Costa Rica News, Daily News in Costa Rica by the Tico Times
Dec 24, 2008
   
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That holiday glow: The Christmas tree in front of the National Children's Hospital in San José is bejeweled with holiday color.
Ronald Reyes | Tico Times
Costa Rica to join CAFTA Jan. 1
President Oscar Arias' administration yesterday applauded a move in Washington that clears the way for this nation to join the Central American Free-Trade Agreement with the United States (CAFTA).
Colón takes rollercoaster ride with the dollar
Costa Rica's exchange rate with the United States, which was firmly attached to the upper colón-to-dollar limit for most of 2008, has taken a rollercoaster ride the past few months.
What's open and closed during the holidays?
Most government offices are closed through Jan. 2, while the Judicial Investigation Police and Supreme Court will have a limited area open 24 hours a day for emergencies and urgent proceedings. For any emergency, dial 911.
Edited by Alex Leff
Tico Times Staff | aleff@ticotimes.net
Costa Rica Daily News updates by the Tico Times Newspaper
Dec 24

Christmas dinners
Mirador Restaurant: Dec. 24 and 25, 6 p.m., Villa Caletas, Central Pacific, 2630-3000, ext. 209, 305.

Marriot Hotel restaurants
Dec. 24 and 31, 8 p.m., San Antonio de Belén, reservations, 2298-0207 and at Marriot Los Sueños, reservas.costarica@marriotthotels.com.

Cataratas Resort
Christmas dinner, including lodging, breakfast, lunch, dinner and taxes, La Fortuna, San Carlos, 2282-8770, geanina@suenoshoteleros.com.

Fiesta Latina
Dancing and dining, 8 p.m., El Pueblo Shopping Center, Barrio Tournón, 2222-2003, ext. 102. 

Bob Benjamin Zuñiga in concert
5 p.m., Best Western Tamarindo.

Costa Rica to join CAFTA Jan. 1

President Oscar Arias' administration yesterday applauded a move in Washington that clears the way for this nation to join the Central American Free-Trade Agreement with the United States (CAFTA).

President George W. Bush issued a proclamation letting Costa Rica into the pact on Jan. 1.

“With these negotiations, we've finalized the process of approval and implementation of CAFTA, which Costa Rica initiated more than four years ago, following the signing of the trade agreement on August 5, 2004,” Foreign Trade Minister Marco Vinicio Ruiz said. “Finally, the Arias administration is fulfilling the popular mandate that the people of Costa Rica gave us in the Referendum of October 7, 2007.”

Despite the referendum, lawmakers were tasked with approving the treaty bill by bill, including controversial reforms to laws from intellectual property rights to telecommunications, in a drawn out process that required two deadline extensions from the other signatory countries.

Presidency Minister Rodrigo Arias, the president's brother, said the treaty is a much needed sign of unity. “This is the moment for us to come to agreement because there are many subjects such as the world financial crisis and its effects on which we all have to work together. That's what Costa Ricans are hoping for,” he said.

-Tico Times
Colón takes rollercoaster ride with the dollar
By Elizabeth Goodwin
Tico Times Staff | editorial@ticotimes.net

Costa Rica's exchange rate with the United States, which was firmly attached to the upper colón-to-dollar limit for most of 2008, has taken a rollercoaster ride the past few months.

In November and December, the price rose and fell dramatically, fluctuating by up to ¢40.

On Dec. 15, the average buying exchange rate was about ¢538, a drop of over ¢23 from the exchange rate a week earlier of ¢561 per one U.S. dollar. As of Monday, a dollar was worth ¢540.

The Central Bank ensures that a dollar can be worth no less than ¢491 and no more than ¢569 (TT, May 16) by buying and selling dollars.

Ana Toyama, an analyst at the financial advising firm Aldesa, said that much of the volatility in the past few months can be attributed to the yearly process of companies changing money into dollars to pay year-end bonuses, known as aguinaldos, as well as taxes. This floods the local market with dollars, driving its value down, as was seen at the end of November. Toyama said her company did a study of the last two years and found that in the last two months of the year, the negotiated exchange rate increases strongly.

“What we're seeing is not strange,” Toyama said.

Toyama predicts the dollar will remain high next year, as less tourism and foreign investment will reduce dollars in the local economy.

The financial weekly El Financiero predicts that the exchange rate will average about ¢553 per dollar this year. In 2007, it was ¢495.

While 2008 began with the exchange rate stayed at about ¢500 to a dollar, by July the value had soared to ¢550 as the Central Bank started selling dollars to defend the upper band. Not until November did the value of the dollar begin to fall in the local markets.

What's open and closed during the holidays?
By Sonia Cordero
Tico Times Staff | scordero@ticotimes.net

Most government offices are closed through Jan. 2, while the Judicial Investigation Police and Supreme Court will have a limited area open 24 hours a day for emergencies and urgent proceedings. For any emergency, dial 911.

Rest assured, hospital emergency rooms will remain open 24 hours a day, and several pharmacies including Clínica Bíblica Hospital in downtown San José, La Católica Hospital in Guadalupe and Farmacia Sucre Los Angeles in Heredia will all be open.

Cinemark Escazú and Cinemark del Este movie theaters latest show on today and Dec. 30 will be at 3 p.m.

Costa Rican supermarkets Muñoz y Nanne, Más x Menos, Palí and Hipermás will remain open but with some changes to their opening hours.

See this week's print or pdf edition of The Tico Times for more.

Please send us your letters, 500 words or fewer, to letters@ticotimes.net for Costa Rica issues or letters@nicatimes.net for Nicaragua and the Central American and Caribbean region. Thanks!
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