This article is adapted from AQ’s special report on the Summit of the Americas. Click here for the full list of countries.
Peru
President: Pedro Castillo
Term: 2021-2026
Castillo’s lack of political experience has shown since his surprise win in 2021’s tight runoff election. By February, the socially conservative former schoolteacher and member of the far-left Perú Libre party had replaced his cabinet four times. There have been multiple allegations of corruption and mismanagement within Castillo’s inner circle, contributing to Peru’s overall political instability and raising the specter of impeachment. Tense relations with Congress stymied Castillo’s promise to write a new Constitution. Despite fears that a Castillo presidency would end years of economic stability, Peru’s economy has proven resilient, thanks in part to pragmatic leadership at the finance ministry. GDP grew by 13.5% in 2021, recovering from a double-digit recession in 2020. Peru continues to rely heavily on mining and petroleum revenues, and low wages and high labor informality persist.
the data is color-coded:
High performing Middle performing
Low performing
Governance
President’s approval rating* | 19% | |
---|---|---|
Capacity to Combat Corruption Index ranking (out of 15 Latin American countries) | 4 | |
Share of adults who support democracy* | 50% | |
Military expenditure as % GDP | 1.1% |
Economy
Projected GDP growth 2022 | 3% | |
---|---|---|
Projected inflation 2022 | 4.5% | |
Total trade as % of GDP | 43% | |
Unemployment | 8% | |
Share of labor force in informal economy | 60.4% | |
Share of population living in extreme poverty | 8.6% |
Society
Population (millions) | 33.4 | |
---|---|---|
Homicide rate (per 100,000 people) | 4.3 | |
Annual carbon dioxide emissions (millions of tons) | 44.7 | |
Share of public social spending on education | 30.3% | |
Global press freedom ranking (out of 180 countries) | 91 |
Argentina | Brazil | Chile | Colombia | Dominican Republic | Ecuador | Guatemala | Mexico | Venezuela
*NOTES: Approval rating updated May 6. Support for democracy reflects percentage who agree that democracy is preferable to any other form of government.
Sources: Approval rating: Ipsos (April); support for democracy: Latin American Public Opinion Project (2021); Capacity to Combat Corruption Index (2022); military expenditure: Stockholm International Peace Institute (2021); GDP, inflation, unemployment: Bloomberg; total trade: World Bank (2020); informal labor force: Inter-American Development Bank (2020); poverty, population, education spending: Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (2020); Reporters Without Borders Press Freedom Index (2021); homicide rate: InSight Crime (2021); CO2 emissions: Global Carbon Project (2020)