El Salvador Public Enterprises
Municipal buses, San Salvador
Courtesy Inter-American Development Bank
In El Salvador in the late 1980s, there were nine state-owned
companies, the most important of were public utility companies,
such as CEL, Antel, ANDA, IRA, and the Autonomous Executive Port
Commission (Comision Ejecutiva Portuaria Autonoma--CEPA). IRA,
which operated under the Ministry of Agriculture and Livestock,
was responsible for marketing imported or domestic foodstuffs,
such as corn, rice, beans, and powdered milk. Some of these foods
were sold in government stores at subsidized prices. The state
also owned shares of the cement and textile industries. The
establishment of the two state-owned marketing companies, Incafe
and Inazucar, expanded the public sector significantly and
increased public revenue at the expense of coffee and sugar
producers.
Most state-owned companies turned a profit in the 1980s.
Between 1980 and 1983, for example, state-sector profits
increased from 0.8 percent to 1.7 percent of GDP. Some stateowned companies, however, tended not to adjust prices during
inflationary periods. IRA regularly incurred large deficits by
trying to provide affordable foodstuffs. IRA's deficits were
generally covered by the central government. Most other stateowned companies financed their deficits abroad, or through loans
from the Central Reserve Bank.
Data as of November 1988
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