Colombia GDP grows 4.28% in Q2, led by construction

(Photo: Intereconomia)

Colombia’s economy grew 4.28% in the second quarter, buoyed by strong performance in the construction sector, according to Colombian statistics agency DANE.

The increase in Gross Domestic Product (GDP), calculated over the same period (April-June) in 2013, is greater than the average quarterly GDP growth rate of 4.19% since 2008.

Out of the nine industries tracked by DANE, construction led the charge with a 10.15% increase, followed by financial services at 6.12% and social services at 5.81%. Only two industries, mining and manufacturing, reported downturns from the 2013 second quarter.

Construction’s thrust was primarily due to an 18% increase in civil engineering projects, where financial services grew mainly because of an 8.82% rise in leasing actions, and social services mainly because of health and education activity increases.

Though most industries reported higher total GDP contributions than they did during January-March, none of them beat their year over year first quarter growth rates (except financial services, rising a meager .08% more).

Colombia’s economic growth since 2000

Growth in the first quarter of this year was 6.51%.

However, Colombia’s second quarter growth was greater than some of its toughest regional competitors – Brazil’s economy contracted 0.9%, while Peru and Chile grew by 1.7% and 1.9%, respectively.

The Colombian Central Bank has raised interest rates five months in a row to 4.5%, believing the economy to be operating at “near its potential,” according to finance minister Luis Cardenas.

Sources

Related posts

Colombia’s Senate agrees to begin decentralizing government

Colombia’s truckers agree to lift blockades after deal with government

Truckers shut down parts of Colombia over fuel price hikes