Reducing trade barriers and procedures, increasing legal security and improving productive infrastructure are part of the changes required by the business sector for the region's economic development.
In Guatemala, the 12th Ibero-American Business Meeting is held, in which the private sector presents proposals to face the current challenges and generate opportunities for the countries of the region.
In spite of the economic progress that has been achieved in Costa Rica, employment growth has stagnated, results in education are deficient, and anti-competitive regulations continue to hinder business development.
The latest OECD economic study on Costa Rica details the factors that support the significant socio-economic achievements of the last decades, as well as the pending challenges to ensure sustainable and more inclusive growth.
Between January and July 5,032 new companies were registered in the Mercantile Register, 7% more than in the same period in 2016.
The figures reported by the Commercial Registry of the Chamber of Commerce and Industry of Tegucigalpa indicate that of the 5,032 new companies, 3,475 correspond to individual traders, while the remaining 1,557 are mercantile companies.
At the Annual Conference of Executives in Panama, to be held from April 26 to 28, discussions will take place on the technological advances that have been made and how companies can adapt to the "fourth industrial revolution".
"The future has arrived: Panama 4.0" is the name of the 2017 edition of the Annual Conference of Executives in Panama (CADE).
The Mayor of San Jose plans to develop, in an 18 thousand square meters aree in the center of the capital, a building to house technology companies and universities.
The objective of the Municipality of San José is to attract foreign investment to the capital with the development of a business park dedicated to the technology sector. For this end, the Agency for Local Economic Development (ADEL) has been created, which will be responsible for implementing the project.
From February 20th to 23rd a group of Colombian businessmen will be meeting with Panamanian companies to explore business opportunities.
The business meeting is being organized by the Colombian-Panamanian Chamber of Commerce, which aims to help "smooth things over" in the context of prevailing tension in trade relations between the two countries.
The private sector proposal includes building a new port in the Caribbean and improving existing ones, reviewing electricity tariffs, and creating a special tourist area in San Juan del Sur and Tola.
The private union has submitted a proposal for development in 2020 that focuses on five areas: financing; infrastructure and services; public management and facilitation; education system and human capital; and innovation in business management.
A third and final call has started for companies and investors interested in participating in the development of projects in the program 'Apuesta por InversionES'.
Applications are open for national and international companies with the financial capacity to invest anywhere in the country.
Elsalvador.com reports that "...Interested investors should do so in a new project or expansion of an existing one in the category of tradables, which includes goods or services that can be traded internationally, said a statement issued by Fomilenio II.These are projects that can be set up in any part of the country, with a minimum investment of $100,000 by the applicant. "
Better results and stability in most productive sectors in the country are projected by the companies in the coming months.
The main private sector union started this year to measure business activity in the country, with the aim of determining the results achieved in the different productive sectors and short-term prospects in terms of investment and growth.
In El Salvador, the decision taken by the Sanchez Ceren administration not to attend the main business event in the country reveals either disinclination, inability to govern, or simple political manichaeism.
EDITORIAL
Maybe it is a persistence of visualizing the world as it was in the last century, dividing it into two antagonistic parties, capital on the one hand and labour on the other.
Determinants of investment, committed figures, and key economic sectors in the region in which Colombian companies have ventured into in recent years.
From the summary of the document by Cepal: "Colombian Investment in Central America":
The main objective of paper on Colombian investment in Central America is to analyze the business strategies that have led to increased Colombian foreign direct investment (FDI) in Central American countries.
A company can make no mistakes at all, but if its strategy and way of thinking are not able to adapt quickly to changes in the environment, it will inevitably disappear.
EDITORIAL
Nokia's CEO said: "We didnt do anything wrong, but somehow, we lost"
Nokia was the shrimp that was ahead of the pack... but it has become the best example of the old latin adage "a shrimp that falls asleep, gets carried away by the current." The failure of the technology giant was not due to technical mistakes made by company leaders, but the inability and perhaps unwillingness to change and understand that the environment they had to compete in had changed.
Eleven clusters are operating in Costa Rica, in sectors ranging from digital animation to flowers, food or agricultural products, seeking better operating and financial leverage.
Achieving greater access to credit, winning new customers and suppliers, discussing industry issues and possible solutions, more formalized operation or devising new strategies are part of the benefits of belonging to a cluster, a policy that is actively supported by the Costa Rica Foreign Trade Promotion Office (PROCOMER).
The more financially educated people are, more rational their economic and political decisions are, creating greater economic development and better quality of life in society.
EDITORIAL
This fact is clearly indicated by the results of a comprehensive study by McGraw Hill Financial on financial literacy, which is defined as the ability to understand how the money in the world works, what to do to earn it, and how it is administered.
A study has been made comparing the policies and incentives used to attract foreign investment and its impact on the economic development in each country.
From the executive summary of the study "Productive development policies to export and attract investment: a comparison of El Salvador and Costa Rica" produced by the Salvadoran Development Foundation (FUSADES):
Recognized Brazilian company of backhoe loaders, telescopic, articulated and other types of cranes looking for companies interested in representing the brand and distributing their machinery in Central America and Mexico. The company manufactures and sells telescopic,...