The Minister of Economy, Gabriel Oddone, informed the business chambers that Uruguayan GDP growth in the first quarter of the year will be only 0.3%. With graphic harshness, he summed up the situation: “We are paddling in Dulce de Leche”. At the same time, he announced that the Government is preparing new measures to try to improve the economic outlook
.This low expansion rate does not arise from an isolated external shock, but rather reflects accumulated structural problems. The State consumes a very large portion of the available resources, which limits the capacity for savings and private investment. Recent data show that consolidated public spending is around 33% of GDP, while tax collection represents about 27.4% of GDP. The fiscal deficit of the Central Government and the Social Security Bank closed 2025 at around 3.7% of GDP (or 4.1% without extraordinary income from the Social Security Trust), and the consolidated result of the public sector exceeded 4.9% of GDP in
some calculations.These figures imply that almost a third of the wealth generated annually passes first through the hands of the State. Every peso allocated to public spending displaces resources that could have been oriented towards genuine productive projects. High taxes reduce company retained earnings, make it more expensive to hire staff, and discourage innovation and expansion. The costs are then transmitted to the final prices, affecting the purchasing power of families.
Oddone has explicitly recognized that Uruguay “can hardly be a cheap country” due to the size of the State and the model of public provision of services. This statement highlights how structural interventionism increases production costs throughout the chain and reduces international competitiveness
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