President Vicente Fox has been unable to overcome the
political obstacles to many of his vaunted reform plans. Still,Mexico has largely avoided South America’s malaise and remains a regional economic powerhouse.
Category: Regions
The Foreigners Take Over
Nearly all Mexico’s banks are foreign-owned now, and the financial system is fully recovered from the financial crash of 1995. But lending remains feebele in a country desperately in need of credit.
Politics Torpedoes Growth
A casualty of the politics surrounding Alejandro Toledo’s first year as president, Pedro Pablo Kuczynski succeeded
in growing Peru’s economy, sealing a deal with the IMF and issuing a historic international bond. But the public failed to embrace his free market ideas.
Ironing Out Ups and Downs
Venezuela’s economy has always risen and fallen with the price of oil. But pressure from President Chávez and a new investment law are creating further challenges.
Keeping Damage to a Minimum
Venezuela’s financial services industry is remarkably solid and profitable. But bankers are worried about the effect of unemployment, inflation and recession on their institutions.
Negotiating the High Wires
An interview with Vicente Llatas, executive vice president of CanTV, Venezuela’s biggest telecoms provider.
Resource Rich, Cash Poor
PDVSA needs to invest more to keep current energy production at its present level. Rising operating and production costs are making the goal more elusive.
by Brian S. McBeth
Riding Out the Storm
As Venezuela confronts one of the most turbulent periods in its recent history, the government and its people struggle to hold on to democracy and to a cohesive society. Jonathan Wheatley reports in this supplement.
Tending Both Sides of the Budget
Jesús Bermúdez, Venezuela’s deputy finance minister, says the government has assembled a coherent plan to attack one of the country’s most serious economic weaknesses, its deteriorating […]
