Uruguay The Economy
Montevideo's harbor
URUGUAY IS A WEALTHY COUNTRY by Latin American standards,
although its economic development has been sluggish since
the
1950s. In 1990 the country had a gross domestic product
(
GDP--see Glossary) of approximately US$9.2 billion, or US$2,970 per
capita, placing it among the highest-income countries in
Latin
America. Uruguay's small population (just over 3 million)
and low
population growth (0.7 percent per year) enabled its
people to
maintain a reasonable standard of living during the 1980s,
despite the nation's unsteady economic performance. Like
many
other countries in the region, Uruguay faced a large
external
debt and an appreciable public-sector deficit, both of
which
impeded the growth of the economy. Other major limitations
on
growth were the continued dependence on a few agricultural
products and one of South America's lowest levels of
foreign and
domestic investment.
Uruguay's economy developed rapidly during the first
three
decades of the twentieth century because of expanding beef
and
wool exportation. Rising trade income led to the creation
of an
advanced welfare state in which the government
redistributed
wealth and protected workers. After agricultural exports
leveled
off in the 1950s, the government's role in the economy
expanded.
With agriculture stalled and manufacturing potential
limited by
the small size of the domestic market, the public sector
became
the source of most new jobs in Uruguay. The economy
operated
behind high tariff barriers, barring competition from
abroad. An
alliance between the nation's two major political parties
upheld
this statist model through the 1960s, but lack of GDP
growth and
large public-sector deficits testified to its
inefficiency.
Although the military government (1973-85) enacted
major
economic reforms during the 1970s, it operated with high
fiscal
deficits and borrowed extensively to pay for those
deficits. In
an effort to reorient the stagnated economy toward
external
markets, the government eliminated price controls and
slashed
tariffs while providing subsidies to exporters. These
reforms of
the goods market produced favorable results in the short
run:
exports, investment, and GDP all increased significantly.
When
the government went further, however, by deregulating the
banking
sector in hopes of removing inflationary pressures, the
economy
became unstable. In 1981 Uruguay's economy went into
recession.
One source of instability was the growing
"dollarization" of
the banks. When foreign-exchange regulations were
canceled,
United States dollars (mostly from Argentine real estate
investment) flowed into Uruguay. Uruguayan banks, in turn,
loaned
dollars to private companies and ranchers within the
country. The
danger in this system was the exchange rate: when the
government
allowed its currency, the Uruguayan new peso (for value of
the
Uruguayan new peso--see Glossary), to float against the
dollar in
1982, the peso value of many Uruguayan loans suddenly
tripled.
Thus, Uruguay faced both a recession and a domestic debt
crisis
in the early 1980s.
In 1986-87 the economy recovered from the recession as
real
GDP increased by 6.6 percent in 1986 and 4.9 percent in
1987. The
renewed emphasis on exports, including several new
categories of
goods, resulted in a positive trade balance. Real wages,
which
had fallen by 50 percent in the 1970s but risen by 15
percent in
the early 1980s, increased again (but only marginally), as
did
employment (by 4 percent). These modest improvements could
not
mask fundamental problems, however. Inflation averaged
over 60
percent per year in the 1980s, despite efforts to reduce
it. In
addition, the domestic debt was largely absorbed by the
public
sector, but in the process Uruguay's deficit and foreign
debt
became larger. Debt service alone absorbed about
one-quarter of
export earnings. During the last two years of the
administration
of Julio Marķa Sanguinetti Cairolo (1985-90), fiscal
pressures
forced the government to abandon its growth-promotion
strategy,
and GDP did not increase. On the contrary, real GDP growth
fell
to 0.5 percent in 1988, 1.5 percent in 1989, and an
estimated -
0.4 percent in 1990.
In 1989 Sanguinetti defended his administration's
economic
record in terms of what had not happened. In a
speech to
the General Assembly, he said that Uruguay's political and
economic climate remained stable in contrast to its larger
neighbors (Argentina and Brazil). The nation's economy
"had not
collapsed into regional hyperinflation, as was predicted;
nor had
the banking crisis that the government inherited destroyed
the
financial system; nor had the heavy external debt
prevented the
country from growing." The statement was an apt summary of
both
the government's cautious philosophy and of Uruguay's
limited
economic progress in the late 1980s.
The Sanguinetti government could claim credit for
steering a
sensible course during a difficult decade for Latin
American
nations. The government did not, however, make much
progress
addressing a fundamental limitation on the economy and the
leading cause of the deficit: the size of the public
sector.
Powerful public-sector unions made it difficult for the
government to reduce public employment. When, for example,
the
inefficient passenger rail service was discontinued in
1988
because of declining ridership, workers were not released
but
rather were transferred to other government jobs. The
welfarestate model remained largely intact. By the last two years
of the
decade, however, economists and politicians were beginning
to ask
basic questions about the state's proper role in the
economy.
An even more fundamental question, not addressed in the
1980s, was the economy's heavy dependence on a few
livestock
products, which were produced by primitive agricultural
practices. Although exports could be diversified, for
example, by
producing not just wool but also woolen textiles and
apparel, the
supply of raw material depended on methods of raising
sheep and
cattle that had not changed significantly in two
centuries.
Livestock ranged over unimproved pastures whose carrying
capacity
was quite limited; production had actually decreased since
the
beginning of the twentieth century. The vulnerability of
the
sector was demonstrated in the late 1980s when a two-year
drought
(1988-89) decimated livestock herds.
Such fundamental issues were still in the background as
Luis
Alberto Lacalle de Herrera became president in March 1990.
Lacalle indicated that his government would continue the
cautious
adjustment policies of its predecessor, seeking to reduce
inflation and debt first and to resume growth second.
Lacalle
embraced privatization and drew up a bill to eliminate
several
state monopolies. Continued diversification of exports,
including
the possibility of exporting services, also appeared to
hold good
prospects for economic growth.
Data as of December 1990
|