403
Sorry!!
Error! We're sorry, but the page you were looking for doesn't exist.
Colombia's Quiet External Warning: A Growing Deficit Behind The Stronger Peso
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Colombia looks calm from a distance: the economy is growing, the currency has firmed and tourists keep arriving. But beneath that surface, the country is quietly building up an external tab with the rest of the world that should make investors, migrants and exporters pay attention.
In the third quarter of 2025, Colombia's current account deficit – the broadest measure of what the country owes or earns abroad – reached $2.853 billion, or 2.4% of GDP. That is $427 million more than in the previous quarter.
The core problem is simple: Colombians buy more goods from overseas than they sell, and they send large amounts of profits and interest to foreign investors.
A trade deficit in goods of $4.037 billion plus $3.170 billion in net payments to foreign capital were only partly offset by $4.213 billion in remittances and a surplus in services such as tourism, aviation and business outsourcing.
In other words, the country leans heavily on Colombians abroad and on the service economy to pay the import and profit bill created at home.
So far, financing that gap has not been a struggle. In the same quarter, foreign capital inflows totaled $10.377 billion, while Colombian money going out reached $8.009 billion.
Colombia's reserves signal caution
International reserves rose by $534 million. For now, the world is still willing to fund Colombia 's habits at a reasonable price. The risk is what happens if that trust weakens.
An economy that depends on government spending, credit and imports rather than steady private investment and competitive exports is more exposed when global rates rise or commodity prices fall.
They also hint at whether market-friendly reforms are encouraged or pushed aside in favor of easier fixes. A stronger peso makes foreign goods cheaper today, but can quietly hollow out local industry and narrow the export base tomorrow.
For expats, foreign professionals and offshore investors, these balance-of-payments tables are an early-warning system.
They show whether the country is living within its means, whether the peso is backed by hard export and investment flows, and how much room policymakers really have to promise new programs without asking future generations to pick up the bill.
In the third quarter of 2025, Colombia's current account deficit – the broadest measure of what the country owes or earns abroad – reached $2.853 billion, or 2.4% of GDP. That is $427 million more than in the previous quarter.
The core problem is simple: Colombians buy more goods from overseas than they sell, and they send large amounts of profits and interest to foreign investors.
A trade deficit in goods of $4.037 billion plus $3.170 billion in net payments to foreign capital were only partly offset by $4.213 billion in remittances and a surplus in services such as tourism, aviation and business outsourcing.
In other words, the country leans heavily on Colombians abroad and on the service economy to pay the import and profit bill created at home.
So far, financing that gap has not been a struggle. In the same quarter, foreign capital inflows totaled $10.377 billion, while Colombian money going out reached $8.009 billion.
Colombia's reserves signal caution
International reserves rose by $534 million. For now, the world is still willing to fund Colombia 's habits at a reasonable price. The risk is what happens if that trust weakens.
An economy that depends on government spending, credit and imports rather than steady private investment and competitive exports is more exposed when global rates rise or commodity prices fall.
They also hint at whether market-friendly reforms are encouraged or pushed aside in favor of easier fixes. A stronger peso makes foreign goods cheaper today, but can quietly hollow out local industry and narrow the export base tomorrow.
For expats, foreign professionals and offshore investors, these balance-of-payments tables are an early-warning system.
They show whether the country is living within its means, whether the peso is backed by hard export and investment flows, and how much room policymakers really have to promise new programs without asking future generations to pick up the bill.
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.

Comments
No comment