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Latin America's Slow Grind: A Small 2025 Lift, Big Problems Still In The Way
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Latin America and the Caribbean just got a modest upgrade: regional growth is now expected at 2.4% in 2025 and 2.3% in 2026.
That's better than earlier forecasts-but not by much. The region is still running in low gear, weighed down by weak investment, low productivity, and stubborn inequality.
Inflation has cooled more slowly than hoped, keeping interest rates higher for longer and currencies jumpy. Those forces make borrowing costlier and planning harder for families and firms.
The story behind the story is a widening gap between countries and a growth model that hasn't evolved fast enough. South America is projected to grow 2.9% in 2025, helped by stronger demand from China and firmer commodity prices.
But within that, trajectories diverge: Brazil is seen around 2.5%, Chile 2.6%, Colombia 2.5%, and Peru 3.2%, while Mexico-more exposed to manufacturing, trade frictions, and slower external demand-sits near 0.6%.
Several Caribbean and smaller South American economies tied to energy and mining should do better, though their gains are narrow and volatile. Labor markets reflect this slow pulse.
Latin America Faces Slow Job Growth and Global Supply Risks
Employment growth is expected to cool and unemployment to hover near 5.6%. Informality may ease a touch and the gap between men and women may narrow slightly, but both remain high without stronger formal-sector growth.
Why this matters to readers outside the region: Latin America supplies the world with food, fuel, and metals that power factories, batteries, and clean-energy projects.
When the region grows slowly, it invests less in logistics, energy, and education-bottlenecks that can ripple into global supply chains and prices.
For investors, the message is to be selective: commodity-linked plays with disciplined balance sheets look sturdier; interest-rate and currency paths will be pivotal to returns.
For policymakers, the path out of the rut is not a mystery: simpler rules and taxes, faster infrastructure and port upgrades, and targeted industrial policies that crowd in private capital and diversify exports.
In short, the forecast ticked up. The fundamentals didn't. Without a push on productivity and diversification, this recovery risks feeling like standing still.
That's better than earlier forecasts-but not by much. The region is still running in low gear, weighed down by weak investment, low productivity, and stubborn inequality.
Inflation has cooled more slowly than hoped, keeping interest rates higher for longer and currencies jumpy. Those forces make borrowing costlier and planning harder for families and firms.
The story behind the story is a widening gap between countries and a growth model that hasn't evolved fast enough. South America is projected to grow 2.9% in 2025, helped by stronger demand from China and firmer commodity prices.
But within that, trajectories diverge: Brazil is seen around 2.5%, Chile 2.6%, Colombia 2.5%, and Peru 3.2%, while Mexico-more exposed to manufacturing, trade frictions, and slower external demand-sits near 0.6%.
Several Caribbean and smaller South American economies tied to energy and mining should do better, though their gains are narrow and volatile. Labor markets reflect this slow pulse.
Latin America Faces Slow Job Growth and Global Supply Risks
Employment growth is expected to cool and unemployment to hover near 5.6%. Informality may ease a touch and the gap between men and women may narrow slightly, but both remain high without stronger formal-sector growth.
Why this matters to readers outside the region: Latin America supplies the world with food, fuel, and metals that power factories, batteries, and clean-energy projects.
When the region grows slowly, it invests less in logistics, energy, and education-bottlenecks that can ripple into global supply chains and prices.
For investors, the message is to be selective: commodity-linked plays with disciplined balance sheets look sturdier; interest-rate and currency paths will be pivotal to returns.
For policymakers, the path out of the rut is not a mystery: simpler rules and taxes, faster infrastructure and port upgrades, and targeted industrial policies that crowd in private capital and diversify exports.
In short, the forecast ticked up. The fundamentals didn't. Without a push on productivity and diversification, this recovery risks feeling like standing still.
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