Bolivia — Market Overview
🇧🇴 Bolivia
Bolivia is best understood through commodity exports and state-led demand, because gas and mining still drive external balances while public spending and local liquidity shape the domestic cycle. The cleanest read usually comes from gas and mineral export income, fiscal and reserve pressure, and whether domestic credit conditions remain stable enough to support consumption.
Regional map
Key facts
Bolivia at a glance
Capital
Currency
Primary exchange
Central bank
Region
Time zone
Source: INE Bolivia,
Country dashboard
Why this market matters
This first pass is built as a reusable country page instead of a static essay. The page now combines a stylized country map, a switchable line-chart explorer, and linked peer countries so users can move from Bolivia into the rest of the region without losing the macro frame.
Macro explorer
Switch variables, keep the country context
GDP, inflation, labor, policy, and industrial activity are shown on a quarterly path from 2000 onward, while debt and the local equity benchmark come in when usable history exists. This keeps the page focused on fiscal room and macro regime while the broader official country pipeline keeps expanding.
Real GDP growth
Bolivia starter GDP-growth path anchored to sourced country profile readings; full official historical wiring is still pending.
Available variables
Trade and external position
Exports, services, and external balance
Instead of a generic macro-card wall, this section focuses on how the country earns demand from abroad, where its trade edge sits, and how the external balance is evolving.
The full export figure, combining goods and services in one line. It is the cleanest way to read how much external demand Bolivia is capturing across both physical products and higher-value intangible flows.
This is the merchandise side of exports: industrial supplies, capital goods, autos, food, and other physical products. It matters because it reflects the health of manufacturing, energy, aerospace, and the broader global industrial cycle.
This is the intangible side: finance, travel, licensing, business services, and IP-linked flows. It matters because it shows where Bolivia is strongest in higher-margin, knowledge-intensive, and branded service activities.
Trade partners
Where the country trades
Commodity lens
Raw-material exposure
Trade in goods and services equaled 47.0% of GDP in 2024. This is a quick read on how externally exposed the economy is.
Services represented 9.8% of total exports in the latest reading, which helps show whether the export mix leans more toward intangibles or merchandise.
Manufactures accounted for 6.5% of merchandise exports in 2024.
Fuel exports accounted for 18.9% of merchandise exports in 2024, useful for reading commodity exposure.
Food exports accounted for 22.2% of merchandise exports in 2024, adding context on agricultural exposure.
Source: World Bank API: totalExports,
What to watch
Reading framework
gas and mining exports
Bolivia should first be read through gas and mining exports. When this regime shifts, local multiples and sector leadership usually shift with it.
public spending
The cleanest read usually comes from gas and mineral export income, fiscal and reserve pressure, and whether domestic credit conditions remain stable enough to support consumption. That makes public spending one of the most important signals for revising the country narrative.
domestic credit stability
The final layer is domestic credit stability, because it determines whether the macro backdrop turns into sustainable earnings support for the Bolivia General Index.
Other countries
Continue across Americas
Each card opens the same country template with its own map, switchable macro variables, and benchmark view. This is the first linked network of country pages across the region.
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Real GDP growth
What This Signals
GDP growth is published quarterly and annualized, so each point captures how fast real output was expanding or contracting versus the prior quarter at an annual rate. It matters because it is the broadest scorecard of domestic economic momentum and sets the backdrop for revenues, employment, and policy expectations. Versus a year ago, the series is lower by 4.0%, which points to a softer or less supportive backdrop on this measure. Across the displayed window, the broader trend is still downward.