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Dan Collyns reports on Bolivia's growing economy. The country is more stable and is approaching middle income status. But Marcelo Zabalaga, Bolivia's central bank president, is reluctant to call it a "boom."
Reviewing five-well marked economic cycles since the start of Bolivia's modern economy in 1952, this talk asks policies adopted in the national revolution pe...
http://www.pbs.org/commandingheights Bolivia 1982-1984: The political arena is characterized by infighting and corruption. The international recession and do...
Bolivia controls nearly half of the worlds reserves of lithium, a metal crucial for electric cars and other alternative energy technologies. But who will ben...
Official data are revealing that Bolivia's economy reached a record growth during the first quarter of 2013. Other indicators, like financial system deposits...
This clip explores the relationship between the global free-trade economy and migration. It features the impact of free-trade policies on Jessy and Jaime's f...
1226MR BOLIVIA-ECONOMY-GROWTH.
The Central Bank of Bolivia announced a gradual increase in reserve requirements for deposits in U.S. dollars in order to reduce the influence of that curren...
Bolivian national anthem remixed! Music starts at 22 seconds :) This is also my geography project with detailed facts about Bolivia's economy. Enjoy.
Juan Cariaga, Finance Minister of Bolivia from 1986 to 1988, discusses the government's shocking success in saving Bolivia's economy in the late 1980s.
Bolivia's current favorable economic situation is allowing for a 100% increase in imports of electrical appliances. This can be attribued to the country's economic growth, greater consumer purchasing power, the expansion of the middle class, as well as increased consumption. teleSUR http://multimedia.telesurtv.net/v/bolivia-fortalece-su-economia-e-incrementa-consumo-interno-en-4-anos-en/
Aug 2007 Bolivia's white elite claim they're tired of propping up the nation's economy. They're demanding political autonomy for their city and say they're ready to fight for it. Produced by ABC Australia Distributed by Journeyman Pictures
In a country where 70 percent of economic activity happens on an informal level, smuggling, money laundering and black marketeering have replaced most of acc...
In Bolivia, as in the majority of Latin American countries, the informal sector is made up of workers and businesses who operate outside the State system. By not registering their productive activities with the authorities, they miss out on benefits granted by the government such as pension, health-care, and social security. In an effort to help the Bolivian government reduce its informal sector, the World bank produced a study which analyzed the situation and which identified the most significant factors restricting the development and formalization of workers and of micro and small business. The study found that both men and women face the same pressures which lead them into the informal sector. Interestingly, women make up 65% of informal workers. In practice, the existence of a large informal sector significantly reduces the development potential of a country. It limits a country's ability to fight against poverty in an effective and sustainable manner. There are many families in Bolivia that still carry the burden of their poverty because they do not have a formal economic activity that can give them stability, security and education. This is a complex and significant reality that cannot be ignored. The risks of not investing appropriately are too great. However, the advantages that can be had by taking on this challenge are even greater for the Bolivian people.
Decentralizing Bolivia's Government Helped The Poor Jean-Paul Faguet, Reader in the Political Economy of Development, London School of Economics "Decentraliz...
Speaker(s): Dr Jean-Paul Faguet Chair: Professor Teddy Brett Recorded on 14 November 2012 in Old Theatre, Old Building. Dr Faguet will speak about his new bo...
Professor Corrales obtained his Ph.D. in political science from Harvard University, specializing on the politics of economic and social policy reform in deve...
Entrevista de Gustavo Decker (TV Trainer) a Miguel Angel Endara, representante FUNBOLIDER en el Leadeship Institute, Washington D.C..
These are historic times in Bolivia with Evo Morales, the country's first ever indigenous president, being sworn into office in January 2006. Many of the rea...
Flavio Escobar is a Economist, CEO of the Bolivian supermarket chain Ketal, and member of the Universidad Católica Boliviana's board and of the Bolivian Acad...
Author Daniel Yergin discusses Bolivia's big impact in kickstarting economic reforms throughout Latin America.
Today we look at a new cable car system in Bolivia, a turnaround in Spain, and Chinese tourism in Israel.
Volunteers hand out thousands of gifts at La Paz soccer stadium to children from low-income families. Full story: Thousands of Bolivian children packed the s...
The economy of Bolivia is the 95th largest economy in the world in nominal terms and the 87th economy in terms of purchasing power parity. It is clasisfied by the World Bank to be a lower middle income country. With a Human Development Index of 0,663 it is ranked 108th (medium human development).
The Bolivian economy has had a historic pattern of a single-commodity focus. From silver to tin to coca, Bolivia has enjoyed only occasional periods of economic diversification. Political instability and difficult topography have constrained efforts to modernize the agricultural sector. Similarly, relatively low population growth coupled with low life expectancy and high incidence of disease has kept the labor supply in flux and prevented industries from flourishing. Rampant inflation and corruption also have thwarted development, but the last years the fundamentals of its economy showed an impressing improvement leading the major credit rating agencies to an upgrade of Bolivian economy in 2010. The mining industry, especially the extraction of natural gas and zinc, currently dominates Bolivia’s export economy.
Coordinates: 16°42′43″S 64°39′58″W / 16.712°S 64.666°W / -16.712; -64.666 Bolivia (i/bəˈlɪviə/, Spanish: [boliˈβja]) officially known as Plurinational State of Bolivia (Spanish: Estado Plurinacional de Bolivia, Quechua: Bulivya Mamallaqta, Aymara: Wuliwya Suyu), is a landlocked country in central South America. It is bordered by Brazil to the north and east, Paraguay and Argentina to the south, Chile to the southwest, and Peru to the west.
Prior to European colonization, the Andean region of Bolivia was a part of the Inca Empire – the largest state in Pre-Columbian America. The Spanish Empire conquered the region in the 16th century. During most of the Spanish colonial period, this territory was called Upper Peru and was under the administration of the Viceroyalty of Peru, which included most of Spain's South American colonies. After declaring independence in 1809, 16 years of war followed before the establishment of the Republic, named for Simón Bolívar, on 6 August 1825. Bolivia has struggled through periods of political instability, dictatorships and economic woes.