Uruguay SERVICES
The spillway at the Salto Grande Dam
Courtesy Inter-American Development Bank
The Fray Bentos Bridge over the Río Uruguay
Courtesy Inter-American Development Bank
Unavailable
Figure 8. Transportation System, 1990
Artigas Boulevard, a highway leading to downtown Montevideo
Courtesy Inter-American Development Bank
Uruguay's service sector, comprising the major
subsectors of
banking, transportation, communications, and tourism, as
well as
the activities of the large central government, accounted
for 42
percent of GDP in 1988. Transportation, storage, and
communications together accounted for about 6 percent of
GDP,
while banking and commerce accounted for about 15 percent.
Thus,
half of the so-called service sector consisted of
government
activity.
On the one hand, the service sector was a strong point
in the
economy because of the well-educated work force
concentrated in
Montevideo. On the other hand, the instability among
banks, the
lack of a modernized telecommunications system, and
shortcomings
in the nation's transportation infrastructure held back
the
sector's development. In the second half of the 1980s,
these
issues took on increasing importance as the government
began
promoting the idea of Uruguay as an international service
center
for the Southern Cone (Argentina, Bolivia, Chile,
Paraguay, and
Uruguay). The growing potential to export services and to
integrate them across borders was considered a key element
in the
future development of Uruguay's outward-oriented economy.
Data as of December 1990
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