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The economy of Bolivia is the 95th-largest in the world in nominal terms and the 87th-largest in ... Bolivia experienced a financial crisis. [28] Inflation has ...
Inflation is its highest level in over a decade in Bolivia, which was heralded for its commodities-backed "economic miracle" in the 2000s. Now the country faces its worst economic crisis this ...
Bolivia's economic crisis is rooted in a complex combination of dependence on the dollar, draining international reserves, mounting debt and failures to produce products like gas, once the Andean ...
With prices surging, dollars scarce and lines snaking away from fuel-strapped gas stations, protests in Bolivia have intensified over the economy's precipitous decline from one of the continent ...
Bolivia joined the IMF on December 27, 1945. [1] Since 1945, Bolivia has cooperated with the IMF to achieve social reforms and economic growth. [2] These efforts have involved strategies to reduce poverty, increase social equity, improve the education system and healthcare system, and expand social services to rural populations and underserved urban communities. [2]
Economy of Bolivia-related lists (1 C, 1 P) B. Business organisations based in Bolivia (1 C, 1 P) C. Companies of Bolivia (6 C, 3 P) Currencies of Bolivia (1 C, 5 P) E.
As president, Arce has struggled to manage a U.S. dollar shortage that has strained the economy and led credit-ratings agencies to downgrade Bolivia's debt to "junk" status.
The World Bank's Gini coefficient indicates that income inequality in Bolivia, estimated on the basis of size-adjusted household data, increased by almost ten percentage points between 1992 (49.1) and 1997 (58.2), where a value of 100 percent corresponds to the maximum income inequality and a value of zero percent to the minimum.