The Americas | Bello

How will Latin America’s covid-19 bill be paid?

Colombia is a test case of the difficult fiscal decisions governments will face

THE TIMING could hardly be more awkward. Colombia is suffering a third peak of covid-19, even more deadly than its predecessors. Almost all intensive-care beds in the main cities are full, and oxygen tanks are running short. Bogotá, the capital, is under a red alert, with the working week cut to four days and a curfew at 8pm. Yet in April the government of President Iván Duque sent a bill to Congress proposing stiff tax rises. Although the increases would be phased in, the government thinks it must signal now its intention to raise more revenue, particularly if it is to provide emergency aid to its people until the pandemic is over. Many of the country’s politicians disagree, and the bill was the target of a large national protest on April 28th.

Colombia is an early example of the fiscal dilemmas Latin American governments will soon face. The region has suffered grievously in the pandemic. Its economy shrank by 7% last year, more than double the average contraction around the world. As lockdowns eased a couple of months ago, there was optimism that recovery might exceed the 5% growth of most forecasts. But then the P.1 variant of the virus, first detected in Brazil, began to run wild. Like Colombia, other South American countries have been forced to restrict movement yet again. Meanwhile vaccination is happening slowly. The result is that 2021 is shaping up to be another difficult year.

This article appeared in the The Americas section of the print edition under the headline "How will the covid-19 bill be paid?"

The most dangerous place on Earth

From the May 1st 2021 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from The Americas

Years of growth forged prosaic politics. Now Panamanians are fed up

They will elect a new president on May 5th

Latin America’s farmers are cashing in on hot hot cocoa prices

They aim to spend the windfall improving their technology to expand production


Andrés Manuel López Obrador will haunt his successor

Mexico’s next president will struggle against gangs, poverty and migration