upon beliefs of certain government officials and others as well as a number of
assumptions and estimates which are inherently subject to significant uncertainties, many of which are beyond the control of the
Republic. Future events may differ materially from those expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. Such forward-
looking statements are principally contained in the sections "Offering Circular Summary," "The Republic of El Salvador," "The
Salvadoran Economy," "Foreign Trade and Balance of Payments," "Monetary System," "Public Sector Finances" and "Public
Debt." In addition, in those and other portions of this Offering Circular, the words "anticipates," "believes," "estimates,"
"expects," "plans," "intends," "projections" and similar expressions, as they relate to the Republic, are intended to identify
forward-looking statements. Such statements reflect the current views of the Republic with respect to future events and are subject
to certain risks, uncertainties and assumptions. The Republic undertakes no obligation publicly to update or revise any forward-
looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise. In light of these risks and uncertainties,
there can be no assurances that the events described or implied in the forward-looking statements contained in this Offering
Circular will in fact occur.
iii


ARBITRATION AND ENFORCEABILITY
The Republic is a foreign sovereign state. Consequently, it may be difficult for investors to obtain or realize upon judgments in
the courts of the United States. Under its Constitution, the Republic is not permitted to consent to jurisdiction of the courts of any
foreign jurisdiction. The Republic has not consented to the jurisdiction of any court outside El Salvador in connection with actions
arising out of or based on the Notes or in connection with the enforcement of any judgment arising out of such actions, nor has the
Republic appointed an agent for service of process outside El Salvador. The Republic has agreed to the following arbitration
provisions as part of the Terms and Conditions of the Notes:
Any dispute, controversy or claim arising out of or relating to the Notes (other than any action arising out
of or based on the United States federal or state securities laws), including the performance, interpretation,
construction, breach, termination or invalidity thereof shall be finally settled by arbitration in accordance with
the Arbitration Rules of the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law (excluding Article 26
thereof) as in effect on the date of the Fiscal Agency Agreement (the "UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules"). The
number of arbitrators shall be three, to be appointed in accordance with Section II of the UNCITRAL
Arbitration Rules. The appointing authority shall be the Chairman of the International Court of Arbitration of
the International Chamber of Commerce. The third arbitrator may be (but need not be) of the same nationality
as any of the parties to the arbitration. The place of arbitration shall be New York, New York. The language to
be used in the arbitration proceedings shall be English. Any arbitral tribunal constituted under this paragraph
shall make its decisions entirely on the basis of the substantive law of the State of New York.
The decision of any arbitral tribunal shall be final to the fullest extent permitted by law, and a court
judgment may be entered thereon by any Salvadoran court lawfully entitled to enter such judgment. In any
arbitration or related legal proceedings for the conversion of an arbitral award into a judgment, the Republic
will not raise any defense that it could not raise but for the fact that it is a sovereign state. The Republic has
not consented to the jurisdiction of any court outside El Salvador in connection with actions arising out of or
based on the Notes or in connection with the enforcement of any judgment arising out of such actions, nor has
the Republic appointed an agent for service of process outside El Salvador. The Republic waives any forum
non conveniens defense in any proceeding in El Salvador.
No arbitration proceedings hereunder shall be binding upon or in any way affect the right or interest of
any person other than the claimant or respondent with respect to such arbitration.
The Republic's consent to arbitration shall not preclude a holder of any Note from instituting legal
proceedings against the Republic in the courts of El Salvador.
The Republic has represented that it has no right to immunity on the grounds of sovereignty or otherwise, from the execution of
any judgment in El Salvador, or from the execution or enforcement in El Salvador of any arbitral award (except, in each case, for
the limitation on alienation of public property) in respect of any proceeding or any other matter arising out of or relating to its
obligations contained in the Notes. The enforcement by a Salvadoran court of a foreign arbitral award is subject to recognition by
the Corte Suprema de Justicia (the "Supreme Court") of the Republic, which will recognize such award if all of the required
formalities are observed and the award does not contravene Salvadoran national sovereignty, constitutional rights, public policy
and "good morals." Under the laws of the Republic, public property (bienes de uso público) of the Republic located in El Salvador
is not subject to execution or attachment, either prior to or after judgment. The execution of a judgment against the Republic in El
Salvador is only available in accordance with the procedures set forth in Articles 450 et seq. of the Salvadoran Civil Procedure
Code of 1882, as amended, for any execution of judgment commencing on or before December 31, 2009, and in accordance with
procedures set forth in Articles 590 et seq. of the Salvadoran Civil and Business Procedure Code that is expected to enter into force
on January 1, 2010 if no further amendment is made, for any execution of judgment commencing on or after that date. Both
proceedings require registration of the judgment for inclusion in the budget for payment in a subsequent fiscal year of the
Republic.
iv


EXCHANGE RATE INFORMATION
On November 30, 2000, the Legislative Assembly approved the Ley de Integración Monetaria (the "Monetary Integration
Act"), which fixed the colón to the US dollar at ¢8.75 to US$1.00, effective January 1, 2001. Since January 1, 2001, the colón/US
dollar exchange rate has been fixed at ¢8.75/US$1.00 pursuant to the Monetary Integration Act. The Monetary Integration Act
allows free circulation of the US dollar in the Salvadoran economy and makes the US dollar the unit of account for the financial
system in El Salvador.
Currency conversions contained in this Offering Circular should not be construed as representations that colones have been,
could have been or could be converted into US dollars at the indicated or any other rate of exchange.
v


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OFFERING CIRCULAR SUMMARY
The following summary does not purport to be complete and is qualified in its entirety by, and is subject to, the detailed
information appearing elsewhere in this Offering Circular.
The Republic of El Salvador
General
El Salvador is a republic and its form of government is a representative democracy. In March 2009, Mauricio Funes of the
Frente Farabundo Martí para la Liberación Nacional (the "FMLN") party was elected president of the Republic. His election
marked the first time that a representative of the FMLN was elected president after four consecutive terms in which the
representatives of the Alianza Republicana Nacionalista ("ARENA") party had been elected to serve as president. He took office
on June 1, 2009, succeeding Elias Antonio Saca González, who had been elected in 2004.
El Salvador is geographically the smallest and also the most densely populated of the five Central American countries. It is
bounded on the south by the Pacific Ocean, on the northwest by Guatemala and on the northeast and east by Honduras.
In 2008, El Salvador had a nominal gross domestic product ("GDP") of approximately US$22.1 billion, an increase from
US$20.4 billion in 2007. Real GDP grew at a rate of 2.5% in 2008, compared to 4.7% in 2007, reflecting the negative effects of
the slowdown of the global economy as well a record high oil prices. For the six months ended June 30, 2009, real GDP declined
2.1%, compared to a 3.1% increase registered during the same period in 2008, reflecting the continuing negative impacts of the
global economic crisis.
According to the United Nations Human Development Report 2009, El Salvador's per capita GDP based on 2007 figures and
adjusted for purchasing power parity was US$5,804.
Economy
Since 1989, successive governments have implemented a series of measures designed to strengthen the private sector and to
minimize the government's role in the economy. Some of the measures implemented by the government include:
Adopting the Monetary Integration Act, which went into effect on January 1, 2001, fixing the colón to the US dollar at
¢8.75 to US$1.00 and allowing free circulation of the US dollar in the Salvadoran economy and making the US dollar the
unit of account for El Salvador's financial sector. These reforms were intended to stabilize permanently the value of the
colón against the US dollar, reduce interest rates, increase the local savings rate, control inflation, encourage foreign
investment, and simplify the management of the economy. The fixed exchange rate replaced the free floating exchange
rate that had been in place since 1989. The Central Bank is not permitted to be a funding source for the central
government. The power of the Central Bank to issue new colones or coins ceased as of January 1, 2001. All deposits,
loans, pensions and other operations of the financial system were redenominated to US dollars on that date. Non-financial
firms may use either colones or US dollars to express their financial records and accounting. Salaries and wages may be
denominated in either colones or US dollars and prices can be specified in colones or US dollars.
Encouraging the establishment of free trade zones by eliminating certain tariffs and adopting laws allowing unrestricted
repatriation of earnings by foreign companies while providing for rebates of duties on certain exports. All these measures
were intended to stimulate the manufacturing sector, principally by maquila plants, which are exempt from import and
export duties and enjoy certain income tax exemptions.
Implementing the initiatives of the Mercado Común Centroamericano (the "Central American Common Market" or
"CACM"), qualifying for enhanced, preferential access to the United States market under the Caribbean Basin Initiative
(the "CBI") and reaching free trade agreements with Mexico, Chile, the Dominican Republic, Panama, Taiwan, Colombia
and the United States. El Salvador also entered into the U.S.-Dominican Republic-Central America Free Trade Agreement
(the "DR-CAFTA") with the United States, the five member countries of the Central America Economic Integration
System and the Dominican Republic.
Modernizing the banking sector in El Salvador through the privatization of commercial banks and the savings and loan
associations in order to promote competition and the development of a stronger financial system. The government created
the Superintendencia del Sistema Financiero (the "Superintendency of the Financial System") to regulate the banking
industry and enacted legislation to further its modernization efforts in the banking sector.
1


Reforming the pension system with the creation of a new system pursuant to which a substantial portion of the public
"pay-as-you-go" pension system was replaced by a private system based on individual contributions. Under the new
system, participating workers make monthly contributions to private pension funds that invest in permitted Salvadoran
securities. Subsequent reforms to the pension system law reduced the government's obligations by authorizing the
government to make certain payments pursuant to a 15-year annuity rather than in one lump sum and eliminated
employees' option to retire after 30 years of contributions to the system regardless of age. Subsequent reforms further
reduced the burden by substituting the 15-year annuity with 25-year pension investment certificates at more favorable
interest rates. At December 31, 2008, over 1.8 million Salvadoran workers, or 72.8% of the Salvadoran workforce in
2008, were affiliated with the private system and US$4.6 billion in assets, equivalent to 20.6% of 2008 nominal GDP,
were managed by the system's private pension fund administrators. See "The Salvadoran Economy -- Employment and
Wages -- Pension Reform" and "The Salvadoran Economy -- Public Debt -- Internal Debt."
Implementing a series of tax reforms, including the introduction of the value added tax in 1992 and the subsequent
increase in the value added tax rate from 10.0% to 13.0% in 1995. A second tax reform was implemented in 2004 aimed at
closing loopholes, strengthening tax and customs administration, increasing the penalties under the tax code for violations
of the value added tax and income tax provisions as well as the applicable penalties under the Penal Code and Civil Code,
and introducing penalties for customs violations. As a result of these reforms, the tax to GDP ratio increased from 9.5% of
GDP in 1991 to 14.0% GDP in 2008.
Continuing to modernize its public sector institutions by reducing the size of the central government through a decrease in
the number of employees and combining ministries. The government amended the Ley del Servicio Civil (the "Civil
Service Law"), which established a more flexible public sector employment policy and reduced the government's payroll.
The amendments also provided public employees with the right to organize, the right to strike and the right to seek
collective bargaining over wages, benefits, and working conditions. These last amendments were approved by the
Legislative Assembly in September 2006 and entered into force in June 2009 after ratification of a constitutional
amendment recognizing public workers' right to organize and the right to strike under certain circumstances. During 2003
and again in 2009, the government implemented measures designed to reduce government expenditures for subsidies in the
areas of electricity and water consumption and public transportation and focus subsidies on those sectors of the population
most in need of such assistance.
Promoting tourism through, among other things, enacting laws and regulations designed to foster the development of the
tourism sector, including the use of the proceeds from special contribution levies on lodging and airport departures toward
developing the sector. See "The Salvadoran Economy -- Promotion of Tourism."
Investing in infrastructure projects, which include the construction of a major port facility at La Unión, the construction
and expansion of the thermal power plant in Atéos to generate an additional 50.0 MW, the construction of a 66.1 MW
hydroelectric plant known as "El Chaparral" and a highway in the northern region of the country that will connect the
eastern region with the western region of the Republic. See "The Salvadoran Economy -- Infrastructure Investment."
Implementing a comprehensive education plan, known as Plan Nacional de Educación 2021 (the "2021 National
Education Plan"), which includes improving school facilities, providing greater access to computers and the Internet and
establishing technological institutes, as well as implementing a program, known as Programa Red Solidaria (now known
as the Comunidades Solidarias Rurales, the "Mutual Aid Communities"), that provided monetary assistance to rural
families that enroll their children in school, among other things. See "The Salvadoran Economy -- Education Initiatives
(Plan Nacional de Educación 2021)."
Current Economic Initiatives
The Funes administration has begun to implement a series of new measures to continue strengthening the Salvadoran economy
in light of the recent global economic crisis. In an effort to counteract the effects of the recent global economic crisis, President
Funes and his administration implemented the Plan Global Anti-Crisis ("Global Anti-Crisis Plan"). The Global Anti-Crisis Plan
seeks to inject approximately US$575 million into the economy over the course of 18 months, which may be extended to a 30
month period. This plan seeks to: (1) stimulate the national economy with special focus on strategic sectors such as construction
and agriculture; (2) provide unemployment compensation to citizens who have lost their jobs while at the same time reducing the
level of unemployment by creating new positions in key economic sectors to compensate for job losses in the maquila sector; (3)
assist in the budgetary needs of families with low incomes or who have lost their primary source of income as a result of the crisis
by establishing a universal social protection system. The assistance includes free health coverage for six months under the social
security system and providing free uniforms and other materials for students in grades 1 through 9 of the public school system; and
2