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Economy of South America
During 2003 unless otherwise stated
Population: 364.24 million
GDP (PPP): $8,3 trillion
GDP (Currency): $1.97 trillion
GDP/capita (PPP): $10,264
GDP/capita (Currency): $8,663
Annual growth of
per capita GDP:
9.00% (2006)
Income of top 1%: 44.37%
Millionaires: 3 million (0.08%)
Unemployment 9% (2002)
Most numbers are from nationmaster.com from 2002, some numbers exclude certain countries for lack of information.
See also: Economy of the worldEconomy of AfricaEconomy of AsiaEconomy of EuropeEconomy of North AmericaEconomy of OceaniaEconomy of South America

The economy of South America comprises around 371 million people living in twelve nations and three territories.

Contents

[edit] Economic development

São Paulo, Brazil. One of the financial centers of South America, and also the fifth biggest city in the world. See List of metropolitan areas by population.

As of early 2007, South America is experiencing great economic development, with Venezuela, Colombia, Argentina, Uruguay and Peru growing their economies by over 8% per annum.Brazil's economy, on the other hand, is expected to grow by a more sluggish pace during the year.

South America relies heavily on the exporting of goods. On an exchange rate basis Brazil (the seventh largest economy in the world and the second largest in America) leads the way in total amount of exports at $137.8 billion dollars followed by Chile at 58.12 billion and Argentina with 46.46 billion.[1]

[edit] GDP ranks as of 2008

GDP (PPP) 2008
Note: French Guiana, unlisted here, had a total GDP of US$3.52 billion in 2006 (at real exchange rates, not at PPP).[2]

Rank in world Country GDP
9 Brazil $1,981,207 million
23 Argentina $572,860 million
28 Colombia $396,579 million
31 Venezuela $358,623 million
42 Peru $245,883 million
43 Chile $243,004 million
61 Ecuador $106,993 million
88 Bolivia $43,424 million
89 Uruguay $42,543 million
102 Paraguay $29,403 million
167 Guyana $4,129 million
172 Suriname $3,690 million
Source: CIA World Factbook[3]

GDP per capita (PPP) 2006
Note: French Guiana, unlisted here, had a GDP per capita of US$17,336 in 2006 (at real exchange rates, not at PPP).[2]

Rank in world Country GDP
per capita
57 Chile $14,510
58 Argentina $14,413
65 Uruguay $13,294
68 Brazil $10,035
96 Venezuela $12,785
97 Peru $8,580
99 Colombia $8,212
101 Ecuador $7,685
103 Suriname $8,323
105 Guyana $4,035
107 Paraguay $4,778
125 Bolivia $4,330
Source: List of countries by GDP (PPP) per capita

[edit] GNI per capita

  • Gross national income (GNI) is the sum of value added by all resident producers plus any product taxes (less subsidies) not included in the valuation of output plus net receipts of primary income (compensation of employees and property income) from abroad. GNI per capita is

|- | Brazil || $4,730 |- | Suriname || $3,200 |- | Peru || $2,920 |- | Ecuador || $2,840 |- | Colombia || $2,740 |- | Paraguay || $1,400 |- | Guyana || $1,130 |- | Bolivia || $1,100 |- | align="center" colspan="3" |Source: World Bank[4] |}

[edit] External Debt

  • External debt (or foreign debt) is that part of the total debt in a country that is owed to creditors outside the country. The debtors can be the government, corporations or private households. The debt includes money owed to private commercial banks, other governments, or international financial institutions such as the IMF and World Bank.
Rank in world Country External Debt
26 Brazil $230.3 billion
33 Argentina $118.0 billion
47 Chile $49.18 billion
48 Venezuela $45.44 billion
49 Colombia $43.30 billion
63 Peru $27.81 billion
72 Ecuador $17.56 billion
78 Uruguay $12.0 billion
108 Bolivia $3.80 billion
111 Paraguay $3.632 billion
151 Guyana $1.2 billion (2002 est.)
164 Suriname $504.3 million (2005 est.)
Source: CIA World Factbook[5]

[edit] Annual economic growth

Country Annual economic growth (%)
Peru 9.8%
Argentina 8.7%
Venezuela 8.4%
Colombia 7.0%
Uruguay 7.0%
Paraguay 6.4%
Ecuador 6.3%
Suriname 5.5%
Brazil 5.4%
Guyana 5.4%
Chile 5.0%
Bolivia 4.2%
Source: List of countries by GDP (real) growth rate[6]

[edit] Unemployment rate (lowest to highest)

Unemployment rate
(%)

Paraguay 5.60
Peru 6.90
Chile 7.00
Argentina 7.3
Bolivia 7.50
Venezuela 8.50
Uruguay 9.20
Brazil 9.30
Ecuador 9.30
Suriname 9.50
Colombia 11.20
Guyana N/A
Source: CIA World Factbook[7]

[edit] Poverty line (lowest to highest)

Year of
estimate
Country Population below
poverty line (%)
2009 Chile 15
2009 Argentina 15.3
2006 Uruguay 27.4
2005 Brazil 31
2005 Paraguay 32
2005 Venezuela 37.9
2006 Ecuador 38.3
2008 Peru 39.8
2005 Colombia 49.2
2006 Bolivia 60
2002 Suriname 70
N/A Guyana -
Source: CIA World Factbook[8]

[edit] Annual inflation

Country Annual inflation(%)
Peru 1.80%
Ecuador 2.20%
Brazil 3.60%
Chile 4.40%
Colombia 5.50%
Suriname 6.40%
Paraguay 8.10%
Uruguay 8.10%
Bolivia 8.70%
Argentina 8.80%
Guyana 12.20%
Venezuela 18.70%
Source: CIA World Factbook[9]

[edit] Public debt (lowest to highest)

  • Refers to what is owed by the combined public sector to both domestic and foreign creditors.
Country Public debt (% of GDP)
Chile 3.60
Venezuela 20.4
Paraguay 27.10
Peru 29.30
Ecuador 30.40
Brazil 43.90
Colombia 53.90
Bolivia 46.20
Uruguay 53.1
Argentina 59.00
Guyana N/A
Suriname N/A
Source: CIA World Factbook[10]

[edit] Trade blocs

The biggest Trade Bloc in South America is Mercosur (or Mercosul in Portuguese), comprising Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, Uruguay and Venezuela. Associate states include Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador and Peru. The second-biggest trade bloc is the Andean Community of Nations comprising Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Venezuela and as of 2006 Chile. The Union of South American Nations is expected to merge both trade blocs.

[edit] Currency

Below is a list of the currencies of South America, with exchange rates between each currency and both the euro and US dollars.

Country Currency 1 Euro = 1 USD = Central bank
Argentina Argentine peso (ARS) 4.60307 3.13996 Banco Central de la República Argentina [2]
Bolivia Bolivian boliviano (BOB) 11.0985 7.57080 Banco Central de Bolivia [3]
Brazil Brazilian real (BRL) 2.58963 1.76650 Banco Central do Brasil [4]
Chile Chilean peso (CLP) 701.020 $507.580 Banco Central de Chile [5]
Colombia Colombian peso (COP) 2,869.97 1,957.74 Banco de la República [6]
Ecuador U.S. dollar (USD) 1.46611 1 Federal Reserve [7]
French Guiana Euro (EUR) 1 0.682078 European Central Bank [8]
Guyana Guyanese dollar (GYD) 297.547 202.950 Bank of Guyana [9]
Paraguay Paraguayan guaraní (PYG) 6,802.74 4,640.00 Banco Central del Paraguay [10]
Peru Peruvian nuevo sol (PEN) 4.26966 2.72440 Banco Central de Reserva del Perú [11]
Suriname Surinamese dollar (SRD) 4.10543 2.80000 Centrale Bank van Suriname [12]
Uruguay Uruguayan peso (UYU) 31.1529 21.2470 Banco Central del Uruguay [13]
Venezuela Venezuelan bolívar fuerte (VEF) 3.14447 2.14460 Banco Central de Venezuela [14]

Table correct as of January 16, 2008; click price to obtain a current quote

[edit] References

[edit] Economic sectors

[edit] Agriculture

Main products include: Coffee, soybeans, wheat, rice, corn, sugarcane, cocoa, citrus, beef

[edit] Manufacturing

Industries are also important to South America’s economy. Most South American factories produce food items, consumer goods, or building materials. Larger countries also produce cars, trucks, and airplanes. Some of these companies import all the parts and raw materials needed for manufacturing which limits the amount of profits they can receive for the item. An important factor that is crucial to the success of industries is importing and exporting. An organization called Mercosur helps to expand trade, improve transportation, and reduce tariffs among member countries.

[edit] Transport

At the beginning of August 2008, Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez and his colleagues from Argentina and Brazil spoke about Latin American integration and Chavez threw an ambitious idea out: a train that would connect Venezuela's capital (Caracas) with Argentina's (Buenos Aires), and cities in between [11].

[edit] Economy by country

Economy of:

[edit] References

[edit] See also




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