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Economy of Paraguay

The economy of Paraguay is a market economy that is highly dependent on agriculture products. In recent years, Paraguay's economy has grown as a result of increased agricultural exports, especially soybeans. Paraguay has the economic advantages of a young population and vast hydroelectric power. Its disadvantages include the few available mineral resources, and political instability. The government welcomes foreign investment.[16]

Economy of Paraguay
Asunción is the capital and largest city of Paraguay
CurrencyParaguayan guaraní (PYG, ₲)
Calendar year
Trade organizations
WTO, Mercosur, Prosur
Country group
Statistics
Population 6,956,071 (2018)[3]
GDP
  • $43 billion (nominal, 2023)[4]
  • $118 billion (PPP, 2023)[4]
GDP rank
GDP growth
  • 0.2% (2022)[5]
  • 4.5% (2023f)[5]
  • 3.5% (2024f)[5]
GDP per capita
  • $7,238 (nominal, 2023)[4]
  • $19,040 (PPP, 2023)[4]
GDP per capita rank
GDP by sector
3.7% (2020 est.)[4]
Population below poverty line
  • 24.2% (2018)[7]
  • 17.0% on less than $5.50/day (2018)[8]
46.2 high (2018)[9]
Labor force
  • 3,530,715 (2019)[12]
  • 67.4% employment rate (2018)[13]
Labor force by occupation
Unemployment 5.7% (2017 est.)[6]
Main industries
sugar, cement, textiles, beverages, wood products, steel, base metals, electric power
External
Exports $11.73 billion (2017 est.)[6]
Export goods
soybeans, feed, cotton, meat, edible oils, wood, leather
Main export partners
Imports $11.35 billion (2017 est.)[6]
Import goods
road vehicles, consumer goods, tobacco, petroleum products, electrical machinery, tractors, chemicals, vehicle parts
Main import partners
FDI stock
  • $6.235 billion (31 December 2017 est.)[6]
  • Abroad: $705.1 million (31 December 2017 est.)[6]
−$298 million (2017 est.)[6]
$17.7 billion (31 December 2017 est.)[6]
Public finances
19.5% of GDP (2017 est.)[6]
−1.1% (of GDP) (2017 est.)[6]
Revenues5.524 billion (2017 est.)[6]
Expenses5.968 billion (2017 est.)[6]
$7.877 billion (31 December 2017 est.)[6]
Main data source: CIA World Fact Book
All values, unless otherwise stated, are in US dollars.

Agriculture represents 30% of its GDP. According to official figures, 5% of landowners own 90% of the land.[17]

Overview edit

Paraguay is a middle-income country that changed rapidly in the 1970s and 1980s as a result of hydroelectric development, agricultural colonization, construction, and cash crop exports. Nevertheless, the country's gross domestic product (GDP) in 1986 was approximately US$3.4 billion, or roughly US$1,000 per capita, ranking Paraguay only ahead of Bolivia among countries of South America. Paraguay was the most agricultural economy of South America, and that sector influenced the performance of virtually every other sector of the economy. The over dependence on agricultural economy and low tax collections deteriorated the already wide gap wealth distribution. The extreme poverty increased from 16% to 20% during 2001 to 2012, even as the economy grew. By 2013, it has a human development index of 0.669 which is even lower than Bolivia.

The Paraguayan economic miracle of the 1970s came to a halt in 1982 because of the completion of construction at Itaipú, lower commodity prices for cotton and soybeans, and world recession. The economy recovered in 1984 and 1985, stagnated in 1986, and continued to expand in 1987 and 1988. Despite its rapid growth, the Paraguayan economy became increasingly dependent on soybeans and cotton for exports and overall economic dynamism. These two crops, however, remained subject to external price fluctuations and local weather conditions, both of which varied considerably.

Economic growth in the post-World War II period occurred in the context of political stability characterized by authoritarian rule and patronage politics. Government economic policies deviated little from 1954 to the late 1980s, consistently favoring a strong private-enterprise economy with a large role for foreign investment. Unlike most Latin American economies, in Paraguay import tariffs were generally low, fiscal deficits manageable, and exchange rates not overvalued. These trends faltered in the 1980s as the government took a more active part in industry, deficits rose, and the national currency was generally overvalued and devalued numerous times. Throughout the post-World War II era, Paraguay had no personal income tax, and government revenues as a percentage of GDP were among the lowest in the world.

Despite the sustained economic growth that marked the postwar period, the distribution of economic benefits was highly inequitable. Although GDP expanded rapidly in the 1970s, most economists estimated that income distribution worsened during the decade. Government spending on social services was particularly lacking. Paraguay's poverty was mostly a rural phenomenon, which increasingly involved competition for land in the eastern region near the Brazilian border, especially in the departments (administrative divisions) of Alto Paraná, Canendiyú, and Caaguazú. Nonetheless, land tenure was not generally the acute social problem it was in many developing countries.

Although Paraguay faced significant obstacles to future economic development, it displayed extraordinary potential. Paraguay contained little oil and no precious metals or sea coasts, but the country was self-sufficient in many areas and was endowed with fertile land, dense forests, and swift rivers. The process of opening up the eastern border region to economic activity and continued agricultural expansion was expected to effect rapid changes in once-isolated Paraguay. Likewise, the development of a series of hydroelectric plants along the Río Paraná linked Paraguay to its neighbors and provided it access to cherished energy resources and badly needed export revenues. Finally, road construction united different departments of Paraguay and provided the country its first access to the Atlantic Ocean via Brazil. These processes of infrastructure development, hydroelectric expansion, agricultural colonization, and a cash crop explosion allowed Paraguay by the late 1980s to begin to tap its potential

History of economic advancement edit

Until the Spanish established Asunción in 1537, economic activity in Paraguay was limited to the subsistence agriculture of the Guaraní Indians. The Spanish, however, found little of economic interest in their colony, which had no precious metals and no sea coasts. The typical feudal Spanish economic system did not dominate colonial Paraguay, although the encomienda system was established. Economic relations were distinguished by the reducciones (reductions or townships) that were established by Jesuit missionaries from the early seventeenth century until the 1760s. The incorporation of Indians into these Jesuit agricultural communes laid the foundation for an agriculture-based economy that survived in the late twentieth century.

Three years after Paraguay overthrew Spanish authority and gained its independence, the country's economy was controlled by the autarkic policies of José Gaspar Rodríguez de Francia (1814–40), who closed the young nation's borders to virtually all international trade. Landlocked, isolated, and underpopulated, Paraguay structured its economy around a centrally administered agricultural sector, extensive cattle grazing, and inefficient shipbuilding and textile industries. After the demise of de Francia, government policies focused on expanding international trade and stimulating economic development. The government built several roads and authorized British construction of a railroad.

The War of the Triple Alliance (1865–70) fundamentally changed the Paraguayan economy. Economic resources were employed in and destroyed by the war effort. Paraguay was occupied by its enemies in 1870; the countryside was in virtual ruin, the labor force was decimated, peasants were pushed into the environs of Asunción from the east and south, and the modernization of the preceding three decades was undone. Sleepy, self-sufficient Paraguay, whose advances in agriculture and quality of life had been the envy of many in the Southern Cone, became the most backward nation in that subregion.

To pay its substantial war debt, Paraguay sold large tracts of land to foreigners, mostly Argentines. These large land sales established the base of the present-day land tenure system, which is characterized by a skewed distribution of land. Unlike most of its neighbors, however, Paraguay's economy was controlled not by a traditional, landed elite, but by foreign companies. Many Paraguayans grew crops and worked as wage laborers on latifundios (large landholdings) typically owned by foreigners.

The late 1800s and the early 1900s saw a slow rebuilding of ports, roads, the railroad, farms, cattle stock, and the labor force. The country was slowly being repopulated by former Brazilian soldiers who had fought in the War of the Triple Alliance, and Paraguay's government encouraged European immigration. Although few in number, British, German, Italian, and Spanish investors and farmers helped modernize the country. Argentine, Brazilian, and British companies in the late 1800s purchased some of Paraguay's best land and started the first large-scale production of agricultural goods for export. One Argentine company, whose owner had purchased 15 percent of the immense Chaco region, processed massive quantities of tannin, which were extracted from the bark of the Chaco's ubiquitous quebracho (break-axe) hardwood. Large quantities of the extract were used by the region's thriving hide industry. Another focus of large-scale agro-processing was the yerba maté bush, whose leaves produced the potent tea that is the national beverage. Tobacco farming also flourished. Beginning in 1904, foreign investment increased as a succession of Liberal Party (Partido Liberal) administrations in Paraguay maintained a staunch laissez-faire policy.

The period of steady economic recovery came to an abrupt halt in 1932 as the country entered another devastating war. This time Paraguay fought Bolivia over possession of the Chaco and rumors of oil deposits. The war ended in 1935 after extensive human losses on both sides, and war veterans led the push for general social reform. During the 1930s and 1940s, the state passed labor laws, implemented agrarian reform, and assumed a role in modernization, influenced in part by the leadership of Juan Perón in Argentina and Getúlio Vargas in Brazil. The 1940 constitution, for example, rejected the laissez-faire approach of previous Liberal governments. Reformist policies, however, did not enjoy a consensus, and by 1947 the country had entered into a civil war, which in turn initiated a period of economic chaos that lasted until the mid-1950s. During this period, Paraguay experienced the worst inflation in all of Latin America, averaging over 100 percent annually in the 1950s.

After centuries of isolation, two devastating regional wars, and a civil war, in 1954 Paraguay entered a period of prolonged political and economic stability under the authoritarian rule of Alfredo Stroessner. Stroessner's economic policies took a middle course between social reform, desarrollismo, and laissez-faire, all in the context of patronage politics. Relative to previous governments, Stroessner took a fairly active role in the economy but reserved productive activities for the local and foreign private sectors. The new government's primary economic task was to arrest the country's rampant and spiraling price instability. In 1955 Stroessner fired the country's finance minister, who was unwilling to implement reforms, and in 1956 accepted an International Monetary Fund (IMF) stabilization plan that abolished export duties, lowered import tariffs, restricted credit, devalued the currency, and implemented strict austerity measures. Although the sacrifice was high, the plan helped bring economic stability to Paraguay. Labor unions retaliated with a major strike in 1958, but the new government, now firmly established, quelled the uprising and forced many labor leaders into exile; most of them remained there in the late 1980s.

By the 1960s, the economy was on a path of modest but steady economic growth. Real GDP growth during the 1960s averaged 4.2 percent a year, under the Latin American average of 5.7 percent but well ahead of the chaotic economy of the two previous decades. As part of the United States-sponsored Alliance for Progress, the government was encouraged to expand its planning apparatus for economic development. With assistance from the Organization of American States (OAS), the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), and the United Nations Economic Commission for Latin America (ECLA), in 1962 Paraguay established the Technical Planning Secretariat (Secretaría Técnica de Planificación—STP), the major economic planning arm of the government. By 1965 the country had its first National Economic Plan, a two-year plan for 1965–66. This was followed by another two-year plan (1967–68) and then a series of five-year plans. Five-year plans—only general policy statements—were not typically adhered to or achieved and played a minimal role in Paraguay's economic growth and development. Compared with most Latin American countries, Paraguay had a small public sector. Free enterprise dominated the economy, export promotion was favored over import substitution, agriculture continued to dominate industry, and the economy remained generally open to international trade and market mechanisms.

In an economic sense, the 1970s constituted Paraguay's miracle decade. Real GDP grew at over 8 percent a year and exceeded 10 percent from 1976 to 1981—a faster growth rate than in any other economy in Latin America. Four coinciding developments accounted for Paraguay's rapid growth in the 1970s. The first was the completion of the road from Asunción to Puerto Presidente Stroessner and to Brazilian seaports on the Atlantic, ending traditional dependence on access through Argentina and opening the east to many for the first time. The second was the signing of the Treaty of Itaipú with Brazil in 1973. Beyond the obvious economic benefits of such a massive project, Itaipú helped to create a new mood of optimism in Paraguay about what a small, isolated country could attain. The third event was land colonization, which resulted from the availability of land, the existence of economic opportunity, the increased price of crops, and the newly gained accessibility of the eastern border region. Finally, the skyrocketing price of soybeans and cotton led farmers to quadruple the number of hectares planted with these two crops. As the 1970s progressed, soybeans and cotton came to dominate the country's employment, production, and exports.

These developments shared responsibility for establishing thriving economic relations between Paraguay and the world's sixth largest economy, Brazil. Contraband trade became the dominant economic force on the border between the two countries, with Puerto Presidente Stroessner serving as the hub of such smuggling activities. Observers contended that contraband was accepted by many Paraguayan government officials, some of whom were reputed to have benefited handsomely. Many urban dwellers' shelves were stocked with contraband luxury items.

The Paraguayan government's emphasis on industrial activity increased noticeably in the 1970s. One of the most important components of the new industrial push was Law 550, also referred to as Law 550/75 or the Investment Promotion Law for Social and Economic Development. Law 550 opened Paraguay's doors even further to foreign investors by providing income-tax breaks, duty-free capital imports, and additional incentives for companies that invested in priority areas, especially the Chaco. Law 550 was successful. Investments by companies in the United States, Europe, and Japan comprised, according to some estimates, roughly a quarter of new investment. Industrial policies also encouraged the planning of more state-owned enterprises, including ones involved in producing ethanol, cement, and steel.

Much of Paraguay's rural population, however, missed out on the economic development. Back roads remained inadequate, preventing peasants from bringing produce to markets. Social services, such as schools and clinics, were severely lacking. Few people in the countryside had access to potable water, electricity, bank credit, or public transportation. As in other economies that underwent rapid growth, income distribution was believed to have worsened in Paraguay during the 1970s in both relative and absolute terms. By far the greatest problem that the rural population faced, however, was competition for land. Multinational agribusinesses, Brazilian settlers, and waves of Paraguayan colonists rapidly increased the competition for land in the eastern border region. Those peasants who lacked proper titles to the lands they occupied were pushed to more marginal areas; as a result, an increasing number of rural clashes occurred, including some with the government.

Agriculture edit

In 2018, Paraguay was the 6th largest producer of soy in the world, with 11 million tons produced (behind the US, Brazil, Argentina, China and India). In the same year, the country produced 5.3 million tons of maize, and 6.1 million tons of sugarcane, ranking 21st in the world in both; this year, the country also produced 3.3 million tons of cassava, 892 thousand tons of rice, 722 thousand tons of wheat, 223 thousand tons of orange, 116 thousand tons of yerba mate, 107 thousand tons of sorghum, in addition to smaller productions of other agricultural products.[18]

Industry edit

Industry, especially the manufacturing sector, historically was linked to agricultural processing until the 1970s, when the construction of hydroelectric plants and new industrial incentives began to broaden the industrial base. Industry was composed principally of manufacturing and construction. Paraguay had no real mining sector, but the manufacture of construction materials included limited mining activity. Manufacturing and construction in the economy in the late 1980s remained dependent on developments in other sectors, such as agriculture and energy, for their growth. Although industry was becoming more visible in Paraguay in the 1980s, industry's share of GDP actually declined in the 1970s and 1980s because of more rapid growth in agriculture.

Manufacturing edit

Manufacturing accounted for 16.3 percent of GDP in 1986 and employed roughly 13 percent of the labor force, making Paraguay one of the least industrialized nations in Latin America. Manufactured exports, by most definitions, accounted for less than 5 percent of total exports; when semiprocessed agricultural products were included, however, that figure reached 77 percent. The growth of the country's manufacturing industries was hampered by numerous structural obstacles. These included a small internal market, limited physical infrastructure, costly access to seaports, a historical lack of energy production, and the openness of Paraguay's economy to the more industrialized economies of Brazil and Argentina. Another significant factor was the ubiquity and profitability of smuggling operations, which encouraged importing and reexporting rather than production.

Paraguay's earliest manufacturing industries processed hides and leather from its abundant cattle and tannin from quebracho trees. Small-scale manufacturing, especially textiles, flourished under the Francia dictatorship, when the nation's borders were closed. The War of the Triple Alliance, however, devastated what little industry and infrastructure the country had, causing Paraguay to enter the twentieth century as an almost completely agricultural society. Land sales to foreigners stimulated increased agricultural processing in the early twentieth century, including meat packing and the processing of flour, oilseeds, sugar, beer, and pectin extract. After the early 1900s, small-scale manufacturing in all subsectors grew at a slow, but steady pace, with some of the fastest growth occurring because of the shortages during World War II.

The government's role in promoting industry increased in the postwar era, and in 1955 the Stroessner government undertook the country's first industrial census. Over the next twenty years, the government enacted a number of industrial incentive measures, the most important of which was Law 550. Law 550 promoted exportoriented industries or those that would save foreign exchange. It also provided liberal fiscal incentives for companies to develop specific areas of the country, especially the departments of Alto Paraguay, Nueva Asunción, Chaco, and Boquerón. Incentives for business were related mostly to import-duty exemptions, but they included a variety of tax breaks and placed no restrictions on foreign ownership. Approximately one-fourth of all new manufacturing investment from 1975 to 1985 was registered under Law 550. Most foreign investments originated from Brazil, West Germany, the United States, Portugal, and Argentina in that order of importance. The dynamic processes of agricultural colonization and hydroelectric development, combined with such attractive industrial incentives, caused manufacturing to grow at an unprecedented rate in the late 1970s and early 1980s.

Unlike many other Latin American governments, which followed an import-substitution industrial policy, the Paraguayan government had played a minimalist role in the economy through most of the postwar era, curtailing import tariffs and maintaining a realistic exchange rate. In the 1980s, however, Paraguay's exchange rate became overvalued and several state-owned heavy industry plants became operational.

In the late 1980s, the major subsectors of manufacturing were food, beverages, and tobacco; textiles, clothing, leather, and shoes; wood and related products; and chemicals, petroleum, and plastics. Despite some increases in heavy industry in the economy during the 1970s and 1980s, Paraguayan industry was generally small-scale. Manufacturing production remained focused on consumer goods, and capital goods comprised under 5 percent of industrial output. In fact, in the 1980s Paraguay did not contain even one of Latin America's 1,000 largest companies, at least some of which were found in most other countries in the region. Virtually every subsector of Paraguay's manufacturing was characterized by numerous small- to medium-sized firms and a few large firms, which often were foreign owned. Most companies operated well below their capacity.

The food, beverages, and tobacco subsector has been the core manufacturing activity throughout Paraguay's history. In the late 1980s, this subsector continued to dominate, accounting for about 45 percent of industrial activity, depending on agricultural output in a given year. Agro-processing involved a large number of small, inefficient, and often family-run firms as well as a small number of large, efficient, and usually foreign-owned firms. The larger firms produced only the most lucrative items, such as oilseeds, meats, and various beverages, often for export. Some of the most common small-scale producers manufactured milled items, baked goods, sugar and molasses, dairy products, candy, manioc flour, vinegar, coffee, and tobacco. Along with raw agricultural produce, processed and semiprocessed food generated nearly all of the country's exports in the late 1980s. But, as with other manufacturing subsectors, the profitability of the food subsector often was impaired by contraband items from Brazil and Argentina, such as flour, meat, or dairy products. Paraguayan goods crossed borders unofficially, as well, thus lowering official exports.

The second most important manufacturing activity also relied on agricultural inputs for its base. Utilizing Paraguay's rich endowment of hardwood trees, the wood subsector represented about 15 percent of all industrial activity and contributed over 8 percent of exports in the 1980s. The most voluminous wood export was lumber, which was produced by hundreds of small sawmills throughout the central and eastern border regions. In addition to saw wood, mills also produced a variety of milled wood, plywood, chipboard, and parquet flooring. Although the country cut and processed only a fraction of its hundreds of species, Paraguayan wood was known for its quality. The country also contained several small paper companies and one large paper and cardboard factory located at Villeta.

Textiles, clothing, leather, and shoes comprised the third largest manufacturing subsector. These industries were traditional, grounded in the nation's abundance of inputs like cotton fibers, cattle hides, and tannin extract. The subsector accounted for about 10 percent of all manufacturing. The textile industry performed spinning, weaving, and dyeing operations and produced finished fabrics that amounted to over 100 million tons in 1986. Most fabrics were derived from cotton fibers, but a growing number of synthetic and wool fibers also were produced. Textile production provided inputs to approximately sixty clothing firms that operated under capacity and were generally inefficient. As with so many other manufacturers, clothing companies met stiff competition from widespread unregistered imports, which often originated in Asia and typically entered across the Brazilian border. The leather industry was characterized by 200 or so small tanneries dotting the Paraguayan countryside. In addition, many medium and two large tanneries fashioned leather goods. The leather industry operated at only about 40 percent of capacity, however. The shoe industry comprised a few hundred small workshops and a dozen or so mediumsized firms, which produced some 5 million pairs of leather and synthetic shoes a year.

The processing of petroleum, chemicals, and plastics repeated an increasing activity. In the late 1980s, this subsector represented less than 5 percent of industrial activity, but its share of manufacturing output was expanding because of the growth of heavy industry in Paraguay, especially industry related to the energy sector. The country also produced fertilizers, industrial gases, tanning chemicals, varnishes, and detergents. In 1987 a group of Japanese investors was considering the construction of a new fertilizer plant with a 70,000-ton capacity per year. Since the early 1980s, ethanol was being produced in large quantities, and the government was considering producing methanol. Also processed were paints, soaps, candles, perfumes, and pharmaceuticals. One of Paraguay's fastest growing industries was the new, relatively modern plastics subsector, which supplied a wide variety of goods to the local market.

Structure of the economy edit

 
Soybeans and silos on a farm in rural Paraguay

The most important component of the Paraguayan economy is the farming sector, which contributed 27% to GDP in 2006. The participation of commerce was 20.2%, and that of other services, including government, 38.4%. Industry's part (including mining and construction) was about 20%.

After years of economic crisis, between 1999 and 2002, the Paraguayan economy grew at between 2.9 and 4.1% per year from 2003 to 2006. For 2007, the estimated growth is about 6.4%. Inflation in 2007 reached 6.0%.

Most enterprises are small, micro and individual ones, including subsistence jobs like street vendors. Only 4% of the Paraguayan labor force works in companies with more than 50 employees.

In June 2007 external foreign exchange reserves amounted to US$2153 million, and the foreign official debt US$2154 million, close to parity. The fiscal surplus is provisionally reported as 0.5% of GDP in 2006 and 2007. Paraguay's economy (GDP) grew 5.8% in 2008, fastest growing sector being agriculture with 10.5% growth.[19]

 
Cattle on cleared land in the Chaco
 
Commerce in Ciudad del Este, on the border with Brazil

Agriculture accounts for about 20 percent of Paraguay's annual gross domestic product (25 percent in 2004) and virtually all of the country's export earnings. It is Paraguay's largest and most consistent source of employment, employing about 45 percent of the working population. In addition to those engaged in the formal agricultural sector, thousands of Paraguayan families survive through subsistence farming.[16]

Paraguay produces enough basic food to be largely self-sufficient. Corn, cassava, and wheat are the main food crops for local consumption. The global surge in grain prices 2007/2008 was a major impulse for the agricultural sector. Wheat cultivation expanded, so did rice. Most significant was the increase of soy production. In 2004 Paraguay had about 1.6 million hectares dedicated to genetically modified (GM) crops.[16] Export value of soy and its derivates increased from US$1,25 billion in 2007 to US$2,54billion in 2008

Paraguay's eastern plains as well as the Chaco support the country's dairy and ranching industry. Behind soybeans, beef exports make up a significant part of Paraguay's agriculture sector. Additionally, Paraguay produces an adequate supply of beef, pork, and dairy products to meet domestic needs. The discovery of cases of foot-and-mouth disease in 2002 and 2003 led to a ban on Paraguayan beef in many countries. However, in 2004 Paraguay's meat production and exports rebounded. As a result of rising international prices and the recovery of important markets like Chile or Russia, Paraguay's meat exports rose to US$143 million in 2004. They reached US$353 million in 2007 and US$597 million in 2008. Presently, Paraguay has a national herd numbering between 9 and 10 million head of cattle.

Paraguay's forests adequately meet domestic needs for lumber and fuelwood. However, logging for export, both legally and illegally, has thinned Paraguay's once abundant forests, resulting in a ban on the export of logs since the 1970s. More than 90% of the native rainforest of Paraguay's eastern half have been lost between 1975 and 2008. In the western half, the Chaco, virgin forest is lost to cattle ranching at an annual rate of more than 200.000 hectare (2008).[20] Sustainable wood cultivation is now on the increase.[16]

The fishing industry in Paraguay exists almost solely to meet domestic demand.[16]

Mining and minerals edit

Unlike many South American countries, Paraguay has few mineral resources and very little history of mining success. Foreign companies have explored Paraguay in recent years, searching for overlooked mineral deposits. Small extraction projects exist, seeking lime, clay, and the raw materials necessary to make cement, but the country's iron and steel manufacturers must import raw materials from neighboring countries.[16]

In 2010 CIC Resources Inc., the same company that discovered the copper deposits in Chile, claims to have discovered 21 billion metric tons of titanium, which could be the biggest titanium deposit in the world, in Alto Parana near frontier with Brazil.

Industry and manufacturing edit

The industrial sector produces about 25 percent of Paraguay's gross domestic product (GDP) and employs about 31 percent of the labor force. Output grew by 2.9 percent in 2004, after five years of declining production. Traditionally an agricultural economy, Paraguay is showing some signs of long-term industrial growth. The pharmaceutical industry is quickly supplanting foreign suppliers in meeting the country's drug needs. Paraguayan companies now meet 70 percent of domestic consumption and also have begun exporting drugs. Strong growth also is evident in the production of edible oils, garments, organic sugar, meat processing, and steel. Nevertheless, capital for further investment in the industrial sector of the economy is scarce. Following the revelation of widespread financial corruption in the 1990s, the government is still working to improve credit options for Paraguayan businesses.[16]

In 2003 manufacturing made up 13.6 percent of the GDP, and the sector employed about 11 percent of the working population in 2000. Paraguay's primary manufacturing focus is on food and beverages. Wood products, paper products, hides and furs, and non-metallic mineral products also contribute to manufacturing totals. Steady growth in the manufacturing GDP during the 1990s (1.2 percent annually) laid the foundation for 2002 and 2003, when the annual growth rate rose to 2.5 percent.[16]

Energy edit

 
The Itaipú Dam; a hydroelectric dam on the Paraná River

Paraguay relies almost solely on hydroelectric power to meet its energy needs. The Itaipú Dam, completed in 1984, has the world's second largest power-generating capacity: 13.3 gigawatts. The dam is located on the Paraguay River, and Paraguay and Brazil evenly share the ownership, operation, and electricity generated. Additionally, Paraguay co-owns another major hydropower plant, Yacyretá, with Argentina. Paraguay uses only a small portion of the energy it generates through Itaipú and Yacyretá. In 2002 Paraguay generated more than 48 billion kilowatt-hours of energy. It consumed only 2.5 billion kilowatt-hours while exporting 45.9 billion kilowatt-hours. Paraguay will have even more hydroelectricity to export when planned new turbines are installed at Itaipú and the Yacyretá dam is fully completed.[16] In 2007 electricity production rose to 70 TWh, and exports reached 64 TWh which put Paraguay in second place worldwide as an exporter of electrical power (And in the first place as a net exporter since France, the Number one exporter in the World with 67 TWh, also imports 10 TWh, while Paraguay does not import any).

Paraguay has no oil reserves; it relies on imported oil to meet its limited need for oil-produced energy. The Paraguayan government owns Petróleos Paraguayos, which is responsible for all distribution of oil products. The state accepts bids from international oil companies, selecting a few companies annually to meet the country's demand. Presently, Paraguay does not produce or consume natural gas, but consumes LPG imported mainly from Argentina.[16]

Services edit

The services sector made up nearly 50 percent of Paraguay's gross domestic product in 2004 and employed about 19 percent of Paraguay's working population. The importation of goods, especially from Argentina and Brazil, for sale and illegal reexportation creates service industry jobs. The services sector had a moderate growth rate of 0.9 percent from 1990 to 2003. The sector decreased by 7.8 percent in 2002, before rebounding in 2003 with a 1.6 percent growth rate. Instability in the economy and a large black market have hampered development of the formal services sector in Paraguay.[16]

Tourism edit

 
Tourism

Paraguay has a small tourism industry. Total tourism receipts declined annually from 2000 through 2002. In 2003 Paraguay's hotel occupancy rate was 38 percent. It increased by 15 percent in 2004. Small gains in tourism have come from business rather than leisure travellers. For many years, Paraguay served as a central market for trafficable, duty-free goods. However, crackdowns by the governments of Brazil and Argentina have stemmed the flow of shoppers travelling to Paraguay looking for trafficable items.[16]

Banking and finance edit

Paraguay's banking and financial services industry is still recovering from the liquidity crisis of 1995, when news of widespread corruption resulted in the closure of several significant banks. Reform efforts spurred by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank helped restore some credibility to Paraguay's banking industry. Still, a paucity of credit options hinders the overall economy. Paraguay has a long history as a money-laundering center. The government has taken steps to curb the problem, but enforcement of anti-laundering legislation remains inconsistent.[16]

Foreign companies either partially or wholly own most banks and financial institutions in Paraguay. Paraguayan banks hold less than 10 percent of deposits. Of the 16 banks operating in Paraguay in 2003, 50 percent were wholly foreign-owned and 25 percent were partially owned by foreign companies. Paraguay's Central Bank exists to stabilize the financial sector, making sure that another run on banks, such as the one that occurred in 1995, does not recur. The Superintendencia de Bancos regulates the banking system, monitoring the percentage of non-performing loans in the banking system. Bank deposits rose significantly in 2004, along with the percentage of local currency in total deposits. Local currency deposits increased by 26 percent in 2004, a sign that Paraguayans are gaining confidence in the stability of Paraguayan currency. In another promising development, interest rates dropped dramatically in 2004, from 50 percent in 2003 to 27 percent in 2004.[16]

Paraguay's stock market, the Bolsa de Valores y Productos de Asunción, began trading in October 1993. The tradition of family-owned companies and economic instability kept investment low throughout the 1990s. The value of shares on the Asunción stock exchange rose by 390 percent in 2004, reaching US$17.5 million.[16]

Labor edit

Paraguay's formal labour force was estimated to total about 2.7 million workers in 2004. About 45 percent worked in the agricultural sector, 31 percent in the industrial sector, and 19 percent in the services sector. Unemployment was estimated at 15 percent. Paraguay's constitution guarantees the right of workers to unionize and bargain collectively. About 15 percent of workers are members of one of Paraguay's 1,600 unions. Strikes are legal and not uncommon.[16]

The 2001 census found that 5 percent of Paraguay's workforce was under the age of 14. Although Paraguay ratified the International Labour Organization's Minimum Age Convention in 2004, child labour continues to be prevalent. Nearly 14 percent of children between the ages of 5 and 17 are employed, many in poor conditions and for negligible pay. The government has mandated a minimum wage of approximately US$158 per month for private-sector employees. Government employees have no minimum wage. The standard workweek is 48 hours. In 2004 Paraguay's unemployment rate stood at 15 percent.[16]

Currency, exchange rate, and inflation edit

Paraguay's currency is the guarani (PYG). In mid-October 2005, US$1 equaled about PYG6155.[16]

Price inflation fell dramatically between 2003 and 2004, from 14.2 percent to a 30-year low of 4.3 percent. President's Duarte's economic reforms and austerity programs have produced results more rapidly than many expected. As of 2005, experts forecast that the inflation rate in Paraguay likely would rise in coming years but has remained below 10 percent.[16]

Foreign economic relations edit

 
Paraguay's main export goods 2007-2008 Source: Paraguay Ministry of Industry and Commerce / REDIEX

Paraguay is a member of the Common Market of the South (Mercado Común del Sur or Mercosur). Most of Paraguay's trade takes place with Uruguay, Brazil and Argentina.[21] In 2002 Paraguay conducted more than US$400 million in trade with Argentina and nearly US$800 million with Brazil. Paraguay is also a member of the Inter-American Development Bank, Latin American Integration Association, and Latin American Economic System and a signatory to the agreement creating the South American Community of Nations. In 2004 Paraguay signed an energy cooperation agreement with Venezuela to purchase oil and petroleum. Venezuela agreed to concessional financing that allowed Paraguay to pay over a 15-year period at a nominal interest rate.[16]

Imports totaled US$3.3 billion in 2004. Principal import commodities included automobiles, chemical products, consumer goods, tobacco, petroleum, and machinery. Brazil was the leading source of imports to Paraguay (24.3 percent), followed by the United States (22.3 percent), Argentina (16.2 percent), China (9.9 percent), and Hong Kong (5 percent). Experts note that import statistics are difficult to confirm for Paraguay because as much as half of all imports are illegally re-exported to Argentina or Brazil. Imports from Mercosur countries continue to rise, up to 57 percent in 2003.[16]

Paraguay's export revenues totaled about US$2.9 billion in 2004. Agricultural commodities continue to drive Paraguay's export totals. Soybeans are particularly vital, accounting for 35 percent of total export revenues in 2003. Other agricultural cash crops include cotton, sugarcane, cassava, sunflowers, wheat, and corn. Other significant exports include feed, meat, edible oils, electricity, wood, and leather. Even as Paraguayan export revenue has fluctuated, Brazil remained Paraguay's principal export destination (27.8 percent in 2004), followed by Uruguay (15.9 percent), Italy (7.1 percent), Switzerland (5.6 percent), Argentina (4.3 percent), and the Netherlands (4.2 percent). In 2003 nearly 60 percent of Paraguayan exports went to Mercosur countries.[16]

Paraguay had a negative trade balance of about US$400 million in 2004. Higher earnings from soybeans and cotton could not offset the surge in imported consumer goods and petroleum products.[16]

After years of negative balances, Paraguay achieved a positive balance of payments totaling US$234 million in 2003. In 2004, however, the current account had an estimated deficit of US$35.1 million.[16]

Paraguay has a sustainable debt level according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF). External debt totaled about US$3.4 billion in 2004, low compared to most Latin American countries. Continued reductions in Paraguay's debt to gross domestic product ratio are expected in coming years. Paraguay paid US$412 million in debt service to the IMF in 2004.[16]

Foreign investment in Paraguay nearly disappeared in 2002. After direct foreign investment of US$84 million in 2001, only US$9 million in investment came from abroad in 2002. This drop was largely the result of the financial crisis in Argentina and the banking collapse in Paraguay. Direct foreign investment rebounded in 2003, reaching US$90.8 million for the year.[16]

Paraguay has depended on the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank for economic development assistance. The World Bank has promised Paraguay assistance totaling US$325 million between 2003 and 2007. Projects currently underway in Paraguay aim to improve education, transportation, and rural development.[16]

Transport edit

The Paraguayan road network includes almost 4,500 kilometers of paved roads and nearly 60,000 kilometers of secondary roads. The density of the road network is higher in the oriental region, and lower in the Chaco area. However, in 2007 a paved connection to the Bolivian border was completed across the Chaco region.

The Paraguay-Paraná waterway constitutes an essential route for the transport of exported and imported goods.

The railway which connects Asunción to Encarnación actually doesn't operate, but there is still a connection between Encarnación and Posadas (Argentina) for the transport of agricultural goods.

Paraguay has two international airports, Silvio Pettirossi International Airport, in Asunción, and Guarani International Airport, in Ciudad del Este, and several secondary airports in other parts of the country.

Media and communications edit

There are five national newspapers and a larger number of local publications. There are five Paraguayan TV stations. Additionally, essential international stations can be received by cable in the main urban areas.

The fixed line network is controlled by the state-owned COPACO Company. The cell phone network is open to private operators. There are four competing mobile phone operators in Paraguay. During the last few years mobile phone coverage of the population has been far more extensive than fixed line coverage.

Statistics edit

The following table shows the main economic indicators in 1980–2019 (with FMI estimates for 2020-2026).[22]

Year GDP
(in Bil. US$PPP)
GDP per capita
(in US$ PPP)
GDP
(in Bil. US$nominal)
GDP per capita
(in US$ nominal)
GDP growth
(real)
Inflation rate
(in Percent)
Unemployment
(in Percent)
Government debt
(in % of GDP)
1980 11.1 3,536.7 4.1 1,299.7 11.7% 22.5% n/a n/a
1981  13.3  4,103.4  5.2  1,608.5  9.2%  13.8% n/a n/a
1982  13.9  4,171.1  5.5  1,636.5  -1.4%  5.4% n/a n/a
1983  14.0  4,080.4  6.1  1,763.0  -3.0%  12.8% 8.3% n/a
1984  15.0  4,220.3  4.9  1,390.9  2.8%  20.9%  7.3% n/a
1985  16.0  4,390.9  4.2  1,154.1  3.9%  24.8%  5.1% n/a
1986  16.4  4,352.9  5.0  1,335.8  0.3%  31.7%  6.1% n/a
1987  17.5  4,499.5  4.2  1,084.7  4.1%  21.7%  5.5% n/a
1988  19.2  4,780.5  5.6  1,392.4  5.9%  22.6%  4.7% n/a
1989  21.1  5,095.2  4.0  977.8  5.8%  25.6%  6.1% n/a
1990  22.8  5,503.7  4.9  1,185.3  4.1%  38.2%  6.6%  67.0%
1991  24.4  5,529.7  7.0  1,585.2  3.5%  24.3%  5.1%  49.4%
1992  25.3  5,636.6  7.2  1,592.1  1.7%  15.1%  5.3%  34.4%
1993  27.2  5,933.9  7.2  1,580.2  4.9%  18.3%  5.1%  26.6%
1994  29.3  6,255.3  7.9  1,681.4  5.3%  20.6%  4.4%  18.7%
1995  31.9  6,685.7  9.1  1,897.1  6.8%  13.4%  3.3%  17.6%
1996  33.0  6,777.0  9.8  2,008.2  1.6%  9.8%  8.2%  16.8%
1997  35.0  7,042.6  10.0  2,003.6  4.2%  7.0%  5.0%  18.0%
1998  35.4  6,984.2  9.3  1,824.6  0.1%  11.6%  5.8%  22.1%
1999  35.5  6,848.5  8.8  1,706.4  -1.4%  6.8%  6.8%  32.0%
2000  35.4  6,702.7  8.9  1,675.8  -2.3%  9.0%  7.3%  33.6%
2001  35.9  6,665.8  8.5  1,577.7  -0.8%  7.3%  7.6%  40.3%
2002  36.5  6,646.9  7.2  1,312.1  0.0%  10.5%  10.8%  54.5%
2003  38.7  6,937.8  7.7  1,377.5  4.3%  14.2%  8.1%  40.3%
2004  41.4  7,285.2  9.6  1,693.9  4.1%  4.3%  7.3%  30.3%
2005  43.6  7,542.5  10.7  1,857.8  2.1%  6.8%  5.8%  24.1%
2006  47.1  8,009.1  13.4  2,285.1  4.8%  9.6%  6.7%  18.2%
2007  51.0  8,528.9  17.9  2,988.7  5.4%  8.1%  5.6%  14.9%
2008  55.3  9,099.8  24.6  4,047.7  6.4%  10.2%  5.7%  14.5%
2009  55.5  9,001.7  22.3  3,621.7  -0.3%  2.6%  6.4%  13.7%
2010  62.4  9,964.5  27.1  4,326.2  11.1%  4.7%  5.7%  12.1%
2011  66.4  10,442.6  33.7  5,295.4  4.2%  8.3%  5.6%  10.3%
2012  64.4  9,960.8  33.3  5,155.2  -0.5%  3.7%  4.6%  12.3%
2013  72.2  11,004.3  38.7  5,905.7  8.4%  2.7%  5.0%  13.5%
2014  75.4  11,326.6  40.3  6,050.1  4.9%  5.0%  6.0%  15.6%
2015  76.7  11,357.7  36.2  5,353.1  3.1%  3.1%  5.4%  18.6%
2016  81.5  11,895.4  36.1  5,259.9  4.3%  4.1%  6.0%  19.4%
2017  86.5  12,437.5  39.0  5,609.8  5.0%  3.6%  6.1%  19.8%
2018  91.5  12,978.2  40.4  5,725.9  3.4%  4.0%  6.2%  22.2%
2019  93.1  13,021.8  38.1  5,333.0  0.0%  2.8%  6.1%  25.6%
2020  93.4  12,881.0  35.9  4,946.5  -0.9%  1.8%  6.6%  34.8%
2021  98.9  13,454.2  37.8  5,145.6  4.0%  2.7%  6.1%  35.7%
2022  105.2  14,115.9  40.2  5,391.0  4.0%  3.2%  5.9%  36.5%
2023  111.9  14,811.6  43.0  5,685.5  4.0%  3.2%  5.9%  36.4%
2024  118.2  15,441.5  45.4  5,935.3  3.5%  3.2%  5.9%  36.2%
2025  124.8  16,078.0  47.9  6,178.1  3.5%  3.2%  5.9%  35.8%
2026  131.6  16,726.1  50.6  6,430.6  3.5%  3.2%  5.9%  35.2%

GDP - composition by sector:

  • Agriculture: 11.4%
  • Industry: 33.5%
  • Services: 47.5%
  • Taxes: 7.6% (2022)

Labor force: 3.428 million (2017 est.)

Labor force - by occupation:

  • agriculture: 26.5%
  • industry: 18.5%
  • services: 55% (2008 est.)

Unemployment rate: 6.5% (2017 est.)

Population below poverty line: 22.2% (2015 est.)

Household income or consumption by percentage share:

  • lowest 10%: 1.5%
  • highest 10%: 37.6% (2015)

Distribution of family income - Gini index: 51.7 (2015)

Inflation rate (consumer prices): 3.6% (2017 est.)

Investment (gross fixed): 21.2% of GDP (2005 est.)

Budget:

  • revenues: $5.366 billion
  • expenditures: $5.876 billion, including capital expenditures of $700 million (2017 est.)

Public debt: 25.6% of GDP (2017 est.)

Agriculture - products: cotton, sugarcane, soybeans, corn, wheat, tobacco, cassava (tapioca), fruits, vegetables; beef, pork, eggs, milk; timber

Industries: sugar, cement, textiles, beverages, wood products, steel, metallurgic, electric power

Industrial production growth rate: 6% (2017 est.)

Electricity:

  • production: 51.29 billion kWh (2003)
  • consumption: 3.528 billion kWh (2003)
  • exports: 44.17 billion kWh (2003)
  • imports: 0 kWh (2003)

Electricity - production by source:

  • fossil fuel: 0%
  • hydro: 99.9%
  • nuclear: 0%
  • other: 0.1% (2001)

Oil:

  • production: 0 bbl/d (0 m3/d) (2003 est.)
  • consumption: 25,000 bbl/d (4,000 m3/d) (2003 est.)
  • exports: NA (2001)
  • imports: NA (2001)

Current account balance: $543 million (2017 est.)

Exports: $11.53 billion f.o.b. (2017 est.)

Exports - partners: Brazil 31.9%, Argentina 15.9%, Chile 6.9%, Russia 5.9% (2017)

Imports: $10.37 billion f.o.b. (2017 est.)

Imports - partners: China 31.3%, Brazil 23.4%, Argentina 12.9%, US 7.4% (2017)

Reserves of foreign exchange and gold: $7.504 billion (2017 est.)

Debt - external: $17.35 billion (2017 est.)

Economic aid - recipient: NA

Currency: 1 guarani (G) = 100 centimos

Exchange rates: guarani (G) per US$ - 5,628.1 (2017) 4,555.00 (2011), 6,158.47 (2005), 5,974.6 (2004), 6,424.34 (2003), 5,716.26 (2002), 4,105.92 (2001), 3,332.0 (January 2000), 3,119.1 (1999), 2,726.5 (1998), 2,177.9 (1997), 2,056.8 (1996), 1,963.0 (1995); note - since early 1998, the exchange rate has operated as a managed float; prior to that, the exchange rate was determined freely in the market

Fiscal year: calendar year

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "World Economic Outlook Database, April 2019". IMF.org. International Monetary Fund. Retrieved 29 September 2019.
  2. ^ "World Bank Country and Lending Groups". datahelpdesk.worldbank.org. World Bank. Retrieved 29 September 2019.
  3. ^ "Population, total - Paraguay". data.worldbank.org. World Bank. Retrieved 24 October 2019.
  4. ^ a b c d e "Report for Selected Countries and Subjects: April 2023". imf.org. International Monetary Fund.
  5. ^ a b c "The outlook is uncertain again amid financial sector turmoil, high inflation, ongoing effects of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, and three years of COVID". International Monetary Fund. 11 April 2023.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p "The World Factbook". CIA.gov. Central Intelligence Agency. Retrieved 3 July 2019.
  7. ^ "Poverty headcount ratio at national poverty lines (% of population) - Paraguay". data.worldbank.org. World Bank. Retrieved 21 March 2020.
  8. ^ "Poverty headcount ratio at $5.50 a day (2011 PPP) (% of population) - Paraguay". data.worldbank.org. World Bank. Retrieved 21 March 2020.
  9. ^ "GINI index (World Bank estimate)". data.worldbank.org. World Bank. Retrieved 21 March 2020.
  10. ^ "Human Development Index (HDI)". hdr.undp.org. HDRO (Human Development Report Office) United Nations Development Programme. Retrieved 12 October 2022.
  11. ^ "Inequality-adjusted Human Development Index (IHDI)". hdr.undp.org. HDRO (Human Development Report Office) United Nations Development Programme. Retrieved 12 October 2022.
  12. ^ "Labor force, total - Paraguay". data.worldbank.org. World Bank. Retrieved 12 January 2020.
  13. ^ "Employment to population ratio, 15+, total (%) (national estimate) - Paraguay". data.worldbank.org. World Bank. Retrieved 24 October 2019.
  14. ^ "Sovereigns rating list". Standard & Poor's. Retrieved 26 May 2011.
  15. ^ a b Rogers, Simon; Sedghi, Ami (15 April 2011). "How Fitch, Moody's and S&P rate each country's credit rating". The Guardian. Retrieved 28 May 2011.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa Paraguay country profile. Library of Congress Federal Research Division (October 2005). This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  17. ^ "Paraguay's population is booming, but where are all the jobs?".
  18. ^ "Paraguay production in 2018, by FAO".
  19. ^ . Mercopress. 30 December 2008. Archived from the original on 8 January 2009. Retrieved 10 January 2009.
  20. ^ . World Land Trust. 30 November 2009. Archived from the original on 23 August 2010. Retrieved 16 September 2011.
  21. ^ Red de Inversiones y Exportaciones 30 May 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  22. ^ "Report for Selected Countries and Subjects". Retrieved 5 September 2018.
  • Kleinpenning, Jan M.G. (2009). Rural Paraguay 1870-1963 : a geography of progress, plunder and poverty. Madrid; Frankfurt am Main: Iberoamericana; Vervuert. ISBN 978-3-86527-510-3.

External links edit

  • CIA - The World Factbook -- Paraguay
  • Central Bank of Paraguay
  • Ministry of Finance
  • Ministry of Industry and Commerce
  • Paraguayan Investment and Trade Promotion Agency REDIEX
  • US Department of Agriculture - 2008 report on crop expansion in Paraguay 22 July 2015 at the Wayback Machine
  • World Bank Summary Trade Statistics Paraguay

economy, paraguay, economy, paraguay, market, economy, that, highly, dependent, agriculture, products, recent, years, paraguay, economy, grown, result, increased, agricultural, exports, especially, soybeans, paraguay, economic, advantages, young, population, v. The economy of Paraguay is a market economy that is highly dependent on agriculture products In recent years Paraguay s economy has grown as a result of increased agricultural exports especially soybeans Paraguay has the economic advantages of a young population and vast hydroelectric power Its disadvantages include the few available mineral resources and political instability The government welcomes foreign investment 16 Economy of ParaguayAsuncion is the capital and largest city of ParaguayCurrencyParaguayan guarani PYG Fiscal yearCalendar yearTrade organizationsWTO Mercosur ProsurCountry groupDeveloping Emerging 1 Upper middle income economy 2 StatisticsPopulation6 956 071 2018 3 GDP 43 billion nominal 2023 4 118 billion PPP 2023 4 GDP rank100th nominal 2023 94th PPP 2023 GDP growth0 2 2022 5 4 5 2023f 5 3 5 2024f 5 GDP per capita 7 238 nominal 2023 4 19 040 PPP 2023 4 GDP per capita rank103rd nominal 2023 101st PPP 2023 GDP by sectoragriculture 17 9 industry 27 7 services 54 5 2017 est 6 Inflation CPI 3 7 2020 est 4 Population below poverty line24 2 2018 7 17 0 on less than 5 50 day 2018 8 Gini coefficient46 2 high 2018 9 Human Development Index0 717 high 2021 10 105th 0 582 medium IHDI 2021 11 Labor force3 530 715 2019 12 67 4 employment rate 2018 13 Labor force by occupationagriculture 26 5 industry 18 5 services 55 2008 6 Unemployment5 7 2017 est 6 Main industriessugar cement textiles beverages wood products steel base metals electric powerExternalExports 11 73 billion 2017 est 6 Export goodssoybeans feed cotton meat edible oils wood leatherMain export partners Brazil 31 9 Argentina 15 9 Chile 6 9 Russia 5 9 2017 6 Imports 11 35 billion 2017 est 6 Import goodsroad vehicles consumer goods tobacco petroleum products electrical machinery tractors chemicals vehicle partsMain import partners Brazil 24 United States 22 China 17 Argentina 10 Chile 5 2017 6 FDI stock 6 235 billion 31 December 2017 est 6 Abroad 705 1 million 31 December 2017 est 6 Current account 298 million 2017 est 6 Gross external debt 17 7 billion 31 December 2017 est 6 Public financesGovernment debt19 5 of GDP 2017 est 6 Budget balance 1 1 of GDP 2017 est 6 Revenues5 524 billion 2017 est 6 Expenses5 968 billion 2017 est 6 Credit ratingStandard amp Poor s 14 BB Domestic BB Foreign BB T amp C Assessment Outlook Positive 15 Moody s 15 Ba2 Outlook StableForeign reserves 7 877 billion 31 December 2017 est 6 Main data source CIA World Fact Book All values unless otherwise stated are in US dollars Agriculture represents 30 of its GDP According to official figures 5 of landowners own 90 of the land 17 Contents 1 Overview 2 History of economic advancement 3 Agriculture 4 Industry 5 Manufacturing 6 Structure of the economy 6 1 Mining and minerals 6 2 Industry and manufacturing 6 3 Energy 6 4 Services 6 5 Tourism 7 Banking and finance 8 Labor 9 Currency exchange rate and inflation 10 Foreign economic relations 11 Transport 12 Media and communications 13 Statistics 14 See also 15 References 16 External linksOverview editParaguay is a middle income country that changed rapidly in the 1970s and 1980s as a result of hydroelectric development agricultural colonization construction and cash crop exports Nevertheless the country s gross domestic product GDP in 1986 was approximately US 3 4 billion or roughly US 1 000 per capita ranking Paraguay only ahead of Bolivia among countries of South America Paraguay was the most agricultural economy of South America and that sector influenced the performance of virtually every other sector of the economy The over dependence on agricultural economy and low tax collections deteriorated the already wide gap wealth distribution The extreme poverty increased from 16 to 20 during 2001 to 2012 even as the economy grew By 2013 it has a human development index of 0 669 which is even lower than Bolivia The Paraguayan economic miracle of the 1970s came to a halt in 1982 because of the completion of construction at Itaipu lower commodity prices for cotton and soybeans and world recession The economy recovered in 1984 and 1985 stagnated in 1986 and continued to expand in 1987 and 1988 Despite its rapid growth the Paraguayan economy became increasingly dependent on soybeans and cotton for exports and overall economic dynamism These two crops however remained subject to external price fluctuations and local weather conditions both of which varied considerably Economic growth in the post World War II period occurred in the context of political stability characterized by authoritarian rule and patronage politics Government economic policies deviated little from 1954 to the late 1980s consistently favoring a strong private enterprise economy with a large role for foreign investment Unlike most Latin American economies in Paraguay import tariffs were generally low fiscal deficits manageable and exchange rates not overvalued These trends faltered in the 1980s as the government took a more active part in industry deficits rose and the national currency was generally overvalued and devalued numerous times Throughout the post World War II era Paraguay had no personal income tax and government revenues as a percentage of GDP were among the lowest in the world Despite the sustained economic growth that marked the postwar period the distribution of economic benefits was highly inequitable Although GDP expanded rapidly in the 1970s most economists estimated that income distribution worsened during the decade Government spending on social services was particularly lacking Paraguay s poverty was mostly a rural phenomenon which increasingly involved competition for land in the eastern region near the Brazilian border especially in the departments administrative divisions of Alto Parana Canendiyu and Caaguazu Nonetheless land tenure was not generally the acute social problem it was in many developing countries Although Paraguay faced significant obstacles to future economic development it displayed extraordinary potential Paraguay contained little oil and no precious metals or sea coasts but the country was self sufficient in many areas and was endowed with fertile land dense forests and swift rivers The process of opening up the eastern border region to economic activity and continued agricultural expansion was expected to effect rapid changes in once isolated Paraguay Likewise the development of a series of hydroelectric plants along the Rio Parana linked Paraguay to its neighbors and provided it access to cherished energy resources and badly needed export revenues Finally road construction united different departments of Paraguay and provided the country its first access to the Atlantic Ocean via Brazil These processes of infrastructure development hydroelectric expansion agricultural colonization and a cash crop explosion allowed Paraguay by the late 1980s to begin to tap its potentialHistory of economic advancement editUntil the Spanish established Asuncion in 1537 economic activity in Paraguay was limited to the subsistence agriculture of the Guarani Indians The Spanish however found little of economic interest in their colony which had no precious metals and no sea coasts The typical feudal Spanish economic system did not dominate colonial Paraguay although the encomienda system was established Economic relations were distinguished by the reducciones reductions or townships that were established by Jesuit missionaries from the early seventeenth century until the 1760s The incorporation of Indians into these Jesuit agricultural communes laid the foundation for an agriculture based economy that survived in the late twentieth century Three years after Paraguay overthrew Spanish authority and gained its independence the country s economy was controlled by the autarkic policies of Jose Gaspar Rodriguez de Francia 1814 40 who closed the young nation s borders to virtually all international trade Landlocked isolated and underpopulated Paraguay structured its economy around a centrally administered agricultural sector extensive cattle grazing and inefficient shipbuilding and textile industries After the demise of de Francia government policies focused on expanding international trade and stimulating economic development The government built several roads and authorized British construction of a railroad The War of the Triple Alliance 1865 70 fundamentally changed the Paraguayan economy Economic resources were employed in and destroyed by the war effort Paraguay was occupied by its enemies in 1870 the countryside was in virtual ruin the labor force was decimated peasants were pushed into the environs of Asuncion from the east and south and the modernization of the preceding three decades was undone Sleepy self sufficient Paraguay whose advances in agriculture and quality of life had been the envy of many in the Southern Cone became the most backward nation in that subregion To pay its substantial war debt Paraguay sold large tracts of land to foreigners mostly Argentines These large land sales established the base of the present day land tenure system which is characterized by a skewed distribution of land Unlike most of its neighbors however Paraguay s economy was controlled not by a traditional landed elite but by foreign companies Many Paraguayans grew crops and worked as wage laborers on latifundios large landholdings typically owned by foreigners The late 1800s and the early 1900s saw a slow rebuilding of ports roads the railroad farms cattle stock and the labor force The country was slowly being repopulated by former Brazilian soldiers who had fought in the War of the Triple Alliance and Paraguay s government encouraged European immigration Although few in number British German Italian and Spanish investors and farmers helped modernize the country Argentine Brazilian and British companies in the late 1800s purchased some of Paraguay s best land and started the first large scale production of agricultural goods for export One Argentine company whose owner had purchased 15 percent of the immense Chaco region processed massive quantities of tannin which were extracted from the bark of the Chaco s ubiquitous quebracho break axe hardwood Large quantities of the extract were used by the region s thriving hide industry Another focus of large scale agro processing was the yerba mate bush whose leaves produced the potent tea that is the national beverage Tobacco farming also flourished Beginning in 1904 foreign investment increased as a succession of Liberal Party Partido Liberal administrations in Paraguay maintained a staunch laissez faire policy The period of steady economic recovery came to an abrupt halt in 1932 as the country entered another devastating war This time Paraguay fought Bolivia over possession of the Chaco and rumors of oil deposits The war ended in 1935 after extensive human losses on both sides and war veterans led the push for general social reform During the 1930s and 1940s the state passed labor laws implemented agrarian reform and assumed a role in modernization influenced in part by the leadership of Juan Peron in Argentina and Getulio Vargas in Brazil The 1940 constitution for example rejected the laissez faire approach of previous Liberal governments Reformist policies however did not enjoy a consensus and by 1947 the country had entered into a civil war which in turn initiated a period of economic chaos that lasted until the mid 1950s During this period Paraguay experienced the worst inflation in all of Latin America averaging over 100 percent annually in the 1950s After centuries of isolation two devastating regional wars and a civil war in 1954 Paraguay entered a period of prolonged political and economic stability under the authoritarian rule of Alfredo Stroessner Stroessner s economic policies took a middle course between social reform desarrollismo and laissez faire all in the context of patronage politics Relative to previous governments Stroessner took a fairly active role in the economy but reserved productive activities for the local and foreign private sectors The new government s primary economic task was to arrest the country s rampant and spiraling price instability In 1955 Stroessner fired the country s finance minister who was unwilling to implement reforms and in 1956 accepted an International Monetary Fund IMF stabilization plan that abolished export duties lowered import tariffs restricted credit devalued the currency and implemented strict austerity measures Although the sacrifice was high the plan helped bring economic stability to Paraguay Labor unions retaliated with a major strike in 1958 but the new government now firmly established quelled the uprising and forced many labor leaders into exile most of them remained there in the late 1980s By the 1960s the economy was on a path of modest but steady economic growth Real GDP growth during the 1960s averaged 4 2 percent a year under the Latin American average of 5 7 percent but well ahead of the chaotic economy of the two previous decades As part of the United States sponsored Alliance for Progress the government was encouraged to expand its planning apparatus for economic development With assistance from the Organization of American States OAS the Inter American Development Bank IDB and the United Nations Economic Commission for Latin America ECLA in 1962 Paraguay established the Technical Planning Secretariat Secretaria Tecnica de Planificacion STP the major economic planning arm of the government By 1965 the country had its first National Economic Plan a two year plan for 1965 66 This was followed by another two year plan 1967 68 and then a series of five year plans Five year plans only general policy statements were not typically adhered to or achieved and played a minimal role in Paraguay s economic growth and development Compared with most Latin American countries Paraguay had a small public sector Free enterprise dominated the economy export promotion was favored over import substitution agriculture continued to dominate industry and the economy remained generally open to international trade and market mechanisms In an economic sense the 1970s constituted Paraguay s miracle decade Real GDP grew at over 8 percent a year and exceeded 10 percent from 1976 to 1981 a faster growth rate than in any other economy in Latin America Four coinciding developments accounted for Paraguay s rapid growth in the 1970s The first was the completion of the road from Asuncion to Puerto Presidente Stroessner and to Brazilian seaports on the Atlantic ending traditional dependence on access through Argentina and opening the east to many for the first time The second was the signing of the Treaty of Itaipu with Brazil in 1973 Beyond the obvious economic benefits of such a massive project Itaipu helped to create a new mood of optimism in Paraguay about what a small isolated country could attain The third event was land colonization which resulted from the availability of land the existence of economic opportunity the increased price of crops and the newly gained accessibility of the eastern border region Finally the skyrocketing price of soybeans and cotton led farmers to quadruple the number of hectares planted with these two crops As the 1970s progressed soybeans and cotton came to dominate the country s employment production and exports These developments shared responsibility for establishing thriving economic relations between Paraguay and the world s sixth largest economy Brazil Contraband trade became the dominant economic force on the border between the two countries with Puerto Presidente Stroessner serving as the hub of such smuggling activities Observers contended that contraband was accepted by many Paraguayan government officials some of whom were reputed to have benefited handsomely Many urban dwellers shelves were stocked with contraband luxury items The Paraguayan government s emphasis on industrial activity increased noticeably in the 1970s One of the most important components of the new industrial push was Law 550 also referred to as Law 550 75 or the Investment Promotion Law for Social and Economic Development Law 550 opened Paraguay s doors even further to foreign investors by providing income tax breaks duty free capital imports and additional incentives for companies that invested in priority areas especially the Chaco Law 550 was successful Investments by companies in the United States Europe and Japan comprised according to some estimates roughly a quarter of new investment Industrial policies also encouraged the planning of more state owned enterprises including ones involved in producing ethanol cement and steel Much of Paraguay s rural population however missed out on the economic development Back roads remained inadequate preventing peasants from bringing produce to markets Social services such as schools and clinics were severely lacking Few people in the countryside had access to potable water electricity bank credit or public transportation As in other economies that underwent rapid growth income distribution was believed to have worsened in Paraguay during the 1970s in both relative and absolute terms By far the greatest problem that the rural population faced however was competition for land Multinational agribusinesses Brazilian settlers and waves of Paraguayan colonists rapidly increased the competition for land in the eastern border region Those peasants who lacked proper titles to the lands they occupied were pushed to more marginal areas as a result an increasing number of rural clashes occurred including some with the government Agriculture editIn 2018 Paraguay was the 6th largest producer of soy in the world with 11 million tons produced behind the US Brazil Argentina China and India In the same year the country produced 5 3 million tons of maize and 6 1 million tons of sugarcane ranking 21st in the world in both this year the country also produced 3 3 million tons of cassava 892 thousand tons of rice 722 thousand tons of wheat 223 thousand tons of orange 116 thousand tons of yerba mate 107 thousand tons of sorghum in addition to smaller productions of other agricultural products 18 Industry editIndustry especially the manufacturing sector historically was linked to agricultural processing until the 1970s when the construction of hydroelectric plants and new industrial incentives began to broaden the industrial base Industry was composed principally of manufacturing and construction Paraguay had no real mining sector but the manufacture of construction materials included limited mining activity Manufacturing and construction in the economy in the late 1980s remained dependent on developments in other sectors such as agriculture and energy for their growth Although industry was becoming more visible in Paraguay in the 1980s industry s share of GDP actually declined in the 1970s and 1980s because of more rapid growth in agriculture Manufacturing editManufacturing accounted for 16 3 percent of GDP in 1986 and employed roughly 13 percent of the labor force making Paraguay one of the least industrialized nations in Latin America Manufactured exports by most definitions accounted for less than 5 percent of total exports when semiprocessed agricultural products were included however that figure reached 77 percent The growth of the country s manufacturing industries was hampered by numerous structural obstacles These included a small internal market limited physical infrastructure costly access to seaports a historical lack of energy production and the openness of Paraguay s economy to the more industrialized economies of Brazil and Argentina Another significant factor was the ubiquity and profitability of smuggling operations which encouraged importing and reexporting rather than production Paraguay s earliest manufacturing industries processed hides and leather from its abundant cattle and tannin from quebracho trees Small scale manufacturing especially textiles flourished under the Francia dictatorship when the nation s borders were closed The War of the Triple Alliance however devastated what little industry and infrastructure the country had causing Paraguay to enter the twentieth century as an almost completely agricultural society Land sales to foreigners stimulated increased agricultural processing in the early twentieth century including meat packing and the processing of flour oilseeds sugar beer and pectin extract After the early 1900s small scale manufacturing in all subsectors grew at a slow but steady pace with some of the fastest growth occurring because of the shortages during World War II The government s role in promoting industry increased in the postwar era and in 1955 the Stroessner government undertook the country s first industrial census Over the next twenty years the government enacted a number of industrial incentive measures the most important of which was Law 550 Law 550 promoted exportoriented industries or those that would save foreign exchange It also provided liberal fiscal incentives for companies to develop specific areas of the country especially the departments of Alto Paraguay Nueva Asuncion Chaco and Boqueron Incentives for business were related mostly to import duty exemptions but they included a variety of tax breaks and placed no restrictions on foreign ownership Approximately one fourth of all new manufacturing investment from 1975 to 1985 was registered under Law 550 Most foreign investments originated from Brazil West Germany the United States Portugal and Argentina in that order of importance The dynamic processes of agricultural colonization and hydroelectric development combined with such attractive industrial incentives caused manufacturing to grow at an unprecedented rate in the late 1970s and early 1980s Unlike many other Latin American governments which followed an import substitution industrial policy the Paraguayan government had played a minimalist role in the economy through most of the postwar era curtailing import tariffs and maintaining a realistic exchange rate In the 1980s however Paraguay s exchange rate became overvalued and several state owned heavy industry plants became operational In the late 1980s the major subsectors of manufacturing were food beverages and tobacco textiles clothing leather and shoes wood and related products and chemicals petroleum and plastics Despite some increases in heavy industry in the economy during the 1970s and 1980s Paraguayan industry was generally small scale Manufacturing production remained focused on consumer goods and capital goods comprised under 5 percent of industrial output In fact in the 1980s Paraguay did not contain even one of Latin America s 1 000 largest companies at least some of which were found in most other countries in the region Virtually every subsector of Paraguay s manufacturing was characterized by numerous small to medium sized firms and a few large firms which often were foreign owned Most companies operated well below their capacity The food beverages and tobacco subsector has been the core manufacturing activity throughout Paraguay s history In the late 1980s this subsector continued to dominate accounting for about 45 percent of industrial activity depending on agricultural output in a given year Agro processing involved a large number of small inefficient and often family run firms as well as a small number of large efficient and usually foreign owned firms The larger firms produced only the most lucrative items such as oilseeds meats and various beverages often for export Some of the most common small scale producers manufactured milled items baked goods sugar and molasses dairy products candy manioc flour vinegar coffee and tobacco Along with raw agricultural produce processed and semiprocessed food generated nearly all of the country s exports in the late 1980s But as with other manufacturing subsectors the profitability of the food subsector often was impaired by contraband items from Brazil and Argentina such as flour meat or dairy products Paraguayan goods crossed borders unofficially as well thus lowering official exports The second most important manufacturing activity also relied on agricultural inputs for its base Utilizing Paraguay s rich endowment of hardwood trees the wood subsector represented about 15 percent of all industrial activity and contributed over 8 percent of exports in the 1980s The most voluminous wood export was lumber which was produced by hundreds of small sawmills throughout the central and eastern border regions In addition to saw wood mills also produced a variety of milled wood plywood chipboard and parquet flooring Although the country cut and processed only a fraction of its hundreds of species Paraguayan wood was known for its quality The country also contained several small paper companies and one large paper and cardboard factory located at Villeta Textiles clothing leather and shoes comprised the third largest manufacturing subsector These industries were traditional grounded in the nation s abundance of inputs like cotton fibers cattle hides and tannin extract The subsector accounted for about 10 percent of all manufacturing The textile industry performed spinning weaving and dyeing operations and produced finished fabrics that amounted to over 100 million tons in 1986 Most fabrics were derived from cotton fibers but a growing number of synthetic and wool fibers also were produced Textile production provided inputs to approximately sixty clothing firms that operated under capacity and were generally inefficient As with so many other manufacturers clothing companies met stiff competition from widespread unregistered imports which often originated in Asia and typically entered across the Brazilian border The leather industry was characterized by 200 or so small tanneries dotting the Paraguayan countryside In addition many medium and two large tanneries fashioned leather goods The leather industry operated at only about 40 percent of capacity however The shoe industry comprised a few hundred small workshops and a dozen or so mediumsized firms which produced some 5 million pairs of leather and synthetic shoes a year The processing of petroleum chemicals and plastics repeated an increasing activity In the late 1980s this subsector represented less than 5 percent of industrial activity but its share of manufacturing output was expanding because of the growth of heavy industry in Paraguay especially industry related to the energy sector The country also produced fertilizers industrial gases tanning chemicals varnishes and detergents In 1987 a group of Japanese investors was considering the construction of a new fertilizer plant with a 70 000 ton capacity per year Since the early 1980s ethanol was being produced in large quantities and the government was considering producing methanol Also processed were paints soaps candles perfumes and pharmaceuticals One of Paraguay s fastest growing industries was the new relatively modern plastics subsector which supplied a wide variety of goods to the local market Structure of the economy edit nbsp Soybeans and silos on a farm in rural ParaguayThe most important component of the Paraguayan economy is the farming sector which contributed 27 to GDP in 2006 The participation of commerce was 20 2 and that of other services including government 38 4 Industry s part including mining and construction was about 20 After years of economic crisis between 1999 and 2002 the Paraguayan economy grew at between 2 9 and 4 1 per year from 2003 to 2006 For 2007 the estimated growth is about 6 4 Inflation in 2007 reached 6 0 Most enterprises are small micro and individual ones including subsistence jobs like street vendors Only 4 of the Paraguayan labor force works in companies with more than 50 employees In June 2007 external foreign exchange reserves amounted to US 2153 million and the foreign official debt US 2154 million close to parity The fiscal surplus is provisionally reported as 0 5 of GDP in 2006 and 2007 Paraguay s economy GDP grew 5 8 in 2008 fastest growing sector being agriculture with 10 5 growth 19 nbsp Cattle on cleared land in the Chaco nbsp Commerce in Ciudad del Este on the border with BrazilAgriculture accounts for about 20 percent of Paraguay s annual gross domestic product 25 percent in 2004 and virtually all of the country s export earnings It is Paraguay s largest and most consistent source of employment employing about 45 percent of the working population In addition to those engaged in the formal agricultural sector thousands of Paraguayan families survive through subsistence farming 16 Paraguay produces enough basic food to be largely self sufficient Corn cassava and wheat are the main food crops for local consumption The global surge in grain prices 2007 2008 was a major impulse for the agricultural sector Wheat cultivation expanded so did rice Most significant was the increase of soy production In 2004 Paraguay had about 1 6 million hectares dedicated to genetically modified GM crops 16 Export value of soy and its derivates increased from US 1 25 billion in 2007 to US 2 54billion in 2008Paraguay s eastern plains as well as the Chaco support the country s dairy and ranching industry Behind soybeans beef exports make up a significant part of Paraguay s agriculture sector Additionally Paraguay produces an adequate supply of beef pork and dairy products to meet domestic needs The discovery of cases of foot and mouth disease in 2002 and 2003 led to a ban on Paraguayan beef in many countries However in 2004 Paraguay s meat production and exports rebounded As a result of rising international prices and the recovery of important markets like Chile or Russia Paraguay s meat exports rose to US 143 million in 2004 They reached US 353 million in 2007 and US 597 million in 2008 Presently Paraguay has a national herd numbering between 9 and 10 million head of cattle Paraguay s forests adequately meet domestic needs for lumber and fuelwood However logging for export both legally and illegally has thinned Paraguay s once abundant forests resulting in a ban on the export of logs since the 1970s More than 90 of the native rainforest of Paraguay s eastern half have been lost between 1975 and 2008 In the western half the Chaco virgin forest is lost to cattle ranching at an annual rate of more than 200 000 hectare 2008 20 Sustainable wood cultivation is now on the increase 16 The fishing industry in Paraguay exists almost solely to meet domestic demand 16 Mining and minerals edit Main article Mineral industry of Paraguay Unlike many South American countries Paraguay has few mineral resources and very little history of mining success Foreign companies have explored Paraguay in recent years searching for overlooked mineral deposits Small extraction projects exist seeking lime clay and the raw materials necessary to make cement but the country s iron and steel manufacturers must import raw materials from neighboring countries 16 In 2010 CIC Resources Inc the same company that discovered the copper deposits in Chile claims to have discovered 21 billion metric tons of titanium which could be the biggest titanium deposit in the world in Alto Parana near frontier with Brazil Industry and manufacturing edit The industrial sector produces about 25 percent of Paraguay s gross domestic product GDP and employs about 31 percent of the labor force Output grew by 2 9 percent in 2004 after five years of declining production Traditionally an agricultural economy Paraguay is showing some signs of long term industrial growth The pharmaceutical industry is quickly supplanting foreign suppliers in meeting the country s drug needs Paraguayan companies now meet 70 percent of domestic consumption and also have begun exporting drugs Strong growth also is evident in the production of edible oils garments organic sugar meat processing and steel Nevertheless capital for further investment in the industrial sector of the economy is scarce Following the revelation of widespread financial corruption in the 1990s the government is still working to improve credit options for Paraguayan businesses 16 In 2003 manufacturing made up 13 6 percent of the GDP and the sector employed about 11 percent of the working population in 2000 Paraguay s primary manufacturing focus is on food and beverages Wood products paper products hides and furs and non metallic mineral products also contribute to manufacturing totals Steady growth in the manufacturing GDP during the 1990s 1 2 percent annually laid the foundation for 2002 and 2003 when the annual growth rate rose to 2 5 percent 16 Energy edit See also Energy in Paraguay and Electricity sector in Paraguay nbsp The Itaipu Dam a hydroelectric dam on the Parana RiverParaguay relies almost solely on hydroelectric power to meet its energy needs The Itaipu Dam completed in 1984 has the world s second largest power generating capacity 13 3 gigawatts The dam is located on the Paraguay River and Paraguay and Brazil evenly share the ownership operation and electricity generated Additionally Paraguay co owns another major hydropower plant Yacyreta with Argentina Paraguay uses only a small portion of the energy it generates through Itaipu and Yacyreta In 2002 Paraguay generated more than 48 billion kilowatt hours of energy It consumed only 2 5 billion kilowatt hours while exporting 45 9 billion kilowatt hours Paraguay will have even more hydroelectricity to export when planned new turbines are installed at Itaipu and the Yacyreta dam is fully completed 16 In 2007 electricity production rose to 70 TWh and exports reached 64 TWh which put Paraguay in second place worldwide as an exporter of electrical power And in the first place as a net exporter since France the Number one exporter in the World with 67 TWh also imports 10 TWh while Paraguay does not import any Paraguay has no oil reserves it relies on imported oil to meet its limited need for oil produced energy The Paraguayan government owns Petroleos Paraguayos which is responsible for all distribution of oil products The state accepts bids from international oil companies selecting a few companies annually to meet the country s demand Presently Paraguay does not produce or consume natural gas but consumes LPG imported mainly from Argentina 16 Services edit The services sector made up nearly 50 percent of Paraguay s gross domestic product in 2004 and employed about 19 percent of Paraguay s working population The importation of goods especially from Argentina and Brazil for sale and illegal reexportation creates service industry jobs The services sector had a moderate growth rate of 0 9 percent from 1990 to 2003 The sector decreased by 7 8 percent in 2002 before rebounding in 2003 with a 1 6 percent growth rate Instability in the economy and a large black market have hampered development of the formal services sector in Paraguay 16 Tourism edit See also Rural tourism of Paraguay nbsp TourismParaguay has a small tourism industry Total tourism receipts declined annually from 2000 through 2002 In 2003 Paraguay s hotel occupancy rate was 38 percent It increased by 15 percent in 2004 Small gains in tourism have come from business rather than leisure travellers For many years Paraguay served as a central market for trafficable duty free goods However crackdowns by the governments of Brazil and Argentina have stemmed the flow of shoppers travelling to Paraguay looking for trafficable items 16 Banking and finance editParaguay s banking and financial services industry is still recovering from the liquidity crisis of 1995 when news of widespread corruption resulted in the closure of several significant banks Reform efforts spurred by the International Monetary Fund IMF and World Bank helped restore some credibility to Paraguay s banking industry Still a paucity of credit options hinders the overall economy Paraguay has a long history as a money laundering center The government has taken steps to curb the problem but enforcement of anti laundering legislation remains inconsistent 16 Foreign companies either partially or wholly own most banks and financial institutions in Paraguay Paraguayan banks hold less than 10 percent of deposits Of the 16 banks operating in Paraguay in 2003 50 percent were wholly foreign owned and 25 percent were partially owned by foreign companies Paraguay s Central Bank exists to stabilize the financial sector making sure that another run on banks such as the one that occurred in 1995 does not recur The Superintendencia de Bancos regulates the banking system monitoring the percentage of non performing loans in the banking system Bank deposits rose significantly in 2004 along with the percentage of local currency in total deposits Local currency deposits increased by 26 percent in 2004 a sign that Paraguayans are gaining confidence in the stability of Paraguayan currency In another promising development interest rates dropped dramatically in 2004 from 50 percent in 2003 to 27 percent in 2004 16 Paraguay s stock market the Bolsa de Valores y Productos de Asuncion began trading in October 1993 The tradition of family owned companies and economic instability kept investment low throughout the 1990s The value of shares on the Asuncion stock exchange rose by 390 percent in 2004 reaching US 17 5 million 16 Labor editParaguay s formal labour force was estimated to total about 2 7 million workers in 2004 About 45 percent worked in the agricultural sector 31 percent in the industrial sector and 19 percent in the services sector Unemployment was estimated at 15 percent Paraguay s constitution guarantees the right of workers to unionize and bargain collectively About 15 percent of workers are members of one of Paraguay s 1 600 unions Strikes are legal and not uncommon 16 The 2001 census found that 5 percent of Paraguay s workforce was under the age of 14 Although Paraguay ratified the International Labour Organization s Minimum Age Convention in 2004 child labour continues to be prevalent Nearly 14 percent of children between the ages of 5 and 17 are employed many in poor conditions and for negligible pay The government has mandated a minimum wage of approximately US 158 per month for private sector employees Government employees have no minimum wage The standard workweek is 48 hours In 2004 Paraguay s unemployment rate stood at 15 percent 16 Currency exchange rate and inflation editParaguay s currency is the guarani PYG In mid October 2005 US 1 equaled about PYG6155 16 Price inflation fell dramatically between 2003 and 2004 from 14 2 percent to a 30 year low of 4 3 percent President s Duarte s economic reforms and austerity programs have produced results more rapidly than many expected As of 2005 experts forecast that the inflation rate in Paraguay likely would rise in coming years but has remained below 10 percent 16 Foreign economic relations edit nbsp Paraguay s main export goods 2007 2008 Source Paraguay Ministry of Industry and Commerce REDIEXParaguay is a member of the Common Market of the South Mercado Comun del Sur or Mercosur Most of Paraguay s trade takes place with Uruguay Brazil and Argentina 21 In 2002 Paraguay conducted more than US 400 million in trade with Argentina and nearly US 800 million with Brazil Paraguay is also a member of the Inter American Development Bank Latin American Integration Association and Latin American Economic System and a signatory to the agreement creating the South American Community of Nations In 2004 Paraguay signed an energy cooperation agreement with Venezuela to purchase oil and petroleum Venezuela agreed to concessional financing that allowed Paraguay to pay over a 15 year period at a nominal interest rate 16 Imports totaled US 3 3 billion in 2004 Principal import commodities included automobiles chemical products consumer goods tobacco petroleum and machinery Brazil was the leading source of imports to Paraguay 24 3 percent followed by the United States 22 3 percent Argentina 16 2 percent China 9 9 percent and Hong Kong 5 percent Experts note that import statistics are difficult to confirm for Paraguay because as much as half of all imports are illegally re exported to Argentina or Brazil Imports from Mercosur countries continue to rise up to 57 percent in 2003 16 Paraguay s export revenues totaled about US 2 9 billion in 2004 Agricultural commodities continue to drive Paraguay s export totals Soybeans are particularly vital accounting for 35 percent of total export revenues in 2003 Other agricultural cash crops include cotton sugarcane cassava sunflowers wheat and corn Other significant exports include feed meat edible oils electricity wood and leather Even as Paraguayan export revenue has fluctuated Brazil remained Paraguay s principal export destination 27 8 percent in 2004 followed by Uruguay 15 9 percent Italy 7 1 percent Switzerland 5 6 percent Argentina 4 3 percent and the Netherlands 4 2 percent In 2003 nearly 60 percent of Paraguayan exports went to Mercosur countries 16 Paraguay had a negative trade balance of about US 400 million in 2004 Higher earnings from soybeans and cotton could not offset the surge in imported consumer goods and petroleum products 16 After years of negative balances Paraguay achieved a positive balance of payments totaling US 234 million in 2003 In 2004 however the current account had an estimated deficit of US 35 1 million 16 Paraguay has a sustainable debt level according to the International Monetary Fund IMF External debt totaled about US 3 4 billion in 2004 low compared to most Latin American countries Continued reductions in Paraguay s debt to gross domestic product ratio are expected in coming years Paraguay paid US 412 million in debt service to the IMF in 2004 16 Foreign investment in Paraguay nearly disappeared in 2002 After direct foreign investment of US 84 million in 2001 only US 9 million in investment came from abroad in 2002 This drop was largely the result of the financial crisis in Argentina and the banking collapse in Paraguay Direct foreign investment rebounded in 2003 reaching US 90 8 million for the year 16 Paraguay has depended on the International Monetary Fund IMF and World Bank for economic development assistance The World Bank has promised Paraguay assistance totaling US 325 million between 2003 and 2007 Projects currently underway in Paraguay aim to improve education transportation and rural development 16 Transport editMain article Transport in Paraguay The Paraguayan road network includes almost 4 500 kilometers of paved roads and nearly 60 000 kilometers of secondary roads The density of the road network is higher in the oriental region and lower in the Chaco area However in 2007 a paved connection to the Bolivian border was completed across the Chaco region The Paraguay Parana waterway constitutes an essential route for the transport of exported and imported goods The railway which connects Asuncion to Encarnacion actually doesn t operate but there is still a connection between Encarnacion and Posadas Argentina for the transport of agricultural goods Paraguay has two international airports Silvio Pettirossi International Airport in Asuncion and Guarani International Airport in Ciudad del Este and several secondary airports in other parts of the country Media and communications editMain articles Media of Paraguay and Telecommunications in Paraguay There are five national newspapers and a larger number of local publications There are five Paraguayan TV stations Additionally essential international stations can be received by cable in the main urban areas The fixed line network is controlled by the state owned COPACO Company The cell phone network is open to private operators There are four competing mobile phone operators in Paraguay During the last few years mobile phone coverage of the population has been far more extensive than fixed line coverage Statistics editThe following table shows the main economic indicators in 1980 2019 with FMI estimates for 2020 2026 22 Year GDP in Bil US PPP GDP per capita in US PPP GDP in Bil US nominal GDP per capita in US nominal GDP growth real Inflation rate in Percent Unemployment in Percent Government debt in of GDP 1980 11 1 3 536 7 4 1 1 299 7 11 7 22 5 n a n a1981 nbsp 13 3 nbsp 4 103 4 nbsp 5 2 nbsp 1 608 5 nbsp 9 2 nbsp 13 8 n a n a1982 nbsp 13 9 nbsp 4 171 1 nbsp 5 5 nbsp 1 636 5 nbsp 1 4 nbsp 5 4 n a n a1983 nbsp 14 0 nbsp 4 080 4 nbsp 6 1 nbsp 1 763 0 nbsp 3 0 nbsp 12 8 8 3 n a1984 nbsp 15 0 nbsp 4 220 3 nbsp 4 9 nbsp 1 390 9 nbsp 2 8 nbsp 20 9 nbsp 7 3 n a1985 nbsp 16 0 nbsp 4 390 9 nbsp 4 2 nbsp 1 154 1 nbsp 3 9 nbsp 24 8 nbsp 5 1 n a1986 nbsp 16 4 nbsp 4 352 9 nbsp 5 0 nbsp 1 335 8 nbsp 0 3 nbsp 31 7 nbsp 6 1 n a1987 nbsp 17 5 nbsp 4 499 5 nbsp 4 2 nbsp 1 084 7 nbsp 4 1 nbsp 21 7 nbsp 5 5 n a1988 nbsp 19 2 nbsp 4 780 5 nbsp 5 6 nbsp 1 392 4 nbsp 5 9 nbsp 22 6 nbsp 4 7 n a1989 nbsp 21 1 nbsp 5 095 2 nbsp 4 0 nbsp 977 8 nbsp 5 8 nbsp 25 6 nbsp 6 1 n a1990 nbsp 22 8 nbsp 5 503 7 nbsp 4 9 nbsp 1 185 3 nbsp 4 1 nbsp 38 2 nbsp 6 6 nbsp 67 0 1991 nbsp 24 4 nbsp 5 529 7 nbsp 7 0 nbsp 1 585 2 nbsp 3 5 nbsp 24 3 nbsp 5 1 nbsp 49 4 1992 nbsp 25 3 nbsp 5 636 6 nbsp 7 2 nbsp 1 592 1 nbsp 1 7 nbsp 15 1 nbsp 5 3 nbsp 34 4 1993 nbsp 27 2 nbsp 5 933 9 nbsp 7 2 nbsp 1 580 2 nbsp 4 9 nbsp 18 3 nbsp 5 1 nbsp 26 6 1994 nbsp 29 3 nbsp 6 255 3 nbsp 7 9 nbsp 1 681 4 nbsp 5 3 nbsp 20 6 nbsp 4 4 nbsp 18 7 1995 nbsp 31 9 nbsp 6 685 7 nbsp 9 1 nbsp 1 897 1 nbsp 6 8 nbsp 13 4 nbsp 3 3 nbsp 17 6 1996 nbsp 33 0 nbsp 6 777 0 nbsp 9 8 nbsp 2 008 2 nbsp 1 6 nbsp 9 8 nbsp 8 2 nbsp 16 8 1997 nbsp 35 0 nbsp 7 042 6 nbsp 10 0 nbsp 2 003 6 nbsp 4 2 nbsp 7 0 nbsp 5 0 nbsp 18 0 1998 nbsp 35 4 nbsp 6 984 2 nbsp 9 3 nbsp 1 824 6 nbsp 0 1 nbsp 11 6 nbsp 5 8 nbsp 22 1 1999 nbsp 35 5 nbsp 6 848 5 nbsp 8 8 nbsp 1 706 4 nbsp 1 4 nbsp 6 8 nbsp 6 8 nbsp 32 0 2000 nbsp 35 4 nbsp 6 702 7 nbsp 8 9 nbsp 1 675 8 nbsp 2 3 nbsp 9 0 nbsp 7 3 nbsp 33 6 2001 nbsp 35 9 nbsp 6 665 8 nbsp 8 5 nbsp 1 577 7 nbsp 0 8 nbsp 7 3 nbsp 7 6 nbsp 40 3 2002 nbsp 36 5 nbsp 6 646 9 nbsp 7 2 nbsp 1 312 1 nbsp 0 0 nbsp 10 5 nbsp 10 8 nbsp 54 5 2003 nbsp 38 7 nbsp 6 937 8 nbsp 7 7 nbsp 1 377 5 nbsp 4 3 nbsp 14 2 nbsp 8 1 nbsp 40 3 2004 nbsp 41 4 nbsp 7 285 2 nbsp 9 6 nbsp 1 693 9 nbsp 4 1 nbsp 4 3 nbsp 7 3 nbsp 30 3 2005 nbsp 43 6 nbsp 7 542 5 nbsp 10 7 nbsp 1 857 8 nbsp 2 1 nbsp 6 8 nbsp 5 8 nbsp 24 1 2006 nbsp 47 1 nbsp 8 009 1 nbsp 13 4 nbsp 2 285 1 nbsp 4 8 nbsp 9 6 nbsp 6 7 nbsp 18 2 2007 nbsp 51 0 nbsp 8 528 9 nbsp 17 9 nbsp 2 988 7 nbsp 5 4 nbsp 8 1 nbsp 5 6 nbsp 14 9 2008 nbsp 55 3 nbsp 9 099 8 nbsp 24 6 nbsp 4 047 7 nbsp 6 4 nbsp 10 2 nbsp 5 7 nbsp 14 5 2009 nbsp 55 5 nbsp 9 001 7 nbsp 22 3 nbsp 3 621 7 nbsp 0 3 nbsp 2 6 nbsp 6 4 nbsp 13 7 2010 nbsp 62 4 nbsp 9 964 5 nbsp 27 1 nbsp 4 326 2 nbsp 11 1 nbsp 4 7 nbsp 5 7 nbsp 12 1 2011 nbsp 66 4 nbsp 10 442 6 nbsp 33 7 nbsp 5 295 4 nbsp 4 2 nbsp 8 3 nbsp 5 6 nbsp 10 3 2012 nbsp 64 4 nbsp 9 960 8 nbsp 33 3 nbsp 5 155 2 nbsp 0 5 nbsp 3 7 nbsp 4 6 nbsp 12 3 2013 nbsp 72 2 nbsp 11 004 3 nbsp 38 7 nbsp 5 905 7 nbsp 8 4 nbsp 2 7 nbsp 5 0 nbsp 13 5 2014 nbsp 75 4 nbsp 11 326 6 nbsp 40 3 nbsp 6 050 1 nbsp 4 9 nbsp 5 0 nbsp 6 0 nbsp 15 6 2015 nbsp 76 7 nbsp 11 357 7 nbsp 36 2 nbsp 5 353 1 nbsp 3 1 nbsp 3 1 nbsp 5 4 nbsp 18 6 2016 nbsp 81 5 nbsp 11 895 4 nbsp 36 1 nbsp 5 259 9 nbsp 4 3 nbsp 4 1 nbsp 6 0 nbsp 19 4 2017 nbsp 86 5 nbsp 12 437 5 nbsp 39 0 nbsp 5 609 8 nbsp 5 0 nbsp 3 6 nbsp 6 1 nbsp 19 8 2018 nbsp 91 5 nbsp 12 978 2 nbsp 40 4 nbsp 5 725 9 nbsp 3 4 nbsp 4 0 nbsp 6 2 nbsp 22 2 2019 nbsp 93 1 nbsp 13 021 8 nbsp 38 1 nbsp 5 333 0 nbsp 0 0 nbsp 2 8 nbsp 6 1 nbsp 25 6 2020 nbsp 93 4 nbsp 12 881 0 nbsp 35 9 nbsp 4 946 5 nbsp 0 9 nbsp 1 8 nbsp 6 6 nbsp 34 8 2021 nbsp 98 9 nbsp 13 454 2 nbsp 37 8 nbsp 5 145 6 nbsp 4 0 nbsp 2 7 nbsp 6 1 nbsp 35 7 2022 nbsp 105 2 nbsp 14 115 9 nbsp 40 2 nbsp 5 391 0 nbsp 4 0 nbsp 3 2 nbsp 5 9 nbsp 36 5 2023 nbsp 111 9 nbsp 14 811 6 nbsp 43 0 nbsp 5 685 5 nbsp 4 0 nbsp 3 2 nbsp 5 9 nbsp 36 4 2024 nbsp 118 2 nbsp 15 441 5 nbsp 45 4 nbsp 5 935 3 nbsp 3 5 nbsp 3 2 nbsp 5 9 nbsp 36 2 2025 nbsp 124 8 nbsp 16 078 0 nbsp 47 9 nbsp 6 178 1 nbsp 3 5 nbsp 3 2 nbsp 5 9 nbsp 35 8 2026 nbsp 131 6 nbsp 16 726 1 nbsp 50 6 nbsp 6 430 6 nbsp 3 5 nbsp 3 2 nbsp 5 9 nbsp 35 2 GDP composition by sector Agriculture 11 4 Industry 33 5 Services 47 5 Taxes 7 6 2022 Labor force 3 428 million 2017 est Labor force by occupation agriculture 26 5 industry 18 5 services 55 2008 est Unemployment rate 6 5 2017 est Population below poverty line 22 2 2015 est Household income or consumption by percentage share lowest 10 1 5 highest 10 37 6 2015 Distribution of family income Gini index 51 7 2015 Inflation rate consumer prices 3 6 2017 est Investment gross fixed 21 2 of GDP 2005 est Budget revenues 5 366 billion expenditures 5 876 billion including capital expenditures of 700 million 2017 est Public debt 25 6 of GDP 2017 est Agriculture products cotton sugarcane soybeans corn wheat tobacco cassava tapioca fruits vegetables beef pork eggs milk timberIndustries sugar cement textiles beverages wood products steel metallurgic electric powerIndustrial production growth rate 6 2017 est Electricity production 51 29 billion kWh 2003 consumption 3 528 billion kWh 2003 exports 44 17 billion kWh 2003 imports 0 kWh 2003 Electricity production by source fossil fuel 0 hydro 99 9 nuclear 0 other 0 1 2001 Oil production 0 bbl d 0 m3 d 2003 est consumption 25 000 bbl d 4 000 m3 d 2003 est exports NA 2001 imports NA 2001 Current account balance 543 million 2017 est Exports 11 53 billion f o b 2017 est Exports partners Brazil 31 9 Argentina 15 9 Chile 6 9 Russia 5 9 2017 Imports 10 37 billion f o b 2017 est Imports partners China 31 3 Brazil 23 4 Argentina 12 9 US 7 4 2017 Reserves of foreign exchange and gold 7 504 billion 2017 est Debt external 17 35 billion 2017 est Economic aid recipient NACurrency 1 guarani G 100 centimosExchange rates guarani G per US 5 628 1 2017 4 555 00 2011 6 158 47 2005 5 974 6 2004 6 424 34 2003 5 716 26 2002 4 105 92 2001 3 332 0 January 2000 3 119 1 1999 2 726 5 1998 2 177 9 1997 2 056 8 1996 1 963 0 1995 note since early 1998 the exchange rate has operated as a managed float prior to that the exchange rate was determined freely in the marketFiscal year calendar yearSee also editList of Latin American and Caribbean countries by GDP growth List of Latin American and Caribbean countries by GDP nominal List of Latin American and Caribbean countries by GDP PPP References edit World Economic Outlook Database April 2019 IMF org International Monetary Fund Retrieved 29 September 2019 World Bank Country and Lending Groups datahelpdesk worldbank org World Bank Retrieved 29 September 2019 Population total Paraguay data worldbank org World Bank Retrieved 24 October 2019 a b c d e Report for Selected Countries and Subjects April 2023 imf org International Monetary Fund a b c The outlook is uncertain again amid financial sector turmoil high inflation ongoing effects of Russia s invasion of Ukraine and three years of COVID International Monetary Fund 11 April 2023 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p The World Factbook CIA gov Central Intelligence Agency Retrieved 3 July 2019 Poverty headcount ratio at national poverty lines of population Paraguay data worldbank org World Bank Retrieved 21 March 2020 Poverty headcount ratio at 5 50 a day 2011 PPP of population Paraguay data worldbank org World Bank Retrieved 21 March 2020 GINI index World Bank estimate data worldbank org World Bank Retrieved 21 March 2020 Human Development Index HDI hdr undp org HDRO Human Development Report Office United Nations Development Programme Retrieved 12 October 2022 Inequality adjusted Human Development Index IHDI hdr undp org HDRO Human Development Report Office United Nations Development Programme Retrieved 12 October 2022 Labor force total Paraguay data worldbank org World Bank Retrieved 12 January 2020 Employment to population ratio 15 total national estimate Paraguay data worldbank org World Bank Retrieved 24 October 2019 Sovereigns rating list Standard amp Poor s Retrieved 26 May 2011 a b Rogers Simon Sedghi Ami 15 April 2011 How Fitch Moody s and S amp P rate each country s credit rating The Guardian Retrieved 28 May 2011 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa Paraguay country profile Library of Congress Federal Research Division October 2005 This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Paraguay s population is booming but where are all the jobs Paraguay production in 2018 by FAO Paraguay GDP grows 5 8 in 2008 record per capita income Mercopress 30 December 2008 Archived from the original on 8 January 2009 Retrieved 10 January 2009 Deforestation in Paraguay Over 1500 football pitches lost a day in the Chaco World Land Trust 30 November 2009 Archived from the original on 23 August 2010 Retrieved 16 September 2011 Red de Inversiones y Exportaciones Archived 30 May 2012 at the Wayback Machine Report for Selected Countries and Subjects Retrieved 5 September 2018 Kleinpenning Jan M G 2009 Rural Paraguay 1870 1963 a geography of progress plunder and poverty Madrid Frankfurt am Main Iberoamericana Vervuert ISBN 978 3 86527 510 3 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Economy of Paraguay CIA The World Factbook Paraguay Central Bank of Paraguay Ministry of Finance Ministry of Industry and Commerce Paraguayan Investment and Trade Promotion Agency REDIEX US Department of Agriculture 2008 report on crop expansion in Paraguay Archived 22 July 2015 at the Wayback Machine World Bank Summary Trade Statistics Paraguay Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Economy of Paraguay amp oldid 1209747805, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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