Home > Publications > Program Summaries
Chile's President Sebastián Piñera on "Renaissance" of Chilean Economy
Prepared by Carin ZissisSeptember 22, 2010
![]() |
| Photo by John Calabrese. |
- Access President Piñera's presentation.
- Watch a video of his presentation.
- Read a transcript of President Piñera's speech.
The president delivered the speech less than a week after the Chile’s bicentennial and said “we want to take advantage of the spirit” felt in the country during the celebration. Looking at more recent history, he stressed that the time has come for Chile to wake up from an economic slumber. He compared Chilean growth between 1986 and 1997—when GDP rates averaged 7.8 percent—to the 1998 to 2009 period, when growth rates fell to 3.4 percent. “We are living a real renaissance in our economy,” said Piñera, who pointed out that Chile is now on track to rank twenty-fourth in the world, second in Latin America, and first among OECD countries in terms of growth.
“We want to create a society of opportunities,” said the president, who forecast that Chile would see the creation of 300,000 jobs in 2010 and one million jobs by the end of his term in order to combat poverty and promote entrepreneurship. Moreover, in the first four months of the Piñera administration, real salaries rose by 2.1 percent, unemployment dropped during the second quarter from 9 percent to 8.3 percent, and crime related to drug trafficking dropped while arrests rose.
Piñera focused on education and health improvements to improve social development. Government initiatives and achievements include:
- Cutting hospital waiting lists by 37 percent during a 60-day period.
- Doubling public investment in education, including direct educational subsidies for students in need to allow them to attend schools of choice.
- Creation of a network of schools of excellence.
- Access to laptops for all students by the end of 2012 to help students “join a society of knowledge and society of innovation.”
During a question and answer session following the remarks, Piñera commented on China’s rising importance as an economic partner, not only for Chile but also for Latin America in general. China represents 25 percent of exports for Chile—the world’s biggest copper producer—and is on target to become Latin America’s top investor, he said. Piñera noted that Chile decided long ago to have a “free, open, competitive economy” and, as such, has a trade agreement with Beijing. He suggested the United States catch up by approving the languishing trade accords with Colombia and Panama. “At the end of the day if United States doesn’t take those opportunities then someone else will do it,” he said, suggesting China could fill the gap.
Watch a video of his presentation:
This text will be replaced
See more in: Chile, Infrastructure & Environment, Economics & Finance, Democracy & Elections
Related Publications
Upcoming Programs
May 24
Washington
May 30
New York
Jun 4
New York
Newsletters
AS/COA provides up-to-date analysis through News & Views, the monthly policy e-newsletter, and the Weekly Roundup, a summary of the latest news stories covering the Americas.
The latest from AQ:
Loading...

Delicious
Digg
Reddit