COSTA RICA | Bowing to US pressure. The US threat to leave Costa Rica out of Cafta appears to have succeeded. President Abel Pacheco has announced a climbdown on the two conditions demanded by the US [WR-03-39]. At the negotiating round this week in Washington, Costa Rica will present an offer to gradually open up its telecommunications sector to private enterprise, starting with the high-value-added activities. It is also preparing a proposal for `some degree of opening' of the insurance business, currently monopolised by the Instituto Nacional de Seguros (INS). This will begin with `the consolidation of some existing accesses.'
CUBA | Revised growth forecast. Interior minister Ricardo Cabrisas last week said that the Cuban economy was likely to register 1.5% growth this year. This comes only shortly after Osvaldo Martínez, chairman of the national assembly's economic affairs committee, predicted a growth rate of more than 2%. Cuba's growth rate last year was 1.1%. Whichever forecast comes true, this will be the third year running in which Cuba's economic growth falls well below the 4% target set to recover from the 30% contraction that took place in the 1990s.
GUATEMALA | Company closures multiply. In the first nine months of the year, 3,309 companies closed down in Guatemala; 25% more than in the same period of 2002. Among the closures were those of four foreign companies and 35 maquiladoras (assembly plants) — almost three times as many as in 2002. Only 11 new companies were registered in January-November, compared with 27 a year earlier.
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