Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Paraguay's Factory Inputs Are Surging-A Clear Rebound With A Concentration Risk


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Paraguay's factories are buying more of the basics they need to run. From January through September, the government approved $394 million in raw-material imports under its temporary admission regime for processing-up 31% from a year earlier.

September added $44 million on the back of 568 approvals benefiting 134 manufacturers. In total, 5,044 requests were cleared in the first nine months, a 23% increase year over year.

What this means in plain terms: the program lets companies bring in inputs at favorable terms, turn them into goods in Paraguay, and then sell domestically or export.

The pattern of what's being imported shows which assembly lines are busiest. About 76% of approvals are tied to machinery and electrical equipment, metalworking, and chemical-pharmaceutical inputs.

The user base has widened to 269 companies, roughly 69% of which operate in food and beverages, paper, rubber and plastics, chemical-pharma, and metalworking. Most of these firms are located in the Central department, followed by Alto Paraná and the capital, Asunción.



The story behind the story is where those inputs come from. China and India account for about three-quarters of the authorized volume this year; the United States adds roughly 5%, while Spain, Turkey, and Germany each stand near 2%.
Paraguay's Manufacturing Booms but Faces Supply Risks
That concentration has helped hold down costs but leaves producers exposed if shipping snarls, price spikes, or policy changes hit major Asian suppliers. Officials also point to a broader pickup in domestic demand, reflected in higher overall imports through September.

Why readers outside Paraguay should care: these approvals are a real-time signal of factory utilization across a Mercosur supply chain that links Paraguay to Brazil and Argentina.

Rising approvals suggest fuller production schedules ahead, with spillovers for trucking, warehousing, packaging, and intermediate goods.

The flip side is a single point of failure-heavy reliance on a narrow set of foreign suppliers. For manufacturers, investors, and logistics firms in the region, both trends matter now.

MENAFN16102025007421016031ID1110205706



Legal Disclaimer:
MENAFN provides the information “as is” without warranty of any kind. We do not accept any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright issues related to this article, kindly contact the provider above.