Duque celebrates restart Colombia’s manufacturing, forgets sales collapse

President Ivan Duque on Sunday celebrated that 90% of Colombia’s factories have reopened, ignoring the fact that sales have collapsed.

In an interview with economic magazine Dinero, the president cherry-picked random statistics possibly hoping his incoherence would conceal the worst economic collapse in history.

Ignoring the unprecedented 15.7% drop of the country’s GDP in the second quarter of this year, Duque stressed that economy in the first quarter — before the COVID-19 pandemic hit the country — had gone up 1.4%

Duque admitted that “growth will be negative this year, but said he was “looking at 2021 with the expectation of a growth above 5%.

Where the president got that projection is a mystery as the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) expects the economy to contract between 6.1% and 7.9% this year and grow between 2.8% and 4.3% next year.

Oxford Economics lowered its 2020 economic growth projection from -6.6% to 8.5% and believed 2021 will see a 1.2% growth.

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development

Duque boasted that 90% of the country’s production activity restarted “from the supply point of view” after a full shutdown on March 25.

Domestic sales, however, dropped 14.2% in June compared to the same month last year and exports dropped 26% in June.

The president boasted that he had created 2,7 million jobs, but chose to ignore that unemployment more than doubled in June from 9.4% in 2019 to 19.8% this year.

Duque vowed to be creating more jobs in the construction of tertiary roads he was already obliged to build as part of a 2016 peace deal with demobilized FARC guerrillas.

The president and the trade ministry, which has so far only kicked off a “Buy Local” initiative to promote local consumption, appear to have no comprehensive economic recovery plan while alarms are ringing about an impending famine.

Related posts

Colombia’s congress sinks Petro’s budget finance bill

Colombia’s Senate agrees to begin decentralizing government

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