Ecuador
GANG INFORMATION
PROFILE
OFFICIAL NAME:
Republic of Ecuador
Geography
Area: 276,840 sq. km; about the size of Colorado.
Cities: Capital--Quito (pop. 1.6 million). Other major cities--Guayaquil
(2.4 million).
Terrain: Jungle east of the Andes, a rich agricultural coastal
plain west of the Andes, high-elevation valleys through the mountainous
center of the country and an archipelago of volcanic islands in
the Pacific Ocean.
Climate: Varied, mild year-round in the mountain valleys; hot
and humid in coastal and Amazonian jungle lowlands.
People
Nationality: Noun and adjective--Ecuadorian(s).
Population (July 2005 est.): 13,363,593
Annual population growth rate (July 2005 est.): 1.24%.
Ethnic groups: Indigenous 25%, mestizo (mixed Indian and Spanish)
65%, Caucasian and others 7%, African 3%.
Religion: Predominantly Roman Catholic (95%), but religious freedom
recognized.
Languages: Spanish (official), indigenous languages, especially
Quichua, the Ecuadorian dialect of Quechua.
Education: Years compulsory--ages 6-14, but enforcement varies.
Attendance (through 6th grade)--76% urban, 33% rural. Literacy--92%.
Health: Infant mortality rate--23.66/1,000. Life expectancy--76.21
yrs.
Government
Type: Republic.
Independence: May 24, 1822 (from Spain).
Constitution: August 10, 1998.
Branches: Executive--President and 15 cabinet ministers. Legislative--unicameral
Congress. Judicial--Supreme Court, Provincial Courts, and ordinary
civil and criminal judges.
Administrative subdivisions: 22 provinces.
Major political parties: Over a dozen political parties; none
predominates.
Suffrage: Obligatory for literate citizens 18-65 yrs. of age;
optional for other eligible voters; active duty military personnel
and police may not vote.
Economy
GDP: (2005 est.) $32 billion; (2004 est.) $30 billion; (2003)
$27.2 billion; (2002) $24.3 billion.
Real annual growth rate: 1996, 2.0%; 1997, 3.4%; 1998, 0.4%; 1999,
-7.3%; 2000, 2.3%; 2001, 5.6%; 2002, 3.4%; 2003, 2.7%; 2004, 6.9%;
2005, 3.9% (est., statistics vary).
Per capita GDP: (2005 est.) $2,424; (2004 est.) $2,304; (2003)
$2,118.
Natural resources: Petroleum, fish, shrimp, timber, gold.
Agriculture, including seafood (9.8 % of GDP in 2004; 9.6% of
GDP in 2005 est.): Products--bananas, seafood, flowers, coffee,
cacao, sugar, tropical fruits, palm oil, palm hearts, rice, corn,
and livestock.
Industry (12.5% of GDP in 2004; 12.5% of GDP in 2005 est.; oil
and mining--23.3% in 2004; 23.6% in 2005 est.): Types--petroleum
extraction, food processing, wood products, textiles, chemicals,
and pharmaceuticals.
Other major contributors to GDP: Commercial trade (wholesale and
retail): 15.1% (2004), 15% (2005 est.); transportation and communications:
9.8% (2004), 9.8% (2005 est.); construction: 7.3% (2004), 7.3%
(2005 est.).
Trade: Exports--(2004) $7.66 billion; $7.2 billion (2005 est.)
. Types--petroleum, bananas, shrimp, coffee, cacao, hemp, wood,
fish, cut flowers. Major markets in 2003--Latin America 35.26%;
U.S. 34.56%, European Union (EU) 14.62%, and Asia 5.41%.
Imports--(2004) $7.27 billion; $7.9 billion (2005 est.) . Types--industrial
materials, nondurable consumer goods, agricultural products. Major
suppliers (2003)--Latin America 51.57%, U.S. 17.46%, Asia 12.28%,
and EU 10.12%.
Currency: U.S. dollar.
PEOPLE
Ecuador's population is ethnically mixed. The largest ethnic groups
are indigenous and mestizo (mixed Indian-Caucasian). Although
Ecuadorians were heavily concentrated in the mountainous central
highland region a few decades ago, today's population is divided
about equally between that area and the coastal lowlands. Migration
toward cities--particularly larger cities--in all regions has
increased the urban population to over 60%. The tropical forest
region to the east of the mountains remains sparsely populated
and contains only about 3% of the population. Due to an economic
crisis in the late 1990s, more than 600,000 Ecuadorians emigrated
to the U.S. and Europe from 2000 to 2001. It is estimated that
there are over two million Ecuadorians currently residing in the
U.S.
HISTORY, GOVERNMENT, AND POLITICAL CONDITIONS
The Inca Empire and Spanish Conquest
Advanced indigenous cultures flourished in Ecuador long before
the area was conquered by the Inca Empire in the 15th century.
In 1534, the Spanish arrived and defeated the Inca armies, and
Spanish colonists became the new elite. The indigenous population
was decimated by disease in the first decades of Spanish rule--a
time when the natives also were forced into the "encomienda"
labor system for Spanish landlords. In 1563, Quito became the
seat of a royal "audiencia" (administrative district)
of Spain.
Independence
After independence forces defeated the royalist army in 1822,
Ecuador joined Simon Bolivar's Republic of Gran Colombia, only
to become a separate republic in 1830. The 19th century was marked
by instability, with a rapid succession of rulers. The conservative
Gabriel Garcia Moreno unified the country in the 1860s with the
support of the Catholic Church. In the late 1800s, world demand
for cocoa tied the economy to commodity exports and led to migrations
from the highlands to the agricultural frontier on the coast.
A coastal-based liberal revolution in 1895 under
Eloy Alfaro reduced the power of the clergy and opened the way
for capitalist development. The end of the cocoa boom produced
renewed political instability and a military coup in 1925. The
1930s and 1940s were marked by populist politicians such as five-time
President Jose Velasco Ibarra. In January 1942, Ecuador signed
the Rio Protocol to end a brief war with Peru the year before.
Ecuador agreed to a border that conceded to Peru much territory
Ecuador previously had claimed in the Amazon. After World War
II, a recovery in the market for agricultural commodities and
the growth of the banana industry helped restore prosperity and
political peace. From 1948-60, three presidents--beginning with
Galo Plaza--were freely elected and completed their terms.
Contemporary History
Military Rule and Return to Democracy (1972-1982)
Recession and popular unrest led to a return to populist politics
and domestic military interventions in the 1960s, while foreign
companies developed oil resources in the Ecuadorian Amazon. In
1972, a nationalist military regime seized power and used the
new oil wealth and foreign borrowing to pay for a program of industrialization,
land reform, and subsidies for urban consumers. With the oil boom
fading, Ecuador returned to democracy in 1979, but by 1982, the
government faced an economic crisis, characterized by inflation,
budget deficits, a falling currency, mounting debt service, and
uncompetitive industries.
Uninterrupted Democracy (1984-1996)
The 1984 presidential elections were narrowly won by Leon Febres-Cordero
of the Social Christian Party (PSC). During the first years of
his administration, Febres-Cordero introduced free-market economic
policies, took strong stands against drug trafficking and terrorism,
and pursued close relations with the United States. His tenure
was marred by bitter wrangling with other branches of government
and his own brief kidnapping by elements of the military. A devastating
earthquake in March 1987 interrupted oil exports and worsened
the country's economic problems.
Rodrigo Borja of the Democratic Left (ID) party
won the presidency in 1988. His government was committed to improving
human rights protection and carried out some reforms. Most notably,
Borja opened Ecuador to foreign trade. The Borja government concluded
an accord leading to the disbanding of the small terrorist group,
"Alfaro Lives." However, continuing economic problems
undermined the popularity of the ID, and opposition parties gained
control of Congress in 1990.
In 1992, Sixto Duran-Ballen won in his third run
for the presidency. His government succeeded in pushing a limited
number of modernization initiatives through Congress. Duran-Ballen's
Vice President, Alberto Dahik, was the architect of the administration's
economic policies, but in 1995, Dahik fled the country to avoid
prosecution on corruption charges following a heated political
battle with the opposition. A war with Peru erupted in January-February
1995 in a small, remote region where the boundary prescribed by
the 1942 Rio Protocol was in dispute.
The Return of Instability (1997-2006)
Abdala Bucaram, from the Guayaquil-based Ecuadorian Roldosista
Party (PRE), won the presidency in 1996 on a platform that promised
populist economic and social policies and the breaking of what
Bucaram termed as the power of the nation's oligarchy. During
his short term of office, Bucaram's administration drew criticism
for corruption. Bucaram was deposed by the Congress in February
1997 on grounds of alleged mental incompetence. In his place,
Congress named interim President Fabian Alarcon, who had been
president of Congress and head of the small Radical Alfarist Front
party. Alarcon's interim presidency was endorsed by a May 1997
popular referendum.
Congressional and first-round presidential elections
were held on May 31, 1998. No presidential candidate obtained
a majority, so a run-off election between the top two candidates--Quito
Mayor Jamil Mahuad of the Popular Democracy party and Alvaro Noboa
of the Ecuadorian Roldosista Party (PRE)--was held on July 12,
1998. Mahuad won by a narrow margin. He took office on August
10, 1998. On the same day, Ecuador's new constitution came into
effect. Mahuad concluded a well-received peace with Peru on October
26, 1998, but increasing economic, fiscal, and financial difficulties
drove his popularity steadily lower. On January 21, 2000, during
demonstrations in Quito by indigenous groups, the military and
police refused to enforce public order. Demonstrators entered
the National Assembly building and declared a three-person "junta"
in charge of the country. Field-grade military officers declared
their support for the concept. During a night of confusion and
negotiations, President Mahuad was obliged to flee the presidential
palace. Vice President Gustavo Noboa took charge and Mahuad went
on national television in the morning to endorse Noboa as his
successor. Congress met in emergency session in Guayaquil the
same day, January 22, and ratified Noboa as President of the Republic
in constitutional succession to Mahuad.
By completing Mahuad’s term, Noboa restored
some stability to Ecuador. He implemented the dollarization that
Mahuad had announced, and he obtained congressional authorization
for the construction of Ecuador’s second major oil pipeline,
this one financed by a private consortium. Noboa turned over the
government on January 15, 2003, to his successor, Lucio Gutierrez,
a former army colonel who first came to the public’s attention
as a leader of the January 2000 events that led to Mahuad’s
departure from the presidency. Anti-corruption and a leftist,
populist platform characterized Gutierrez’s campaign. However,
shortly after taking office, Gutierrez adopted conservative fiscal
policies and authoritarian tactics to combat mounting opposition.
The situation came to a head in April 2005 when political opponents
and popular uprisings in Quito forced Gutierrez to resign the
presidency and leave the country. In the aftermath, Vice President
Alfredo Palacio was confirmed as the new president, and a new
majority coalition of opposition political parties reclaimed control
of Congress. A semblance of stability has returned, but the Palacio
administration remains weak amid popular pressure for reform.
Government
The constitution provides for 4-year terms of office for the president,
vice president, and members of Congress, although none of the
last three democratically-elected presidents have remained in
office much beyond two years. Presidents may be re-elected after
an intervening term, while legislators may be re-elected immediately.
The executive branch includes 15 ministries. Provincial governors
and councilors, like mayors and aldermen and parish boards, are
directly elected. Congress meets throughout the year except for
recess in July and December. There are twenty 7-member congressional
committees. Justices of the Supreme Court are appointed by the
Congress for indefinite terms.
Principal Government Officials
President--Alfredo PALACIO
Vice President--Nicanor Alejandro SERRANO Aguilar
Minister of Foreign Affairs--Francisco CARRION Mena
Minister of Defense--Oswaldo JARRIN
Ambassador to the United States--Luis GALLEGOS Chiriboga
Ambassador to the Organization of American States--Mario ALEMAN
Ambassador to the United Nations--Marcelo Fernandez de CORDOVA
Ecuador maintains an embassy in the United States
at 2535 15th Street NW, Washington, DC 20009 (tel. 202-234-7200).
Consulates are located in Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Dallas, Denver,
Houston, Jersey City, Los Angeles, Miami, New Orleans, New York,
San Francisco, and San Juan, Puerto Rico.
Political Conditions
Ecuador's political parties have historically been small, loose
organizations that depend more on populist, often charismatic,
leaders to retain support than on programs or ideology. Frequent
internal splits have produced extreme factionalism. No party has
ever elected more than one president in recent years. Although
Ecuador's political elite is highly factionalized along regional,
ideological, and personal lines, a strong desire for consensus
on major issues often leads to compromise. Opposition forces in
Congress are loosely organized, but historically they often unite
to block the administration's initiatives. Currently a majority
coalition of three of the main parties holds 53% of the seats
in Congress, and effectively controls congressional leadership.
Constitutional changes enacted by a specially elected
National Constitutional Assembly in 1998 took effect on August
10, 1998. The new constitution strengthens the executive branch
by eliminating mid-term congressional elections and by circumscribing
Congress' power to remove cabinet ministers. Party discipline
is traditionally weak, and routinely many congressional deputies
switch allegiance during each Congress. However, after the new
constitution took effect, the Congress passed a code of ethics
that imposes penalties on members who defy their party leadership
on key votes.
Beginning with the 1996 election, the indigenous
population abandoned its traditional policy of shunning the official
political system and participated actively. The indigenous population
has established itself as a significant force in Ecuadorian politics,
as shown by its early participation in the Gutierrez administration.
2006 will see the next scheduled presidential and
congressional elections, according to the following timetable:
Congressional election and First Round of Presidential Election-
October 14, 2006; Runoff presidential election - November 26,
2006; Congressional inauguration - January 5, 2007; Presidential
inauguration - January 15, 2007.
ECONOMY
The Ecuadorian economy is based on petroleum production and exports
of bananas, shrimp, and other primary agricultural products. In
2004, oil accounted for over 50% of total export earnings. Ecuador
is the world's largest exporter of bananas (about $1.2 billion
in 2004) and a major exporter of shrimp ($319.3 million in 2004).
Exports of nontraditional products such as flowers ($345 million
in 2004) and canned fish, including pouch tuna ($331 million in
2004) have grown in recent years. Industry is largely oriented
to servicing the domestic market.
Deteriorating economic performance in 1997-98 culminated
in a severe economic and financial crisis in 1999. The crisis
was precipitated by a number of external shocks, including the
El Nino weather phenomenon in 1997, a sharp drop in global oil
prices in 1997-98, and international emerging market instability
in 1997-98. These factors highlighted the Government of Ecuador's
unsustainable economic policy mix of large fiscal deficits and
expansionary monetary policy and resulted in a 6.3% contraction
of GDP, annual year-on-year inflation of 52.2%, and a 65% devaluation
of the national currency in 1999.
In 2000, President Jamil Mahuad announced that Ecuador
would adopt the U.S. dollar as its official currency. Shortly
thereafter Mahaud was forced from office, but his vice president
who assumed the presidency, Gustavo Noboa, stayed with the dollarization
policy and completed the transition later that same year. The
rate of inflation soared to an annual rate of over 96% is 2000.
However, since dollarization, the inflation rate has continued
to drop each year until it reached 1.9% in 2004, lower than the
rate in the United States.
One of the first acts of the incoming Lucio Gutierrez
administration in 2003 was the negotiation of a standby agreement
with the International Monetary Fund. Though his administration’s
fiscal economic policies were sound, the Gutierrez administration
was never able to enact the structural reforms the country needed.
The IMF standby agreement lapsed in 2004.
Buoyed by higher oil prices, the Ecuadorian economy
experienced a modest recovery in 2000-01, with GDP rising 2.8%
in 2000 and 5.1% in 2001. GDP growth leveled off to 3.4% in 2002.
Ecuador experienced modest GDP growth of 2.7% in what the Government
of Ecuador called a transition year in 2003. Spurred by high oil
prices and the completion of a second oil pipeline (the Trans-Andean
Oil Pipeline or OCP, in Spanish) in late 2003, GDP growth for
2004 reached nearly 7%.
Though Ecuador has a relative abundance of oil reserves,
it has been unable to take full advantage of those resources for
its own development. Mismanagement, lack of investment and corruption
in the state-owned oil sector has caused declines in state oil
production over the last decade. Commercial disputes as well as
judicial and contractual uncertainties have deterred private oil
and other companies from investing in the country. The electricity
and telecommunications sectors also have similar significant problems,
which are costing Ecuadorians hundreds of millions of dollars
each year. As much as 70% (statistics vary) of the population
lives below the poverty line. Ecuador is in the final stages of
negotiating a free trade agreement with the U.S.
Ecuador's investment climate worsened with the April
2006 Hydrocarbons Law, which pursued contract renegotiation with
foreign investors in that sector, and the May 2006 forfeiture
of Occidental Petroleum assets.
FOREIGN RELATIONS
Ecuador always has placed great emphasis on multilateral approaches
to international problems. Ecuador is a member of the United Nations
(and most of its specialized agencies) and the Organization of
American States (OAS) and also is a member of many regional groups,
including the Rio Group, the Latin American Economic System, the
Latin American Energy Organization, the Latin American Integration
Association, and the Andean Pact.
In October 1998, Ecuador and Peru reached a peace
agreement to settle their border differences, which had festered
since the signing of the 1942 Rio Protocol. This long-running
border dispute occasionally erupted into armed hostility along
the undemarcated sections, with the last conflict occurring in
1995. The U.S. Government, as one of the four guarantor nations
(the others are Argentina, Brazil and Chile), played an important
role in bringing the conflict to an end. The peace agreement brokered
by the four guarantors in February 1995 led to the cessation of
hostilities and the establishment of the Military Observers Mission
to Ecuador-Peru (MOMEP) to monitor the zone. In addition to helping
broker the peace accord, the U.S. has been active in demining
the former area of conflict and supporting welfare and economic
projects in the border area.
The ongoing conflict in Colombia and security along
the 450-mile-long northern border are important issues in Ecuador's
foreign relations with Colombia. The instability of border areas
and frequent encroachments of Colombian guerillas into Ecuadorian
territory has led the Ecuadorian army to deploy more troops to
the region. Although Ecuadorian officials have stated that Colombian
guerrilla activity will not be tolerated on the Ecuadorian side
of the border, guerrilla bands have been known to intimidate the
local population, demanding extortion payments and practicing
vigilante justice. The close proximity of the border to northern
oil fields also has resulted in kidnappings of foreign oil workers
by Colombian-based criminals. Ecuador has deployed a contingent
of Army engineers to Haiti as part of the peacekeeping force.
U.S.-ECUADORIAN RELATIONS
The United States and Ecuador have maintained close ties based
on mutual interests in maintaining democratic institutions; combating
narcotrafficking; building trade, investment, and financial ties;
cooperating in fostering Ecuador's economic development; and participating
in inter-American organizations. Ties are further strengthened
by the presence of an estimated two million Ecuadorians living
in the United States and by 150,000 U.S. citizens visiting Ecuador
annually, and by approximately 20,000 U.S. citizens residing in
Ecuador. More than 100 U.S. companies are doing business in Ecuador.
The United States assists Ecuador's economic development
directly through the Agency for International Development (USAID)
and through multilateral organizations such as the Inter-American
Development Bank and the World Bank. In addition, the U.S. Peace
Corps operates a sizable program in Ecuador. Total U.S. assistance
to Ecuador exceeded $65 million in FY 2004; it was expected to
amount to over $50 million in 2005.
The United States is Ecuador's principal trading
partner. In 2004, Ecuador exported about $3.5 billion in products
to the U.S. For 10 years Ecuador benefited from duty-free entry
for certain of its exports under the Andean Trade Preferences
Act (ATPA) and received additional trade benefits under the Andean
Trade Promotion and Drug Eradication Act (ATPDEA) in 2002. Those
benefits will expire in 2006. In May 2004 Ecuador entered into
negotiations for an Andean free trade agreement with the U.S.,
Colombia, and Peru. The negotiations are ongoing.
Both nations are signatories of the Rio Treaty of
1947, the Western Hemisphere's regional mutual security treaty.
Although there are problems with money laundering, border controls,
and illegal alien immigration, Ecuador shares U.S. concerns over
narcotrafficking and international terrorism and has energetically
condemned terrorist actions, whether directed against government
officials or private citizens. The government has maintained Ecuador
virtually free of coca production since the mid-1980s and is working
to combat money laundering and the transshipment of drugs and
chemicals essential to the processing of cocaine. It has recently
given greater priority to combating child labor and trafficking
in persons.
Ecuador and the U.S. agreed in 1999 to a 10-year
arrangement whereby U.S. military surveillance aircraft could
use the airbase at Manta, Ecuador as a Forward Operating Location
to detect drug trafficking flights through the region.
Ecuador claims a 320-kilometer-wide (200-mi.) territorial
sea. The United States, in contrast, claims a 12-mile boundary
and jurisdiction for the management of coastal fisheries up to
320 kilometers (200 mi.) from its coast but excludes highly migratory
species. Although successive Ecuadorian governments have declared
a willingness to explore possible solutions to this issue, the
U.S and Ecuador have yet to resolve fundamental differences concerning
the recognition of territorial waters.
Principal U.S. Embassy Officials
Ambassador--Linda Jewell
Deputy Chief of Mission--Jefferson Brown
Political Counselor-Erik Hall
Economic Counselor--Larry Memmott
Consul General--Patricia Johnson
Commercial Attaché--James F. Sullivan
Management Counselor--Michael St. Clair
Public Affairs Officer--Marti Estell
Regional Security Officer--Martin J. Rath
USAID Director--Alexandra Panehal
Narcotics Affairs Section Director--Brian Doherty
Guayaquil Consulate
Consul General--Kevin Herbert
Chief, Consular Section--Jill Johnson
U.S. Embassy
Avenida Patria 120
Quito, Ecuador
(tel. (593)(2) 256-2890/256-1634)
The mailing address is APO AA 34039
U.S. Consulate
9 de Octubre and Garcia Moreno
Guayaquil, Ecuador
(tel. (593)(4) 232-3570)
Consular Agent for the Galapagos
Puerto Ayora
(tel. (593) (5) 526-330 or (593) (5) 526-296)
Other Contact Information
U.S. Department of State
2201 C Street, NW
Washington, DC 20520
Main Switchboard: (202)-647-4000 (http://www.state.gov)
U.S. Department of Commerce, Trade Information Center,
International Trade Administration
1401 Constitution Avenue
Washington, DC 20230
(tel: 800-USA-TRADE, Internet: http://www.ita.doc.gov)
Ecuadorian-American Chamber of Commerce--Quito
Edificio Multicentro, 4 Piso
La Nina y Avenida 6 de Diciembre
Quito, Ecuador
Tel: (593) (2) 250-7450
Fax: (593) (2) 250-4571
E-mail: info@ecamcham.com
Website: www.ecamcham.com (Spanish)
www.ecamcham.com/default_en.htm (English)
(Branches: Ambato, Cuenca & Manta)
Ecuadorian-American Chamber of Commerce--Guayaquil
Av. Francisco de Orellanda y Alberto Borges
Edificio Centrum, Piso 6, Oficina 5
Tel: 593-(4)-269-3470 or 593-4-269-3471
Fax: 593-(4)-269-3465
Email: infocenter@amchamecuador.org
Website: www.amchamecuador.org (Spanish)
(Branch: Manchala)
TRAVEL AND BUSINESS INFORMATION
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