El Salvador The Economy
Farm worker drying coffee
UNTIL THE GOVERNMENT IMPLEMENTED a major land reform in 1980,
the most notable characteristic of El Salvador's economic
structure was the unequal distribution of landownership. The
economy was dominated by a few large plantations that produced
cash crops, especially coffee, for export. The slow and difficult
implementation of a sweeping three-phase land reform begun in
1980, however, considerably altered the pattern of unequal
landownership.
El Salvador's economic development in the 1980s was hindered
by a resource drain caused by the country's civil conflict,
natural disasters, a lack of economic expertise, and adverse
changes in the
terms of trade (see Glossary). Consequently, by
1987 El Salvador's economic output barely equaled 80 percent of
its 1978 level, and exports were only the third most important
source of foreign exchange after foreign aid and remittances from
Salvadorans living abroad. The most damaging of these factors was
the civil conflict, particularly its impact on the country's
infrastructure. By mid-1987 observers estimated that the total
cost to the economy based on lost agricultural production,
damaged infrastructure, and funds diverted from economic to
military purposes was about US$1.5 billion.
El Salvador entered the 1970s as a relatively poor middleincome country with per capita income greater than that of
Thailand and slightly less than that of the Republic of Korea
(South Korea), Malaysia and Costa Rica. Its overall level of
development was roughly comparable to these countries as well,
judging by such indicators as industrial contribution to the
gross domestic product
(GDP--see Glossary),
life expectancy, the
cost of labor, and per capita income. El Salvador had one other
important characteristic in common with these other four
countries--a hard-working, productive, and motivated labor force.
El Salvador's annual rate of investment growth (3.5 percent),
however, lagged substantially behind the other four during the
1960s. During this decade, gross investment grew annually by 24
percent in South Korea, 16 percent in Thailand, 7.5 percent in
Malaysia, and 7.1 percent in Costa Rica. El Salvador's inferior
rate of investment growth continued and in some cases widened
during the 1970s.
By 1982 Salvadoran development had fallen far behind that of
South Korea, Malaysia, Thailand, and even Costa Rica. Industrial
production hovered around 20 percent of GDP, whereas in the other
countries it accounted for between 27 percent (Costa Rica) and 40
percent (South Korea). Salvadoran per capita income fell to about
a third of South Korea's and Malaysia's, half of Costa Rica's,
and 15 percent below that of Thailand. Making matters worse, El
Salvador's terms of trade had deteriorated much more rapidly than
had that of the other countries.
Between 1982 and 1986, El Salvador fell even further behind
as it failed to diversify its exports away from agricultural
commodities and into manufactured goods. In 1986 per capita GDP
was almost half its level of 1977, and the country entered a
period of disinvestment. As other middle-income countries
appeared to be taking off, El Salvador was regressing.
Data as of November 1988
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