The Coronavirus in Latin America
The Coronavirus in Latin America
One year in, AS/COA Online’s tracker offers an in-depth look at governments’ responses to the pandemic from reopenings to curfews to vaccine rollouts.
It’s been a year since the coronavirus landed in Latin America, with the first case confirmed in São Paulo on February 26, 2020. Within a month of that date, countries across the region shuttered schools and airports, closed down businesses, and implemented a range of restrictions in an attempt to control the pandemic. Tragically, few were successful, and the region’s COVID-19 death total exceeded 600,000 by the end of January 2021.
On top of this terrible tally is a deep social and economic cost. Latin America and the Caribbean experienced, per IMF projections, a 7.4 percent contraction in 2020. Even as vaccines appear to offer a light at the end of the tunnel, 2021 began with outbreaks and fears of new variants, threatening hopes for a swift recovery.
AS/COA Online began tracking the spread of the disease and mitigation measures in the early days of the pandemic. Below, find a country-by-country look at how governments responded in the first year of COVID-19
This article was originally published on March 5, 2020 and has been updated with new information.
Tras un año, AS/COA Online ofrece una mirada en profundidad a cómo los gobiernos responden al COVID-19 en la región.
Spread
- February 9, 2021: 1,993,295 confirmed cases, 49,556 deaths
- January 12: 1,744,704 confirmed cases, 44,848 deaths
- December 15, 2020: 1,510,203 confirmed cases, 41,204 deaths
- November 17: 1,329,005 confirmed cases, 36,106 deaths
- October 20: 1,018,999 confirmed cases, 27,100 deaths
- September 22: 652,174 confirmed cases, 13,952 deaths
- August 25: 359,638 confirmed cases, 7,661 deaths
- August 4: 213,535 confirmed cases, 4,009 deaths
- July 7: 83,426 confirmed cases, 1,654 deaths
- June 9: 24,761 confirmed cases, 717 deaths
- May 12: 6,563 confirmed cases, 321 deaths
- April 14: 2,443 confirmed cases, 105 deaths
- March 17: 79 confirmed cases, 2 deaths
- March 10: 19 confirmed cases, 1 death
- March 7: First death
- March 3: First confirmed case
- On March 7, Argentina became the first country in Latin America to announce a death related to the virus after a 64-year-old man died in Buenos Aires.
- The first case was confirmed on March 3, involving a 43-year-old Argentine man who returned home from a two-week trip to Milan, Italy.
- On October 5, 2020, Argentina’s COVID-19 test positivity rate hit 60 percent—the world’s highest—a reflection of low testing and lax enforcement of public health measures.
- Argentina confirmed the first two Brazilian variant cases involving incoming travelers from the neighboring country on February 8, 2021.
Government response
- Vaccine plan: On December 10, 2020, President Alberto Fernández unveiled a national vaccination plan, which aims to administer 60 million doses across the country in the first six months of 2021. Among groups who will receive immunization first are the elderly, health care workers, and military personnel. Below, see with which vaccine producers the country has made agreements.
- On January 21, 2021, President Fernández, 61, received his first dose of the Russian Sputnik V shot, a day after the country’s regulator ANMAT approved it for those over 60 years of age. Despite initial concern over the Russian vaccine’s efficacy due to delayed results before an end to trials, a February 2, 2021 study released in a scientific journal confirmed that Sputnik V has a 91.6 percent efficacy rate. On January 28, 2021 Argentina received a third shipment of Sputnik V, adding up to 820,000 doses to date of a total of around 10 million.
- On December 30, 2020, Argentina authorized the use of the AstraZeneca-Oxford vaccine, becoming the first country in Latin America to do so. Earlier, the national health regulator authorized the use of Pfizer-BioNTech’s vaccine, despite not having a purchasing deal. In early November 2020, Argentina agreed to purchase 22 million doses of the AstraZeneca-Oxford vaccine within the first six months of 2021. The day before, Fernández said that Argentina was looking to purchase an additional 750,000 doses of the U.S. Pfizer vaccine in December.
- On August 13, 2020, Fernández announced that the Argentine laboratory mAbxience signed an agreement with AstraZeneca and Oxford University to produce their vaccine. Fernández announced that between 150 and 250 million doses will be available for distribution across Latin America—with the exception of Brazil, which has a separate production and distribution agreement—in the first six months of 2021. Argentina also agreed with Mexico that the first stage of production (producing the active substance) will take place in Argentina while final production stages will be in Mexico.
- Reopening plan: The government extended a measure for the ninth time in which the entire country would remain in the social distancing phase from February 1 through February 28, 2021, which is subject to extension. However, they urged provincial authorities to assess contagion rates in their provinces (see the January 8 update under mitigation measures.) In this more relaxed—yet cautious—phase, people may move without permission passes, host outdoor gatherings of up to 100 people and indoor ones of up to 20, indoor sporting activities of up to 10 people, and dine at restaurants at 30 percent capacity. The use of face masks continues to be mandatory, as well as keeping a six feet distance wherever possible. In a first move toward reopening, the government announced a new social distancing phase on June 7 that eased quarantine restrictions for large portions of the national territory with low levels of contagion. On this date, social and economic activity restarted but had to follow strict health guidelines, including restricting social gatherings to 10 people or fewer and maintaining two meters from each other while using face masks in public spaces.
- Mitigation measures:
- On January 18, scientists announced the first nationally-developed rapid test—approved by ANMAT. It detects infection through a drop of blood.
- On January 12, Argentina announced trials for a hyperimmune serum from horse antibodies to fight COVID-19—which began in July 2020—were successful and distribution of the treatment in hospitals and other medical centers would begin a few days later. Producer Inmunova said that current production capacity is between 12,000 to 15,000 monthly treatments (as the number of vials a person receives depends on their weight) but they expect to produce about 1,000,000 monthly treatments by March.
- On January 8, the government announced that governors must assess the epidemiological situation in their provinces and impose restrictions to movement and public activities accordingly. The government defined a province as having a high contagion rate if the number of confirmed cumulative cases from the past 14 days per 100,000 people is higher than 150. In the city of Buenos Aires, shops and restaurants were closed from 1 to 6 pm.
- Fernández decreed a national health emergency on March 12, to be in effect for one year.
- Travel and border restrictions: On February 1, 2021, the government extended a December measure through February 28 to shut air, land, and sea borders to all foreign nationals. Since December 15, 2020, all incoming travelers must submit a valid negative PCR test completed up to 72 hours before travel. Domestic commercial flights and land travel were resumed as of October 15.
- School closings and restrictions: According to a Ministry of Education’s plan released on November 29, 2020, the country’s 23 provinces and the City of Buenos Aires are slated to begin a gradual process of sending children back to in-person schooling by March 1, 2021. In-person classes at all school levels were suspended on March 15.
- Other updates:
- Argentina’s Chamber of Deputies resumed in-person sessions in December after seven months of virtual meetings. Deputies who are at risk are exempt. The Senate, meanwhile, will continue virtual sessions through at least March 1.
Economic impact and measures
- GDP forecasts: On December 4, 2020, the Central Bank forecasted a 10.9 percent contraction in GDP in 2020, slightly improved from the 11.6-point drop projected the month before. A December Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC) report projected GDP will contract 10.5 percent in 2020. The total GDP contraction for the first half of the year was 12.6 percent.
- Fiscal stimulus and economic policy:
- On February 1, 2021, the government extended a measure freezing prices for basic goods across the country through March 31 in an effort to control price gouging. The measure has been renewed multiple times since its first announcement in April 2020.
- On January 23, 2021, the government extended a decree, originally issued April 1, that prohibits companies from firing or suspending employees without just cause or due to downsizing through December 2021.
- On December 15, 2020, Argentina’s Senate approved a bill that aims to raise roughly $3.6 billion for COVID-19 relief through a one-time 2 percent wealth tax on fortunes of $2.45 million and above.
- On May 11, the president added over $5.6 billion to the public spending budget and granted Chief of Staff Santiago Cafiero powers to oversee the national budget through the end of 2020 without congressional oversight. Fernández also suspended Cafiero’s congressionally approved 5 percent limit within which to make budget adjustments, saying that it is “necessary to give flexibility to spending related to the health emergency due to COVID-19." The opposition criticized this measure, including former legislator Eduardo Amadeo saying, “It is definitely unconstitutional, a state of emergency cannot shut out Congress.”
- Social programs:
- On January 31, 2021, the government extended a measure for the third time to suspend housing evictions and freeze rent hikes and mortgage rates, through March 31.
- On October 13, 2020, the Central Bank issued roughly $39 million in loans to small- and medium-sized tourism-related businesses.
- In September, the government extended a June measure involving a series of non-deductible monthly bonuses for medical workers of up to $590 through the end of 2020, with amounts variable depending on length of service and specialty.
- On August 27, the government further expanded definitions for the Emergency Employment and Production Assistance Program, including more companies that fit into the assistance program criteria. On July 24, the government incorporated financing for companies who show an increase in mid-year revenue into the program. Additionally, the government will continue to pay salaries for private sector workers whose income fell in June 2020 compared to the same period last year. This adds to the May 5 expansion to the Program that allowed companies with over 800 employees to request assistance, as well as companies who have lost 30 percent in billing. The government announced on April 19 it would pay workers of companies facing a financial crisis 50 percent of their salaries and will give zero-interest loans to self-employed workers. This was the first expansion of the Program announced on April 1, which includes postponing or reducing up to 95 percent of employer payments to the Argentine social security agency, as well as a compensatory salary for workers in companies of up to 100 employees who meet conditions such as being in obligatory quarantine or at high health risk, or whose commission-based productivity has been highly affected.
- On August 21, the government announced it would extend its price freeze on mobile, internet, and television services through the end of 2020, and come 2021, any price increases must gain government approval.
- On April 8, the government implemented the Provincial Financial Emergency Program, allocating roughly $1.85 billion from the National Treasury Contribution Fund and Trust Fund for Provincial Development to help provincial finances during the crisis.
- Other updates:
- Argentina’s poverty rate rose to almost 41 percent in the first half of 2020, according to a September 30, 2020, government report, up from 36 percent a year ago.
- The S&P upgraded Argentina’s long-term sovereign credit rating to CCC+ out of SD (selective default) status on September 7 in light of the government’s restructuring of over $100 billion in debt in foreign bonds and foreign currency, including a $65 billion debt restructuring deal with international creditors which was accepted by nearly all of the country’s creditors in August 2020.
- On May 19, 2020, the government put a local crude oil price of $45 per “criollo” barrel to back producers at the major Vaca Muerta shale deposit, while Brent crude prices traded at $35 after global oil prices slid at the same time the pandemic hit. The measure lasted through 2020.
- On May 5, 2020, the government announced it would receive a $4 billion loan from the Inter-American Development Bank, rolled out over four years, to mitigate economic impacts from the pandemic.
Spread
- February 9, 2021: 230,731 confirmed cases, 10,929 deaths
- January 12: 176,761 confirmed cases, 9,454 deaths
- December 15, 2020: 147,716 confirmed cases, 9,026 deaths
- November 17: 143,473 confirmed cases, 8,866 deaths
- October 20: 140,037 confirmed cases, 8,526 deaths
- September 22: 131,453 confirmed cases, 7,693 deaths
- August 25: 110,999 confirmed cases, 4,664 deaths
- August 4: 83,361 confirmed cases, 3,320 deaths
- July 7: 41,545 confirmed cases, 1,530 deaths
- June 9: 14,644 confirmed cases, 487 deaths
- May 12: 2,964 confirmed cases, 128 deaths
- April 14: 397 confirmed cases, 28 deaths
- March 29: First death
- March 17: 12 confirmed cases
- March 10: First two confirmed cases
- Then-Health Minister Aníbal Cruz confirmed the first two cases on March 10, 2020. Both involved women in their 60s who had traveled to Italy.
- Cruz confirmed the country’s first COVID-19 death, that of a 78-year-old woman, on March 29.
- On July 9, then-interim President Jeanine Añez confirmed she was one of 1,129 new confirmed cases of COVID-19 that day and was going into a 14-day quarantine. On July 27, she announced that she’d recovered and would be returning to her regular duties. As an interim president with no appointed interim vice president, it’s not clear constitutionally who would have taken over if she’d become too ill to carry out her duties.
- Bolivia’s first wave hit in July and August of 2020, with the seven-day, new-case average peaking at 1,702 on July 22. After subsiding a bit in the last quarter of 2020, new cases picked up again in force in the first quarter of 2021.
- The virus also hit Añez’s cabinet directly: 11 of 17 ministers had tested positive for the virus by August 3.
- Former President Evo Morales tested positive for COVID-19, his office confirmed on January 12.
- One of Bolivia’s most high-profile deaths from COVID-19 was that of Eugenio Rojas, 57, on June 30, 2020. The Aymaran politician served for a total of five days as interim president while head of the Senate in 2014 and 2015, as well as various positions in Morales’ administrations.
Government response
- Vaccine plan: Bolivia will receive 3.6 million doses of a vaccine for free via the WHO’s COVAX initiative, 5 million doses of the AstraZeneca-Oxford vaccine from India’s Serum Institute, and 5.2 million doses of Russia’s Sputnik V vaccine. Ten health workers became the first in Bolivia to be vaccinated on January 29 when they received initial doses of Sputnik V. Combined, the doses will be enough to vaccinate about 6.9 million people; Bolivia has an estimated population of 11.7 million. An estimated 31 percent of the population is considered at-risk.
- Reopening plan: Bolivia first began to relax its national quarantine measures on May 11.
- Since July 1, Bolivian workers have been able to return to the job site for up to eight hours per day, per a series of continuing resolutions from the Labor Ministry.
- La Paz began opening up again on the weekends as of September 12, with most regular activities (food services, markets and shopping centers, and driving) permitted for at least seven hours per day. After an initial, gradual reopening began June 1, La Paz city officials implemented restrictions once again on June 22 when cases spiked and several hospitals in the greater metropolitan area announced they were partially closing over lack of personal protective equipment (PPE) for staff.
- On May 25, the government sealed off the city of Trinidad, which had 16.6 percent of nationwide cases (and a sixth of the population of La Paz), for one week beginning June 1. A 2017 government survey found that only about 29 percent of the city’s residents had access to sanitation services and 56 percent to running water.
- Mitigation measures: Arce issued a slew of measures on January 16, 2021, meant to limit mobility and enforce social distancing, but stopped short of declaring a health emergency, via executive decree.
- The interim Añez government had declared a national state of emergency on March 11, 2020, a health emergency on March 17, and instituted a full national quarantine beginning March 22. The interim Añez administration also adopted a resolution on February 7, 2020 that removed a requirement that the government publicly disclose information regarding contracts signed in the event of a “disaster and/or emergency,” local media reported on May 27.
- Travel and border restrictions: After Añez initially closed all of Bolivia’s land borders except to returning citizens and residents and suspended international flights on March 19, she then closed the borders to all on March 25. While close to 5,000 Bolivians successfully returned home from Chile during the quarantine, at least 700 remained as of June 3 in border camps in Iquique, petitioning to be allowed back into their country. The situation has raised questions about the right of return. The government set up an isolation camp in April in the border town of Pisiga, through which successive groups of a few hundred Bolivians quarantine for 14 days and then are released to their hometowns.
- School closings and restrictions: Bolivia’s Education Ministry suspended all in-person classes indefinitely on March 12. Then on August 2, the ministry announced the entire school year—which was to end in November—was cancelled, citing difficulties in reaching students in rural areas with little internet access. The UN asked the government to reverse the decision. Over 93 percent of Bolivian students said they were learning “nothing” or “close to nothing,” with four in 10 students saying they had no internet access, according to a UNICEF study published June 20. Some 40 percent of university students said their school was not offering online classes.
- Other updates:
- Bolivia’s special general elections were pushed back to October 18, the national electoral board announced on July 23. It was the second time the elections, originally scheduled for May 3, were postponed due to the pandemic. While 64 percent of voters supported pushing the elections back to lessen coronavirus spread in one poll, some in the opposition were resistant to moves that prolonged Añez’s caretaker presidency.
- Bolivia went through three health ministers in less than a month and a half early in the pandemic. Cruz stepped down on April 8, citing personal reasons. On May 20, Añez removed his replacement, Marcelo Navajas, who was subsequently arrested, over his apparent involvement in the $4.7 million purchase of 170 faulty breathing machines. Authorities also arrested two consultants for the Inter-American Development Bank and two Health Ministry directors over their alleged involvement in the affair. Eidy Roca served as health minister for the remainder of Añez’s term.
- On May 22, the judge overseeing the investigation into the breathing machines was also arrested for having “possible bias” after he overturned the pretrial detention of a suspect in the case. The arrest happened without a warrant or judge’s order but on an “in flagrante” basis, something Human Rights Watch’s José Miguel Vivanco called “madness,” since it could plausibly allow the government to arrest any judge who rules contrary to its interests.
- Artists voiced concern over a decree signed by Añez on May 7 that, while about government funding for cancer treatments during the pandemic, also includes a line that says that anybody who “incites non-compliance” with the decree or who disseminates information of any kind, including “written, print, artistic” media, that “puts public health at risk” will be subject to criminal prosecution.
- During the pandemic, Añez called for Bolivians to pray and fast and spent an estimated $15,000 to send four helicopters to fly over and bless four cities, aggravating concerns about her blurring the separation between church and state.
Economic impact and measures
- GDP forecasts: The Bolivian economy contracted 8.0 percent in 2020, only slightly below the 7.7 percent contraction for Latin America on the whole, according to an ECLAC December report. The commission projects growth of 5.1 percent for Bolivia in 2021.
- Fiscal stimulus and economic policy: In one of his first acts as president, on November 13 Luis Arce approved a plan to issue stimulus checks totaling $145 to certain vulnerable groups of the Bolivian population, including low-income women, the homeless, and those with disabilities. The funds will be distributed over 90 days beginning in December.
- Arce, who was Morales’ longtime economy minister, also plans to pursue three other measures through the legislature—lowering credit card interest rates, a tax rebate for low-income Bolivians, and increased property taxes—among a host of other proposals.
- On March 17, the Bolivian Senate passed a law that allows for a “financial pause” on all payments for loans under roughly $10,000, flexibility for loans over $10,000, and a restructuring once the health crisis is over.
- On June 30, the Bolivian Congress passed a bill that cuts rents by 50 percent during quarantine. The measure applies retroactively to when the health emergency first went into effect on March 17 and will last for three months after quarantine is lifted in various municipalities. The measure also provides for a 50 percent cut to property taxes for property owners. On July 13, Añez referred the bill to the country’s constitutional tribunal to review its constitutionality. A moratorium on evictions was in place for all of 2020.
- Social programs:
- The families of close to 2.5 million students had received checks of roughly $72 per student, intended to cover expenses for three months, as of mid-May. GDP per capita in Bolivia was about $300 per month in 2018, according to the World Bank.
- On March 18, Añez announced that utility services can’t be suspended, but some corporate taxes will be deferred. Bolivians won’t have to start making credit payments again until six months after the health emergency ends, per a May 13 court order. On April 14, Añez announced the government would subsidize payrolls for all micro-, small- and medium-sized businesses for two months.
- Other updates:
- Moody’s downgraded Bolivia from B2 to B1 on September 22, and changed the outlook from stable to negative, citing an “erosion of fiscal and foreign exchange reserve buffers” and reduced hydrocarbon sector demand, among other factors.
- Unemployment in Bolivia hit 11.8 percent in July, according to the national statistics agency. The agency’s director said that, if there’d been no pandemic, they’d expect that figure to be at 3.9 percent.
Spread
- February 9, 2021: 9,599,565 confirmed cases, 233,520 deaths
- January 12: 8,195,637 confirmed cases, 204,690 deaths
- December 15, 2020: 6,970,034 confirmed cases, 182,799 deaths
- November 17: 5,911,758 confirmed cases, 166,699 deaths
- October 20: 5,273,954 confirmed cases, 154,837 deaths
- September 22: 4,591,604 confirmed cases, 138,108 deaths
- August 25: 3,669,995 confirmed cases, 116,580 deaths
- August 4: 2,801,921 confirmed cases, 95,819 death
- July 7: 1,668,589 confirmed cases, 66,741 deaths
- June 9: 739,503 confirmed cases, 38,406 deaths
- May 12: 177,589 confirmed cases, 12,400 deaths
- April 14: 25,262 confirmed cases, 1,532 deaths
- March 17: 291 confirmed cases, first death
- March 10: 34 confirmed cases
- February 26: First confirmed case
- Brazil confirmed Latin America’s first case on February 26: a 61-year-old man who had recently returned to São Paulo from a business trip to northern Italy.
- On March 17, Brazil confirmed its first death from the virus involving a 62-year-old man in São Paulo.
- After President Jair Bolsonaro tested negative for COVID-19 on July 25—having tested positive in three previous tests over the course of the prior three weeks—his eldest son, Senator Flavio Bolsonaro, tested positive for COVID-19 on August 25, 2020. Secretary of the Presidency Jorge Oliveira confirmed he contracted the virus on August 4, the eighth minister in Bolsonaro’s cabinet to test positive. Bolsonaro’s Chief of Staff Walter Braga Netto also confirmed he was positive for the virus on August 3. On July 30, First Lady Michelle Bolsonaro tested positive for the virus as well as science and technology minister and the transparency, supervision, and control minister. The ministers of citizenship and education each announced they tested positive for the virus on July 20. Two other ministers tested positive in March after accompanying Bolsonaro on a trip to Florida.
- Researchers discovered people infected with two different variants of COVID-19 in January 2021, including a new variant from Rio de Janeiro. This is a growing concern in the country after a first strain was found in the Amazonas city of Manaus in December 2020 causing many patients in hospitals to suffer death by asphyxiation due to lack of oxygen.
Government response
- Vaccine plan: On January 17, the country began vaccinating citizens in São Paulo with China’s Sinovac vaccine, and starting January 18 the state began vaccinating healthcare workers. Health Minister Eduardo Pazuello announced on the same day that distribution to states would begin January 20. The government released its national vaccination four-phase plan on December 12, 2020, which aims to inoculate 24 percent of the population by June 2021. On November 26, Bolsonaro said he will not take the vaccine.
- Despite Brazil being one of the hardest hit countries by the pandemic, its national regulator Anvisa only approved emergency use on January 17 for any vaccine, such as those from AstraZeneca and Sinovac. On February 6, 2021, the city of Rio de Janeiro received the first shipment of active ingredients from China to produce AstraZeneca-Oxford’s vaccine at home, an important move to speed up the country’s delayed vaccination schedule. This should help Rio’s Fiocruz center finish the 2.8 million doses it planned to manufacture and distribute.
- On December 3, 2020, the Senate approved the purchase of 100 million doses of the AstraZeneca-Oxford vaccine, which are set to arrive in the first half of 2021.
- On January 22, 2021, Anvisa approved a second request for emergency use of Chinese firm Sinovac’s shot produced locally, different to the first approval for the shot produced entirely in China.
- Governor João Doria announced that São Paulo began building a facility to produce 100 million doses of the Chinese vaccine. The state has an agreement to receive 6 million doses by the end of 2021. On January 12, São Paulo’s Butantan Institute released corrected efficacy data for the Chinese Sinovac vaccine CoronaVac, which stands at 50.4 percent when considering all participants, after previously reporting a 78 percent efficacy rate which only pertained to mild and severe cases.
- On January 5, 2020, Brazil’s Health and Foreign Ministries announced that the Rio de Janeiro health center Fiocruz was in talks with India’s Serum Institute to receive shipments of AstraZeneca-Oxford’s vaccine.
- In December 2020, Russia requested regulatory approval from Anvisa to launch Phase 3 trials of its Sputnik V vaccine.
- On December 8, Brazil signed a letter of intent with Pfizer and BioNTech to acquire 70 million vaccine doses in 2021.
- On June 26, Bolsonaro set aside $356 million to buy the first 100 million doses of the AstraZeneca-Oxford vaccine and support domestic production. Despite being a center for vaccine trials, some experts revealed it could take Brazil between two and 10 years to produce vaccines domestically due to the difficulty of technology transfers and the country’s under-invested production facilities.
- Reopening plan: In Brazil, reopening measures are determined at the state level.
- Per a February 5 report—the twentieth revision to the state plan—the São Paulo state government announced that 82 percent of the state was in Phase 2 of five. The remaining 18 percent is in Phase 1 which implies the strictest lockdown and a retreat from previous reopenings in several regions of the state. On May 27, 2020, authorities announced a five-level plan to reopen commercial activity beginning June 1, to be revised according to contagion levels.
- Rio de Janeiro public schools closed on December 6 with no reopening date set, while shopping centers are to remain open 24 hours a day during the holidays in an attempt to try and avoid large crowds. Rio de Janeiro authorities announced that on November 3 the city went into its final reopening phase, which allows the full reopening of beaches, restaurants, and bars with touchless payment systems, and dance floors at bars and nightclubs. Shops and businesses may also go back to operating without hourly restrictions. The only measures still in effect are social distancing of 1.5 meters between individuals or groups (reduced from 2 meters), and 3 square meters per client in stores and gyms (down from 4 square meters). Rio de Janeiro state authorities reopened tourism on August 12, including prime tourist spots at 50 percent visitor capacity. State authorities announced a gradual six-phase reopening plan that started on June 2.
- On October 9, Brasília officials announced shopping malls and street businesses could reopen without hourly restrictions, and restaurants no longer have a six-person-per-table limit, though facemasks are still required in public generally. The capital also allowed business conferences of up to 100 people to take place starting September 22, up to 300 people beginning October 27, and up to 500 people as of November 17. On July 2, Brasília announced a reopening schedule for the capital under strict health guidelines, including opening commercial activities on July 7 such as beauty parlors, barber shops, and gyms, while bars and restaurants reopened on July 15.
- Mitigation measures:
- On January 21, 2021, Rio de Janeiro’s mayor said there would be no carnaval celebrations in June 2021—the new date after the typical February celebrations had been postponed—given the second wave of contagion.
- Bolsonaro and his U.S. counterpart Donald Trump issued a joint statement announcing that the United States would send 2 million doses of the disputed hydroxychloroquine drug to Brazil for prophylactic and therapeutic treatments and that the two countries will conduct clinical trials on the drug’s efficacy.
- On May 21, 2020, at least eight states said they would not follow recently expanded guidelines issued by the Health Ministry, which was temporarily being headed by General Pazuello. Those guidelines encouraged the use of antimalarial drugs chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine to treat patients with mild COVID-19 symptoms. This came after pressure from Bolsonaro to push the drugs became a point of contention between the president and his prior top health officials. Bolsonaro removed Luiz Henrique Mandetta from heading the Ministry on April 16 and replaced him with Nelson Teich, who in turn resigned on May 15, after both clashed with the president over the guidelines recommending hydroxychloroquine for patients with mild symptoms.
- On April 15, the Supreme Court affirmed that states and municipalities have the autonomy to regulate social distancing measures.
- Travel and border restrictions: On December 23, 2020, Brazil shut its land and sea borders once again after reopening them three months earlier. The measure also demanded that, starting December 30, nationals and foreigners must present a negative PCR done no more than 72 hours upon entry via air travel. Entry to the country hinges on foreigners purchasing valid health insurance covering the entirety of their stay. The United Kingdom banned travel from Brazil on January 14 due to concerns over the new Brazilian variant. Washington restricted the entry of non-U.S. citizens from Brazil into the United States starting May 26.
- School closings and restrictions: The São Paulo state government announced on September 18, 2020, that public and private schools could resume in-person classes on October 7, with the exception of lower and middle public schools, which would reopen on November 3. In Rio de Janeiro, the mayor announced on December 4 that schools would close until further notice. That said, local authorities will have the final word on if/when to open. On September 21, the Federal District of Brasília reopened schools, and on August 10, the state of Amazonas resumed in-person classes. While some states suspended in-person classes as early as March 12, school was suspended nationally on March 26, per Unesco’s COVID-19 impact on education tracker. On June 30, the Chamber of Deputies approved a provisional measure adjusting the minimum number of days in the school year due to the pandemic. Preschools are not required to meet the 800 hours and 200 days of school per year minimum while middle and high schools must complete the 800 hours but not 200 days.
- Other updates:
- On February 1, 2021, Brazil’s Senate elected Rodrigo Pacheco, a Bolsonaro ally, to lead the upper chamber. Pacheco assured he would find a mid-point between fiscal restraints and economic assistance to Brazil’s poor population amid the health crisis.
- While Bolsonaro has maintained relatively high approval ratings, they have dropped in the new year. A January 2021 Datafolha poll showed 31 percent of Brazilians see Bolsonaro’s administration as great or good compared to 37 percent in December, while 40 percent see it as bad or terrible, compared to 32 percent in December.
- Brazil held its first round of rescheduled municipal elections on November 15. The elections were originally scheduled for October 4, but Congress postponed them in July due to the pandemic. Runoffs took place on November 29.
- On July 8, 2020, Bolsonaro vetoed 16 sections of a law that mandated the government provide drinking water, disinfectants, and hospital bed quotas for indigenous peoples during the pandemic, while leaving the proposed testing supplies, ambulance services, and medical equipment. On June 30, the military delivered medical supplies and 13,500 chloroquine pills by helicopter to Amazonian indigenous groups at the Venezuelan border. This came after, on April 10, the government announced measures to protect over 800,000 members of indigenous communities from the virus.
Economic impact and measures
- GDP forecasts: An ECLAC December 2020 report projects Brazil’s economy to contract 5.3 percent in 2020. On September 1, the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE) reported a 9.7 percent GDP contraction in the second quarter of 2020, compared to a 5.9 percent contraction in the first quarter.
- Fiscal stimulus and economic policy:
- The government entered the new year with mounting pressure to continue to mitigate the pandemic, despite a determination from the executive branch to reverse the deficit created in 2020. January 2021 talks in Congress signalled a possible renewal of last year’s economic relief package, and on February 8, Bolsonaro confirmed the government is preparing a new round of similar emergency cash transfers to millions of Brazilians. On October 30, the government announced that public spending to mitigate the economic effects of COVID-19 reached $116 billion in the first three quarters of 2020.
- On June 8, 2020, development bank BNDES suspended interest and debt payments owed by states and municipalities through 2020 due to the economic impacts of COVID-19, a measure that could save states up to $790 million. This is in addition to the roughly $388 million in credit loans the bank announced it would give out to the health sector in March 2020.
- On May 27, 2020, Bolsonaro signed a law suspending local governments’ debt payments to the federal government, as well as credit renegotiations, during the state of emergency.
- On May 19, 2020, the president approved a law creating credit lines for micro and small businesses. These loans can be for up to 30 percent of the business’ 2019 profit and have a 36-month amortization period.
- On April 22, 2020, the government announced the $4.7 billion “Pro-Brazil” economic plan, which rolled out through October 2020. No members of the Economy Ministry attended the announcement.
- Social programs:
- On September 22, the Economy Ministry announced a $157 billion budget deficit in 2020 after calculating the extended emergency aid packages announced on September 1 to informal and unemployed workers, as well as beneficiaries of the Bolsa Família welfare program. August Economic Ministry reports show that unemployment insurance claims in the first two weeks of August fell 23.2 percent from the second half of July. The Ministry previously reported that these payments would total over $28 billion instead of the original $18.2 billion. Ministry reports also show that unemployment insurance claims in the first two weeks of May rose by over 76 percent compared to the same period in 2019.
- On May 15, Bolsonaro vetoed an April 22 Senate-approved expansion to the emergency universal basic income plan first signed by the president on March 31 that made informal workers who are not registered in the Citizenship Ministry eligible for benefits. The expansion to include teenage mothers and single parents remains. The measure allowed companies to reduce worker salaries for three months or suspend them for two months, while the government subsidized those affected proportional to the unemployment benefits they can claim.
- On May 7, 2020, Congress passed the constitutional amendment—previously passed by the House on April 3—creating a “war budget” to separate COVID-19 spending from the federal budget and granting the Central Bank bond-buying power to help calm financial markets. The measure is set to last until the end to the state of calamity originally declared on March 20, allowing for additional federal funds to combat the pandemic. When the Chamber of Deputies first passed the amendment in April, the government also freed up roughly $1.8 billion to support public health, adding about $2.7 billion more to the healthcare budget. The government, when announcing the state of calamity, said it could result in a deficit of over $30 billion, above the predetermined ceiling of roughly $24 billion.
- Other updates:
- On February 1, 2021, Fitch Ratings highlighted the importance of revitalizing a fiscal reform agenda this year to increase budgetary capabilities and keep a credible level of spending, particularly given the upcoming October 2022 general elections. The same report showed that the government’s deficit more than doubled to 14 percent of GDP in 2020, from 6 percent in 2019.
- On November 26, 2020, the Economy Ministry said Brazil hit a record in formal job creation with 400,000 new jobs in October, compared to 71,000 new jobs in the same month in 2019.
- On September 28, 2020, the government reported a budget deficit of $17.1 billion in August, compared to $9.3 billion the same month last year. The country is on course to post a deficit of $153.5 billion for the whole year, and the IMF projects public debt to jump to around 100 percent of GDP in 2020, according to a report released October 14.
- On September 4, 2020, Brazil expanded its 2020 government primary deficit from 11 to 12.1 percent, accounting for the extension of emergency aid checks through the year, announced three days earlier.
- Brazil lost 1.2 million formal jobs in the first six months of the year, according to figures from the Economy Ministry released on July 28.
- On May 22, the Economy Ministry reported that national debt will hit record levels in 2020 due to the health crisis, with gross national debt reaching 93.5 percent of GDP, and net debt at 67.6 percent of GDP. A day earlier, the Economy Ministry announced that pandemic-related measures will cost Brazil roughly $62 billion on 2020’s primary budget balance.
- The Health Ministry estimated the pandemic would cost the healthcare system just under $2 billion.
Spread
- February 9, 2021: 758,189 confirmed cases, 19,084 deaths
- January 12: 649,135 confirmed cases, 17,182 deaths
- December 15, 2020: 575,329 confirmed cases, 15,949 deaths
- November 17: 533,610 confirmed cases, 14,883 deaths
- October 20: 494,478 confirmed cases, 13,702 deaths
- September 22: 448,523 confirmed cases, 12,321 deaths
- August 25: 402,365 confirmed cases, 10,990 deaths
- August 4: 364,723 confirmed cases, 9,792 deaths
- July 7: 303,083 confirmed cases, 6,573 deaths
- June 9: 148,496 confirmed cases, 2,475 deaths
- May 12: 34,381 confirmed cases, 347 deaths
- April 14: 8,273 confirmed cases, 94 deaths
- March 21: First death
- March 17: 238 confirmed cases
- March 10: 17 confirmed cases
- March 3: First confirmed case
- Chile confirmed its first case on March 3, 2020 which involved a 33-year-old male doctor who had travelled to Asia.
- The health minister announced the first death from the virus on March 21, involving an 83-year-old woman.
- On April 27, the Health Ministry outlined the three types of cases to record: suspected cases showing symptoms, confirmed cases after a positive test, and patients who were infected but were asymptomatic. This came after an April 26 Health Ministry COVID-19 Advisory Council report widening definitions for suspected and confirmed cases.
- A June 16 Health Ministry announcement found that doctors must update COVID-19 case counts more vigilantly on the Ministry’s platform after concerns about delays that may be causing data underreporting.
Government response
- Vaccine plan: Chile’s vaccination campaign began on December 24 when it received its first 10,000 doses of the Pfizer vaccine. As of February 9, the country had vaccinated over one million citizens, most of whom are front line workers and the elderly. This makes them the most successful country in Latin America so far at administering the vaccine. Chile is using a combination of AstraZeneca, Johnson & Johnson, Pfizer, and Sinovac vaccines. The government has been in talks with Russia over using the Sputnik V vaccine.
- On December 11, Science Minister Andrés Cuove confirmed the country plans to immunize approximately 16 million people, 5.8 million of them by the first quarter of 2021.
- A bill to make a coronavirus vaccine mandatory was introduced in Chile’s Congress on January 5, 2021 by the Christian Democratic Party. Several vaccines, including smallpox and whooping cough, are already mandatory.
- Reopening plan: On July 20, 2020 the government announced a new “Step by Step” reopening plan based on each of the 346 commune’s infection rate. The plan’s five phases are: quarantine, transition, preparation, initial opening, and advanced opening. By November 19, 63 communes were in stage four, the initial opening phase, where restaurants may operate at 50 percent capacity, cinemas may reopen at 50 percent capacity without food sales, and gyms may open at a 10-person limit abiding by a two-meter distance rule.
- As of February 11, 2021, 10 communes are in stage 4, 134 in stage 3, 132 are in stage 2, and 69 are in stage 1.
- A 7 percent surge in COVID-19 cases on January 18 prompted the government to revert thirteen communes to the transition stage, Phase 2. Only one region advanced to the preparation stage, Phase 3. The metropolitan region of Santiago remained in the transition phase as cases there stabilize. Following a 53 percent surge in COVID-19 cases between November 14 and December 10 in the metropolitan region of Santiago, the government reissued total lockdowns on weekends (Phase 2).
- This map demarcates the phase of reopening of each commune and region.
- Mitigation measures:
- Health Minister Enrique Paris announced that the nation’s health alert, which first went into effect February 8, 2020, will remain active for at least six months longer.
- After the first case of the British variant was recorded on December 29, Chile reinstated its mandatory quarantine period for anyone entering the country.
- Chile tested 205 per every 1,000 Chileans as of October 19, the highest testing rate in Latin America.
- As part of the Step by Step Plan, the government announced on August 3 measures for in-person work for those unable to work remotely, including staggered start, end, and lunch hours to minimize close contact. The Health Ministry also announced a strengthening of its strategy to test, trace, and isolate cases starting July 4, including a task force that will go into communities with limited access to medical attention and administer more tests, a strategy to track down those who may have had contact with a confirmed case in order encourage isolation more quickly, and a plan for more sanitary residences for people who may not be able to isolate at home.
- The Health Ministry announced on June 14 it was adding probable COVID-19-related deaths to those confirmed by a positive PCR test. This came after on June 8, the Health Ministry updated its methodology to report COVID-19 related deaths according to the date and place of death accounted by the Civil Registry, and not by the attending physician. This was after the Health Ministry announced on June 1 the official death count would now include suspected COVID-19-related deaths, with or without the presence of a positive test result.
- On May 10, the Health Ministry decided to use the Air Force to bring patients to other regions outside the Santiago metropolitan area to avoid any facility exceeding 80 percent of care capacity. On the same day, the Health Ministry announced the start of rapid testing for health personnel to detect antibodies against the virus. Then-Health Minister Jaime Mañalich said the government would only give out discharge cards for those infected who have completed the two-week isolation period. The government is following a method of “strategic and dynamic quarantine,” and in an April 12 interview with Canal T13, President Sebastián Piñera said that a total nationwide quarantine is “not sustainable” as the government cannot assure the production and supply of basic goods and services to those under quarantine.
- Starting April 8, the use of protective masks became mandatory on public and private transport across Chile, a measure monitored by health authorities as well as the Chilean Armed Forces and the national police.
- Travel and border restrictions: On November 23, Chile’s Arturo Merino Benítez International airport opened to foreign travelers, who must take a PCR test at least 72 hours before their flight and test negative, travel with health insurance, complete a Health Passport, and update a survey tracking their whereabouts for 14 days upon arrival. Those arriving through December 3 from countries the WHO deems “high risk” must quarantine for 14 days in Chile. Starting September 28, the government allowed domestic travel between districts in the last three phases of the reopening plan. The government had closed all borders as of March 18, allowing only Chilean citizens to reenter the country with an obligatory two-week quarantine.
- On February 9, 2021, Chile’s interior minister announced plans to expel more than one hundred migrants from Colombia and Venezuela who entered the country through its northern border.
- Interregional travel is prohibited from any commune or region still in Phase 1 or 2.
- On December 21, Chile banned travel to and from the United Kingdom.
- School closings and restrictions: On November 19, the Education Ministry announced that the 2021 school year would officially begin March 1 with in-person classes. By the time of the announcement, 53 percent of schools—or 755 out of 1,424—had returned to in-person classes to complete the 2020 school year. The Education Ministry announced on June 12 that schools will remain closed until further notice, and they are working with the Health Ministry to assess when schools can safely reopen. The government first suspended in-person classes in schools on March 15.
- Other updates:
- A February 1 Cadem poll showed Piñera’s approval rating sat at 19 percent. His disapproval rating was 72 percent, 1 percent higher than in a poll two weeks earlier.
- On June 13, Piñera named Dr. Enrique Paris the new health minister, after Mañalich resigned amid rising pressures to revise the methodology of COVID-19 cases. Mañalich acknowledged the country “requires new leadership” in the next phase of its pandemic response.
- In a May 17 televised address, Piñera announced new measures, including: distributing 2.5 million food baskets to low-income families, establishing two new funding institutions to make loans more readily available for small businesses, implementing a mental health plan, increasing the number of shelters for patients who may not have appropriate conditions for isolation at home to complete quarantine if known to have the virus, and committing to a better system of releasing more localized epidemiological information. In addition, political parties and the Electoral Service on March 19 agreed to postpone the constitutional referendum to October 25.
Economic impact and measures
- GDP forecasts: ECLAC’s December 2020 report projects a 6 percent contraction for the country in 2020. On December 9, Chile’s Central Bank revised its forecasted GDP contraction for the year to fall between 5.75 and 6.25 percent. The country is not expected to recover to pre-pandemic GDP levels until 2022.
- Fiscal stimulus and economic policy:
- Over 2020, the Chilean Central Bank recorded a 22 percent drop in its net profit, compared to 2019. They have kept interest rates low to stimulate economic growth.
- On January 14, the state-owned copper producer, Codelco, announced it would be reenacting precautionary measures on its sites, including a reduction in on-site personnel.
- On December 4, Congress approved a bill allowing for a second 10 percent early withdrawal from pensions funds, which led to more than 3.5 million Chileans making the requests digitally on the first day the pension funds made their online portals accessible.
- On November 18, a Senate commission approved the possibility of making another 10 percent of pension funds available for early disbursement.
- Some 14 million Chileans receive some form of aid, according to Piñera, who spoke about the government’s support to the middle class on August 14. The president said that to this date, over one million people received the Middle Class Plan’s $626 bonus approved by Congress on July 30 to those making between $525 and $2,000 monthly in 2019, as well as those who had a 30 percent or higher pay decrease during the pandemic. He also announced that the government approved over 550,000 requests for small loans of up to $815. Previously, Piñera announced on July 5 a new $1.5 billion stimulus package aiming to help 1 million middle class families, including zero-interest loans, subsidized rents, and mortgage deferments for up to six months.
- On August 11, the Finance Ministry announced a roughly $69 million cut to nine regions’ budgets in what the Ministry called a “reassignment” of money from areas with slower spending rates to others that are running low on pandemic-related funds.
- Though the president opposed a pension reform measure that allows citizens to take out 10 percent of their savings in the national Pension Fund Administration system, he signed it into law on July 24, a day after Congress passed it. Over 80 percent of Chileans support the measure, per a July Cadem poll, which gives Chileans ready access to cash to deal with the economic impact of the pandemic.
- Piñera announced the distribution of an additional $120 million for municipalities across the country to fight the virus and keep public services operational as part of the Solidarity Municipal Fund. This sum is a 20 percent increase from initial funds distributed in May.
- On June 14, the president detailed a $12 billion emergency plan after the bill passed Congress that morning in a bipartisan agreement. The plan includes funds for the Emergency Family Income Project, local governments, civil society organizations, increased unemployment protections, and health services.
- The government announced new measures for economic relief on May 18 to small- and medium-sized businesses, aiming to give $150 million to 180,000 businesses nationwide. On April 28, Piñera announced a law freeing up to $24 billion for companies to access loans to benefit nearly 100 percent of Chile’s businesses, who provide 84 percent of employment. The credit line offers a period of 48 months for repayment at 0 percent real interest rates. On March 27, the government announced financial help to small companies by suspending stamp taxes—imposed on documents that show money lending operations—for six months and extending a credit line to public bank BancoEstado worth $500 million for emergency loans.
- On May 12, the Central Bank requested a flexible two-year IMF credit line of $23.8 billion. Finance Minister Ignacio Briones said the loan is to bolster the Central Bank’s “solid position” and would allow the financial institution to complement its international reserves.
- Previously on April 8, the government announced the second phase of the economic emergency plan with new measures aiding 2.6 million informal workers to be rolled out in three ways: a $3 billion guarantee fund for small companies from BancoEstado, a fund of up to $2 billion for workers to access emergency jobs and benefits, and the implementation of entities to regulate the Central Bank’s liquidity facilities. Briones said the measure will put Chile’s fiscal deficit at 8 percent of GDP. The first phase of the plan was announced on March 19, using a special constitutional clause to free up nearly $11.7 billion without congressional approval, a measure equaling roughly 4.7 percent of annual GDP.
- The government announced on March 23 it would delay a 2020 bond issue of up to $8.7 billion to help finance the previously announced emergency package to protect jobs amid the coronavirus crisis.
- Social programs:
- On June 13, the Ministry of Social and Family Development announced the second distribution of food products to benefit over 3 million low-income Chileans under the Food for Chile program. The president announced the food campaign on May 18, with the aim to distribute 2.5 million food baskets across Chile. On June 16, Piñera signed into law a project widening the Emergency Family Income project that was announced on April 20 to complement wages for vulnerable families by up to roughly $500 per family with informal income and $125 for those with formal earnings. This extension of the economic relief measure could have reached up to 5.6 million Chileans—a 20 percent increase in outreach to 80 percent of the population.
- Previously on April 15, the government announced a $11.4-million Winter Plan to help people on the streets as the country enters the cold season in which the virus could spread more easily. The plan established 180 care centers, including 22 centers that focus just on the elderly and vulnerable populations, as well as more than 1,000 ICU beds and 80 drive-by facilities that attend to over 4,000 people a day. This comes after an April 2 Health Ministry announcement for mandatory quarantine and health checkpoints to be established at 950 senior nursing facilities.
- On April 17, 2.7 million Chileans started receiving relief from the COVID-19 Bonus, approved on March 28, as part of an economic plan allowing low income families to delay utility payments without having services cut, providing $60 per dependent to each of these families, and passing job protection legislation for those who can’t work during quarantine.
- Other updates:
- Fitch Ratings Agency downgraded Chile from an A+ to A- standing on October 15 due to a destabilizing of public finances, largely resulting from greater government expenses to mitigate recent social unrest, and due to uncertainty given the nearing October 25 constitutional referendum. Also on October 15, the Central Bank announced it will maintain low interest rates at 0.5 percent given the pandemic.
- On August 3, the Central Bank announced that economic activity dropped 12.4 percent in June 2020 in comparison to the same month in 2019. May numbers showed a 13.5 percent drop compared to the previous year.
- On March 24, 2020, Piñera announced a new labor law regulating and facilitating remote work, including mandatory requirements that stipulate work vs. personal time.
- Also on March 24, the government established a maximum cost of $30 for the COVID-19 test in private healthcare facilities.
Spread
- February 9, 2021: 2,166,904 confirmed cases, 56,507 deaths
- January 12: 1,816,082 confirmed cases, 46,782 deaths
- December 15, 2020: 1,444,646 confirmed cases, 39,356 deaths
- November 17: 1,211,128 confirmed cases, 34,381 deaths
- October 20: 974,139 confirmed cases, 29,272 deaths
- September 22: 777,537 confirmed cases, 24,570 deaths
- August 25: 562,128 confirmed cases, 17,889 deaths
- August 4: 334,979 confirmed cases, 11,315 deaths
- July 7: 124,494 confirmed cases, 4,359 deaths
- June 9: 42,078 confirmed cases, 1,372 deaths
- May 12: 12,272 confirmed cases, 493 deaths
- April 14: 2,979 confirmed cases, 127 deaths
- March 21: First death
- March 17: 75 confirmed cases
- March 10: 3 confirmed cases
- March 6: First confirmed case
- Colombia’s Health Ministry confirmed the country’s first case on March 6, involving a 19-year-old woman who returned to Bogotá from Milan.
- The country’s first death from the virus was a 58-year-old taxi driver in Cartagena, who is believed to have contracted the disease from Italian tourists who were his passengers on March 4, 2020.
- On February 4, 2020, Colombia became the first country in Latin America able to offer testing for the coronavirus.
- President Iván Duque was tested for the virus after possible exposure in March 2020 during a trip to Washington, DC. The result was negative.
- On March 21, 2020, Duque appointed former Commerce Minister Luis Guillermo Plata to lead coordination of the country’s coronavirus response.
- Rather than waves, the virus has steadily climbed in Colombia and accelerated over the Christmas holidays. In December 2020 and January 2021, the country confirmed an average of 87,000 new cases per week, up from 58,000 new cases per week during the four months prior. As of January 20, Colombia had the second-highest total number of confirmed cases in Latin America after Brazil, and the tenth-highest total in the world.
- Defense Minister Carlos Holmes Trujillo, 69, passed away from COVID-19 on January 26, two weeks after being hospitalized. He served over three decades in Colombian politics, including as the mayor of Cali, and stints as interior, foreign, and education minister. He was also part of the 1991 constitutional reform process and peace negotiations with the FARC.
Government response
- Vaccine plan: While the first vaccinations were estimated to begin February 20, 2021, the government says people at lower risk might not get the vaccine until 2022. Officials, including the Attorney General and the Bogotá mayor, have criticized the administration for a lack of transparency and clarity around the national vaccine rollout plan.
- Reopening plan: Colombia’s national quarantine expired on August 31, 2020, at which point the country moved into a period of “selective isolation with responsible individual distancing,” where it remained as of February 2021. Some smaller municipalities with no reported cases of COVID-19 previously started to reopen on May 14.
- Cultural activities resumed in Bogotá on September 21. Mayor Claudia López initially began the capital’s reopening on June 15. As cases climbed steadily and ICUs reached near capacity, however, López said 15 of Bogotá’s 20 districts would return to a strict quarantine for 15 days each between July 13 and August 23. She modified the plan on July 21 to place up to 5 million of the city’s 8 million residents under quarantine earlier in the schedule than originally planned, while ruling out a citywide quarantine.
- Colombian courts began to reopen on June 17, albeit with no public audiences and a priority on virtual hearings. Some wholesale and retail sectors reopened on May 11, and construction and manufacturing sectors have been operating since April 27.
- Mitigation measures: Duque first declared a national health emergency on March 12, 2020, an initial state of emergency on March 17, and a national quarantine on March 24, which lasted through August 31, 2020. On May 6, Duque declared a second 30-day state of emergency; the Colombian Constitution allows no more than 90 days per year of rule by presidential decree.
- A Bogotá district court upheld a ruling on August 11 that extra quarantine restrictions for people over 70 years old were not legal, and that all adults must be subject to the same regulations irrespective of age. Since the state of emergency went into effect in March, senior citizens were required at various times to stay in their homes, while those 18 to 69 could go out during certain times of day. Among the appellants to challenge the extra restrictions were former Bogotá Mayor Maurice Armitage, ex-Vice President Humberto de la Calle, and former presidential candidate Clara López, who turned 70 in April.
- Bogotá began restricting movement by gender on April 13, with men going out on “odd” days and women on “even” days; trans and gender non-conforming individuals were allowed to go out with the gender with which they identify, which led to some reports of discrimination and violence. The measure was rescinded on May 10.
- Travel and border restrictions: After initially closing the border with Venezuela on March 14, Duque closed all of Colombia’s borders and ports for entry on March 17 at midnight, with only certain import shipments allowed. The entry ban applies equally to citizens as well as foreigners.
- International flights resumed on September 21, 2020, while land and maritime borders remain closed until at least March 1, 2021.
- On June 23, Ecuador and Colombia announced a plan to allow nationals stranded in each other’s countries to return home via one land border crossing.
- Duque increased Colombia’s military presence along its southeastern border with Brazil in mid-May, after a surge of cases in its southernmost Amazonas province. The Colombian province shares a longer border with Peru, but that country has closed its borders completely.
- School closings and restrictions: The government suspended all in-person classes on March 16. Beginning in February 2021, just under one-quarter of school districts nationally gradually began to phase in-person learning back in, with Bogotá private schools resuming some in-person classes on February 8, and public schools on February 15.
- On August 11, Duque announced that his government would subsidize “practically 100 percent” of the tuition of some 400,000 low-income students at public universities, and 70 percent of fees for another 169,000 students.
- Other updates:
- On April 24, Colombia’s Attorney General’s office announced that it has opened 296 disciplinary proceedings against national, regional, and local officials over claims of misuse of government funds during the pandemic. A review by La Silla Vacía of 48 government contracts for basic food basket items signed during the crisis found that 6 times out of 10 the government overpaid for the products compared to national benchmark prices.
- Colombia’s Supreme Court began reviewing all 72 of the executive orders issued by Duque as of April 21 in response to the pandemic. The legal challenge was prompted by landlords who contested the freeze on rent hikes and evictions.
Economic impact and measures
- GDP forecasts: Colombia’s economy contracted 7.0 percent in 2020, and ECLAC projects it will grow 5.0 percent in 2021. On March 27, S&P downgraded Colombia’s credit rating from stable to negative, warning that the country could lose its investment grade status in the next 12 to 18 months.
- Fiscal stimulus and economic policy: On July 22, Vice President Marta Lucía Ramírez, Commerce Minister José Manuel Restrepo, and ProColombia President Flavia Santoro presented the government’s plan for economic reactivation post-COVID. The plan incorporated 13 strategies, with special focuses on promoting job creation, the knowledge economy, and international e-commerce.
- On October 20, the Duque administration announced a 12-point, $5.2 million plan to facilitate financing for all-sized Colombian businesses. The measures included everything from new direct credit lines to preferred financing terms to extended grace periods for loan repayments.
- On October 19, the Colombian Congress approved a budget for 2021 that was 19.2 percent bigger than the 2020 budget. The budget includes the country’s biggest increase in public spending in the last 12 years and a lesser focus on debt repayments, although it will still disburse more for debt payments than public spending on the whole. The biggest line item in the budget is for education, followed by public security and then health and social services.
- Duque announced a series of economic relief measures on March 18, including accelerated tax refunds, a grace period on mortgage and loan payments for small- and medium-sized enterprises, and special lines of credit for the agriculture, tourism, and aviation sectors.
- On June 3, the Duque administration expedited a measure that allows companies whose revenues have fallen by at least 20 percent to delay paying out employee bonuses and overtime pay from the first half of the year until December 20 at the latest.
- Per a decree issued May 8, the government will subsidize 40 percent of the $250-per-month minimum wage for workers at companies who have seen revenues drop by at least 20 percent during the pandemic. In contrast to the first economic package, which routed funds through banks to issue credit lines to businesses, with the second decree the government gave the money directly to companies. On September 22, the government announced plans to issue another round of subsidies in December to cover worker bonuses for businesses whose revenues fell by 20 percent.
- On April 8, the mayor of Bogotá announced she would allocate $128 million to a project aimed at providing half a million lower-class families in the capital with financial support.
- Social programs:
- Colombia’s lower house approved a “clean slate” law on May 27 that would give debtors a yearlong grace period to catch up on their payments, and those who do would have any negative credit reports erased at the end of the 12 months.
- Duque announced a set of economic measures on March 24, including disbursements of about $40 to 3 million low-income families, easing some conditions for student loan repayments.
- Other updates:
- Brent oil prices, the benchmark for Colombian oil exports, rose above $36 on May 26, after dropping below $20 per barrel on April 21. In order to maintain exploration and production levels, Colombia needs a barrel price of between $40 and $45. Oil export revenues represent 2.7 percent of Colombian GDP, compared to 11.3 percent in Venezuela.
- On May 1, the IMF approved a renewal for a two-year flexible credit line for Colombia totaling $10.8 billion. Additionally, the Colombian government asked for a total of $3 billion from the World Bank, Inter-American Development Bank, and the CAF – Development Bank of Latin America. Local economists estimate that one month of national quarantine costs between $15 and $20 billion, or about 4.5 to 6.1 percent of GDP. Commercial activity overall was down 43 percent.
- Unemployment was at 19.7 percent in July, down from 21.4 percent in May, but still the highest rate of OECD member countries. Of the unemployed, some 43.5 percent said they’d lost their job due to the pandemic, according to a report released by DANE at the end of June.
Spread
- February 9, 2021: 197,852 confirmed cases, 2,698 deaths
- January 12: 181,093 confirmed cases, 2367 deaths
- December 15, 2020: 154,096 confirmed cases, 1,956 deaths
- November 17: 125,590 confirmed cases, 1,578 deaths
- October 20: 97,922 confirmed cases, 1,222 deaths
- September 22: 66,689 confirmed cases, 760 deaths
- August 25: 35,305 confirmed cases, 376 deaths
- August 4: 19,837 confirmed cases, 181 deaths
- July 7: 5,486 confirmed cases, 23 deaths
- June 9: 1,375 confirmed cases, 11 deaths
- May 12: 804 confirmed cases, 7 deaths
- April 14: 618 confirmed cases, 3 deaths
- March 18: First death
- March 17: 50 confirmed cases
- March 10: 13 confirmed cases
- March 6: First confirmed case
- On March 6, 2020, Costa Rica became the first Central American country to confirm a case which involved a 49-year-old tourist visiting from the United States. President Carlos Alvarado announced the confirmed case on Twitter and said Costa Rica had been preparing for the virus’ arrival since January.
- On March 18, the country announced its first coronavirus-related death when an 87-year-old man passed away.
Government response
- Vaccine plan: Costa Rica signed a deal with Pfizer/BioNTech to secure 3 million vaccine doses for $36 million, which are expected to begin arriving in the first quarter of 2021. As of February 8, over 75,000 people or 1.1 out of every 100 had been vaccinated. Vaccination began with first responders and high-risk residents and is free for all citizens and residents. The country’s National Emergency Commission had dedicated $70 million to this vaccine effort through December 8, 2020, including specialized freezers to store vaccines.
- The WHO, along with Alvarado, launched on May 29 the COVID-19 Technology Access Pool, an initiative that aims to make vaccines, tests, treatments, and other health technologies to respond to COVID-19 widely accessible. The initiative was Alvarado’s idea; on March 24 he requested that the WHO create a repository of information available to all member countries.
- Reopening plan: September 2020 brought a new reopening strategy for the country. The plan involved a transition phase running from August 31 to September 8 and a controlled reopening phase, which began September 9. The transition phase only affected cantons under an orange alert (see mitigation measures for alert levels) and mandated that a number of commercial businesses close for the time period. Under the controlled reopening phase, most commercial businesses are open nationwide, except those involving large gatherings such as bars and casinos. Below is a list of previous reopening phases and strategies:
- Previously, August also had its own staggered reopening strategy under which the government divided the month into a reopening phase and a closing phase. The phases differed across the country between areas under yellow and orange alerts. During the reopening phase, most commercial businesses opened nationwide at limited capacity depending on the alert color in place, while the closing phase only went into effect in areas under orange alert.
- Prior to the month-by-month strategies, Costa Rica went through three reopening phases as part of the government’s initial gradual reopening strategy between May and July.
- Mitigation measures: Costa Rica was credited as being successful in its efforts to slow contagion in the early days of the pandemic, but a spike in cases in June pushed officials to reconsider their opening strategy. Prior to the pandemic, Costa Rica already had a color-coded national emergency alert system that ranged from green (for providing information for an upcoming phenomenon) to red (all emergency response teams activated). Between the two, yellow activates the country’s national emergency commission and signifies that residents should take precautionary measures. In the context of the pandemic, an orange alert signals suspected and confirmed cases will be evacuated and isolated.
- In February 2021, the government eliminated the national weekday driving restrictions that had been in place since March 2020. San José’s pre-pandemic driving restrictions and weekend driving restrictions—which include a 10 p.m. to 5 a.m. movement restriction—are still in effect.
- As of February 9, 2021, 19 out of 82 cantons were under orange alert due to rising cases while the rest of the country remained under yellow alert. Alajuela province had the most orange alert cantons while Guanacaste and Heredia had no orange alert cantons.
- Face masks are required indoors, the Health Ministry announced July 20 after making their use mandatory in most public spaces in late June.
- On May 18, Costa Rica began to restrict foreign cargo transit into the country to limit the spread of the coronavirus within its borders—leaving hundreds of truckers stranded and causing other countries in the region to retaliate (see Nicaragua section). When it comes to cargo meant for Costa Rica, truckers must leave the merchandise at the country’s border so that local carriers can complete its delivery. Costa Rica conducts approximately $3.4 billion in trade annually with its Central American neighbors, or about $10 million a day.
- Alvarado declared a national state of emergency on March 16 that went into effect on March 18. Before that, on March 12, the government had already ordered public spaces to operate at 50 percent capacity and canceled international travel for public-sector workers. Large gatherings were also suspended.
- Travel and border restrictions: Costa Rica opened for all tourists traveling by air beginning November 1. Land borders into Costa Rica are closed through at least March 2021. Travelers must fill out an epidemiological survey and purchase traveler’s medical insurance. As of October, people entering the country are not required to provide a negative COVID-19 test to enter the country. The list of countries whose tourists are welcome to enter has expanded since August 1 leading to a gradual opening.
- Costa Rica reopened its borders to Canada, the EU, and UK on August 1. Then, on August 13, the government expanded its list of authorized countries to a total of 44, with Uruguay being the only Latin American one to make the list. On October 15, the list expanded to include Central American countries.
- Starting September 1, some U.S. tourists were allowed into Costa Rica, so long as they were from the approved list of states and provided proof of residence upon arrival.
- Alvarado first announced the closure of all land, air, and sea entry points on March 16.
- School closings and restrictions: In-person schooling resumed in Costa Rica in February 2021 for students in the fifth grade and up. The government encourages schools to use a hybrid model of in-person classes and distance learning when possible. Costa Rica ordered universities to close and suspended public and private schools starting in March 2020 and eventually ordering virtual learning for the remainder of 2020.
- Other updates:
- On April 11, Costa Rican authorities opened an air base at the country’s border with Nicaragua to reinforce border closure policies along the normally high-traffic shared border. The base came with heightened military personnel and surveillance to prevent people crossing south, according to Vice President Epsy Campbell, in light of the fact that the Nicaraguan government has instituted minimal measures to slow contagion within its borders. A May 14 letter signed by 52 out of the 57 members of Costa Rica’s Legislative Assembly urged the director of the Pan American Health Organization to take “forceful and urgent” actions regarding Nicaragua, stating that the Ortega administration’s response to the pandemic was a danger to its neighbors.
Economic impact and measures
- GDP forecasts: ECLAC’s December 2020 report forecasts Costa Rica’s GDP will shrink by 4.8 percent in 2020, its largest fall in four decades.
- Fiscal stimulus and economic policy: Costa Rica negotiated a $1.75 billion loan from the IMF to address the financial strain of the pandemic. Alvarado proposed additional tax measures as part of the negotiations, only to retract the proposal after mass protests.
- Previously, Alvarado announced in July 2020 that the government is making its largest cut to public spending in the country’s history due to the pandemic. The cuts are equivalent to 1 percent of Costa Rica’s GDP and include every sector except social programs. Prior to that, the government announced on May 8 a $1.5 billion economic package including loans; assistance for micro-, small-, and medium businesses; and a plan to attract private investment. The loans are available to all productive sectors and may be used as seed capital assistance or for business-reopening costs. Costa Rica’s Central Bank announced on April 29 that the IMF had granted Costa Rica an emergency loan worth $508 million to mitigate the effects of the pandemic. A month earlier, Costa Rica’s national emergency commission received a $1 million aid package from the Central American Bank for Economic Integration.
- Social programs: The government launched an online financial support platform on April 9 called Plan Proteger through which Costa Ricans who have lost their jobs or are suffering income insecurity may request a monthly bonus of up to $220 for three months. On March 19, Alvarado signed into law tax relief legislation that placed a moratorium on four types of taxes from April through June: the Value-Added Tax, profit taxes, selective consumption taxes, and tariffs on imported merchandise.
- Other updates:
- Unemployment in Costa Rica dropped to 21.3 percent for October to December, an improvement over the record-high rate of 24.4 percent covering May through July. Women are disproportionately affected, facing 25.2 percent unemployment, compared to 16.4 percent for men.
- As lawmakers discussed cutting 15 percent of the government’s highest wages to offset the economic impact of the pandemic, Alvarado announced on July 16 that he would voluntarily reduce his own salary to meet the 15 percent spending cut.
- S&P Global Ratings downgraded its rating for Costa Rica from B+ to B on June 9 citing the effect of the pandemic on the country’s economy, following a similar downgrade from Moody’s on June 2.
Spread
- February 9, 2021: 34,922 confirmed cases, 249 deaths
- January 12: 16,044 confirmed cases, 158 deaths
- December 15, 2020: 9671 confirmed cases, 137 deaths
- November 17: 7,704 confirmed cases, 131 deaths
- October 20: 6,360 confirmed cases, 127 deaths
- September 22: 5,270 confirmed cases, 118 deaths
- August 25: 3,759 confirmed cases, 92 deaths
- August 4: 2,726 confirmed cases, 88 deaths
- July 7: 2,399 confirmed cases, 86 deaths
- June 9: 2,211 confirmed cases, 83 deaths
- May 12: 1,810 confirmed cases, 79 deaths
- April 14: 814 confirmed cases, 24 deaths
- March 18: First death
- March 17: 7 confirmed cases
- March 12: 3 confirmed cases
- March 11: First confirmed cases
- Official Cuban broadcast media confirmed the island’s first three cases on March 11, 2020. The infected were three Italian tourists who traveled to Havana on March 9.
- Cuba experienced its first coronavirus-related death on March 18, 2020.
- President Miguel Díaz-Canel declared on June 6 that Cuba had the pandemic “under control” after the country marked one week without any deaths. The Health Ministry’s head of epidemiology estimated that Cuba experienced its peak in cases in late April. When cases began to fall during the summer, authorities attributed the country’s success in curbing contagion to its rigorous screening and contact tracing strategy in which tens of thousands of doctors, nurses, and medical students monitor every home on the island on a daily basis for any signs of symptoms. However, a resurgence in cases at the end of 2020 prompted new lockdowns on January 14, 2021; the government’s Temporary Working Group attributes the majority of new cases to international visitors.
- Both the South African and the UK strain has been confirmed in Cuba as of January 24, 2021.
Government response
- Vaccine plan: In August, Cuba became the first Latin American country to begin testing its own vaccine. By the end of November, its Center for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology (CIGB) had four vaccine candidates under development: Soberana 01, Soberana 02, Mambisa, and Abdala. The most advanced of the vaccines, Soberana 02, is in its third stage of trials. Once this is completed, Cuba plans to produce 100 million doses, which it intends to offer to its own population, to tourists, and to foreign nations like Vietnam, Iran, and Venezuela. The Abdala vaccine is the second most developed and is in the second stage of trials. Authorities plan to vaccinate the entire Cuban population in 2021.
- Reopening plan: On June 11, the government unveiled its three-stage reopening plan culminating in a “new normal”, where all productive activities and services resume and Cubans assume “personal responsibility” in adhering to basic social distancing guidelines, such as mandatory use of masks in closed spaces and regular disinfecting of work and public spaces. Under the initial transmission phase, the Defense Councils across the country set up quarantines in neighborhoods or municipalities with suspected or confirmed local transmission. Hospitals and outpatient services reopen at 50 percent capacity under phase one and then increase to 75 percent and 100 percent capacity under phases two and three respectively. Workers who saw their jobs interrupted due to the pandemic will continue to receive 60 percent of their basic salary in the first two phases, as has been the case since April 2020. However, starting January 14, Cuba announced a new lockdown, shuttering bars and restaurants. Public transportation will stop at 9 pm and roads to Havana will be limited. The government plans to impose fines on anyone who violates restrictions.
- Public and private transportation—which has been shut down since April 11—begins to operate under phase two.
- By the start of July, every province in Cuba had moved past the “limited local transmission” phase initially decreed for the entire country on April 7. Through the fall and early winter, each of the island’s provinces progressed through the phases with many reaching the final stage of reopening known as “the new normal.”
- However, starting January 14, Cuba announced that several provinces were returning to phase one, shuttering schools, bars, and restaurants. Public transportation stops at 9 pm and routes to Havana will be limited. The government plans to impose fines on anyone who violates restrictions. The surge has required the addition of beds to hospitals and the construction of new medical facilities. However, there have been reports of unsanitary hospital conditions and insufficient doctors, medicine, and medical resources in some cities.
- Public and private transportation—which has been shut down since April 11—begins to operate under phase two.
- Mitigation measures: On May 12, the Health Ministry published in the government’s official gazette the sanitary and health protocols to follow during the pandemic, though these measures had largely been in place since early April. The text includes that those who experience symptoms similar to those of COVID-19 or have had contact with someone infected with the coronavirus must report to the nearest health facility for further guidance. When asked by a health official, Cubans must also provide any personal information deemed necessary for the “effective prevention of the transmission of COVID-19.”
- Travel and border restrictions: Starting in January 2021, the nation announced it was reducing the number of flights into the island and that visitors would need to show a negative coronavirus test in order to be granted entry. Visitors who arrive after February 6 need to quarantine in hotels until they receive their negative result. The government claimed that 70 percent of coronavirus cases since November 15 are linked to international travelers. This, alongside restrictions on transportation in many provinces, has walked back attempts to restart mobility on the island. International commercial flights were initially suspended April 2, 2020, though Cuba slowly reopened travel to tourists in select areas in June and more generally in November 2020 with the opening of the José Martí International airport in Havana.
- School closings and restrictions: On December 9, Education Vice Minister Dania López said the 2019-2020 school year concluded without any cases of COVID-19 transmission. Schools reopened in September after being closed since late March in provinces under the “new normal,” while schools in Havana opened on November 2. However, due to a spike in infections in January 2021, schools were closed again.
- Other updates:
- Cuba deployed medical brigades to over 39 countries to support local efforts as of November 2020.
Economic impact and measures
- GDP forecasts: In December, ECLAC projected an 8.5 percent GDP contraction for 2020, whereas at the beginning of the year, Cuba’s Minister of Economy and Planning Alejandro Gil estimated that the country’s economy would grow by 1 percent.
- Fiscal stimulus and economic policy: In the midst of its worst economic recession since the collapse of the Soviet Union, the government initiated the country’s long-awaited monetary unification on January 1, 2021. The government had also announced a series of economic measures on July 16, 2020 that went into effect on July 20, such as that more markets would accept dollars and that the tax imposed on the dollar would be eliminated.
- Per a May 4 Granma report, Cuba’s Council of Ministers approved a series of adjustments to the island’s fiscal plan for 2020 due to the pandemic, including the prioritization of allocating funds to boost the agricultural and food production sectors.
- On March 26, the government announced the temporary suspension of more than 16,000 work licenses for entrepreneurs, including landlords, contract workers, restaurant workers, and craftsmen.
- Social programs: Between April 1 and April 7, Cuba’s Ministry of Labor and Social Security announced a series of measures aimed at protecting workers, including that workers who must undergo a 14-day isolation period will receive 100 percent of their basic salary for the time period. Older and at-risk workers were instructed to stay home and will receive 100 percent of their basic salary for the first month and 60 percent thereafter.
- Other updates:
- Despite the Trump administration’s tightening of sanctions this year, a cohort of Cuban-Americans organized a shipment of $100,000 in medical supplies that arrived on the island December 10.
- On April 1, the government announced that prices for cell phone data and voice usage would be lower in the mornings. Rates for national long-distance calls were also reduced by 25 percent between 6 a.m. and 5:59 p.m. and by 50 percent between 6 p.m. and 5:59 a.m. These measures have remained in place through February 2021.
Spread
- February 9, 2021: 225,472 confirmed cases, 2,883 deaths
- January 12: 186,383 confirmed cases, 2428 deaths
- December 15, 2020: 156,585 confirmed cases, 2,372 deaths
- November 17: 135,157 confirmed cases, 2,293 deaths
- October 20: 122,398 confirmed cases, 2,206 deaths
- September 22: 109,737 confirmed cases, 2,074 deaths
- August 25: 92,557 confirmed cases, 1,613 deaths
- August 4: 75,660 confirmed cases, 1,222 deaths
- July 7: 39,588 confirmed cases, 829 deaths
- June 9: 20,808 confirmed cases, 550 deaths
- May 12: 11,196 confirmed cases, 409 deaths
- April 14: 3,614 confirmed cases, 189 deaths
- March 17: 21 confirmed cases, 1 death
- March 16: First death
- March 10: 5 confirmed cases
- March 1: First confirmed case
- The Dominican Republic's first confirmed case was reported on March 1 and involved a 62-year-old Italian tourist.
- The country reported its first death from the virus on March 16, involving an HIV-positive woman, 47, who also had tuberculosis and had traveled to Spain recently.
- The Dominican Republic confirmed on January 15, 2021 that the British variant of COVID-19 was detected within the country’s borders in December. The first case was thought to be brought into the country by a Dominican woman recently returned from London.
Government response
- Vaccine rollout: The government contracted 10 million doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine, which are estimated to arrive in February 2021, and 8 million doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine. The Dominican Republic is also promised 2 million vaccines by the end of 2021 via COVAX, the joint World Health Organization and the Global Alliance of Vaccines and Immunization program.
- Reopening plan: Then-President Danilo Medina announced on May 17 the government’s plan to partially reopen the Dominican economy beginning on May 20. Luis Abinader, who previously tested positive for COVID-19 and recovered, was sworn in as the country’s president on August 16 and, upon assuming office, his administration presented a new plan for combating the pandemic. Here is a list of what has happened with the re-opening plan:
- Although phase three of the country’s reopening was tentatively scheduled to go into effect June 17, the government decided on June 16 to postpone that move after cases had peaked during the initial two phases.
- Before that, the country began phase two of its four-phase reopening plan on June 3. Under the second phase, public buses began running at 60 percent capacity, some commercial retailers reopened, and churches were allowed to resume their Sunday services with reduced attendees.
- The plan went into effect with phase one May 20 when micro- and small-sized businesses were able to reopen with up to 50 percent of personnel, and medium to large businesses with up to 25 percent. The public sector reopened at 50 percent, and state public transportation began to run at 30 percent capacity.
- Mitigation measures: Initially instituted in March 2020, the country’s curfews have fluctuated depending on the case count. Most recently, Abinader loosed curfew hours from 7 p.m. to 5 a.m. on weekdays and 5 p.m. to 5 a.m. on weekends until February 8, 2021. A 3-hour grace period after the beginning of curfew is enforced to give people an opportunity to get home. Restaurants are permitted to operate at 50 percent capacity, after being closed from December 30 to January 11. Below is a chronology of measures taken by both presidencies:
- Starting in October 2020 and extended until December 1, a modified national curfew went into effect. The curfew allowed two additional hours of activity on the weekend compared to September.
- Under Medina’s state of emergency, two curfews were in effect starting July 21 based on the level of contagion in each province.
- Before the July nationwide state of emergency decree, the government declared the entire national territory as being under an epidemic on June 30, which granted the government the power to institute new measures to mitigate and control the spread of the coronavirus including suspending most commercial, social, and recreational activities.
- The Health Ministry announced on May 5 that authorities would intervene in the most affected provinces with the help of the country’s Armed Forces, the National Health Service, the Center for Emergency Operations, and other official entities. The interventions, which began on May 14, included measures such as setting up rapid testing centers, limiting movement within designated zones, and decontaminating hospitals and other medical facilities, supermarkets, and malls. The Ministry designated a total of seven areas—each made up of a handful of municipalities with the most confirmed cases—to be inspected.
- On April 22, Medina inaugurated the Command, Control, Communications, Computers, and Cybersecurity Center (C5i), a new agency housed within the Ministry of Defense that works in conjunction with the country’s Armed Forces to monitor and enforce measures, including enforcing at-home quarantines and moving patients to medical facilities.
- Wearing face masks in public became mandatory on April 16.
- Travel and border restrictions: The Dominican Republic reopened its borders for international tourism on July 1. International cruise ships are allowed to port in the Dominican Republic as of November 1. A new tourism protocol, which began September 15, no longer requires tourists to present a negative test result upon arrival. The government performed random tests at their airport instead. The government offered free health insurance to tourists to cover any coronavirus-related costs, through the end of 2020.
- Between July 30 and September 14, the Dominican Republic required tourists to present a negative molecular test result, and those who did not comply were tested at the airport at the government’s cost. Medina initially ordered the country’s borders to close beginning March 19. Before that, the government had suspended all incoming flights from Europe, China, and Iran between March 16–30 after suspending all flights from Milan on February 28, 2020.
- School closings and restrictions: The 2020-2021 school year began on November 10 for all students and runs an additional 45 days to make up for lost time. It is being held remotely via television, radio, and the internet. Though schools were scheduled to open August 24, the Medina government announced June 30 that in-person learning would remain suspended for the foreseeable future. Medina ordered public schools and universities to close and suspended in-person classes in March 2020.
- Other updates:
- Despite a spike in cases, the Dominican Republic held general elections on July 5 and elected opposition candidate Luis Abinader of the Modern Revolutionary Party (PRM) for president. Turnout hovered around 50 percent, and a series of safety protocols were in place during election day, though the Organization of American States reported lapses in physical distancing throughout the day. The executive director of the presidential committee tasked with managing the COVID-19 pandemic warned that he anticipates cases will surge in the weeks after the election. The vote was originally scheduled for May 17, but the country's Electoral Board pushed them back in mid-April to July 5. This is the second election held in the Dominican Republic during the pandemic, and the first general election in Latin America during the crisis. In fact, Medina acknowledged on April 22 that the government did not move to combat the spread of the coronavirus in early March when the first case was confirmed due to municipal elections scheduled for March 15.
Economic impact and measures
- GDP forecasts: The ECLAC’s December report projects a GDP contraction of 5.5 percent for 2020 in the Dominican Republic. The contraction is a notable shift from the World Bank’s April forecast in which it estimated that the economy would neither grow nor contract.
- Fiscal stimulus and economic policy: Between April 21 and April 28, the Dominican government, through its special agricultural fund (FEDA), approved $1.8 million in aid for the agrarian sector to boost production and cultivation. On April 23, the country’s Central Bank approved a series of monetary measures, including lowering three types of interest rates and instituting liquidity measures for the national currency. Prior to that, on March 26, the Central Bank approved roughly $1.5 billion for banks to have available for clients, and $622.4 million in credit for export industries. On April 29, the IMF approved $650 million in emergency assistance for the Dominican Republic.
- Social programs: On March 25, Medina announced an economic package worth over $591 million to alleviate salary losses and food insecurity. The measures include a three-month moratorium on monthly minimum payments on credit cards as well as waivers of late fees. Starting on April 1 until May 31, the 811,000 families already subscribed to the country’s social welfare program Tarjeta de Solidaridad received a monthly payment ranging from $27 to $130 for foodstuffs and first aid products. The president added that 690,000 other families outside the social welfare program also received this assistance. An additional 70,000 homes were added to the program on April 23.
- Other updates:
- Fitch Ratings downgraded its rating for the Dominican Republic from stable to negative on May 5.
Spread
- January 19: 232,568 confirmed cases, 14,382 deaths
- January 12: 222,567 confirmed cases, 14,196 deaths
- December 15: 202,356 confirmed cases, 13,896 deaths
- November 17: 181,104 confirmed cases, 13,025 deaths
- October 20: 154,115 confirmed cases, 12,404 deaths
- September 22: 127,643 confirmed cases, 11,126 deaths
- August 25: 109,030 confirmed cases, 6,368 deaths
- August 4: 87,963 confirmed cases, 5,808 deaths
- July 7: 63,245 confirmed cases, 4,873 deaths
- June 9: 43,917 confirmed cases, 3,690 deaths
- May 12: 30,419 confirmed cases, 2,327 deaths
- April 14: 7,603 confirmed cases, 369 deaths (See note below.)
- March 17: 111 confirmed cases, 2 deaths
- March 13: First death
- March 10: 15 confirmed cases
- March 3: 7 confirmed cases
- February 29: First confirmed case
- Ecuador’s then-Health Minister Catalina Andramuño Zeballos confirmed the country’s first case on February 29, involving a 71-year-old woman who lived in Spain and traveled to Ecuador on February 14. The woman passed away on March 13, becoming the country’s first fatality as well.
- Along with deaths confirmed to be from COVID-19, the government also reports deaths that occurred “in the context” of the virus, typically increasing the death toll by about 67 percent. Separate government figures show that in the Guayas province, close to 14,600 people died of all causes in March and the first two weeks of April. The province, considered an epicenter for the virus with about two-thirds of national cases, normally sees 2,000 deaths per month and the local health system was quickly overwhelmed.
- Note: After not reporting an official count for May 5, officials announced on May 6 that they had lowered the total count of confirmed cases by 2,461 cases between May 4 and May 6 after having discarded duplicate test samples. On April 24, after much discrepancy between four official counts and releasing the results of more than 10,000 previously unreported positive test results that nearly doubled the official case count figure, officials suspended reporting daily COVID-19 case numbers over the weekend while they implemented a new software system to track the data. Beginning April 7, Ecuadoran officials changed their methodology to count the number of cases based on people having symptoms, regardless of whether or not they've been tested.
- On April 9, Guayaquil Mayor and former presidential candidate Cynthia Viteri announced she had recovered from the disease after fighting it for about two weeks at home. She’s one of 15 mayors in Guayas to come down with COVID-19.
Government response
- Vaccine plan: As of January 19, Ecuador has four agreements to acquire a total of 18 million doses—60 percent of its total need—including 2 million from Pfizer/BioNTech, 2 million from the U.S. firm COVAXX, 7 million from AstraZeneca, and 7 million via the WHO’s COVAX initiative. Health Minister Juan Carlos Zevallos said the initial goal of vaccinating 30,000 people a day—at which rate it would take until about July 2022 to vaccinate Ecuador’s 17.6 million people—was modest. Officials say the roughly 180,000 Ecuadorans who’ve recovered from COVID-19 will not be eligible for a vaccine, saying it could pose a health risk to them.
- Reopening plan: Ecuador’s nationwide curfew and driving restrictions ended on September 12, when the state of exception—in place since March 16—expired. The country’s Constitutional Court, which twice before approved President Lenín Moreno’s requests for 60-day states of exception that were then each extended 30 days, ruled on August 24 that it would not approve a third such request. While there’s no constitutional limit on how long Ecuador can be under a state of exception during a given period of time, the court based its ruling on the idea that a state of exception should be just that—exceptional—and to continue to approve states of exception permanently, especially in light of an indefinite pandemic, would “distort the essence and constitutional purpose.” The ruling encouraged the government to adapt its response to the health crisis to be a long-term one within the regular laws. The country began to loosen some restrictions and shift from social isolation to social distancing on May 4 via a three-color system based on the contagion levels in a given municipality.
- Beaches began to reopen on August 5.
- Quito went under a curfew from August 3 to 6 in an effort to limit the virus’ spread. Six weeks after reopening, the capital maxed out its ICU capacity—just as Mayor Jorge Yunda feared it would two weeks prior—in light of which the city council passed a resolution on July 14 asking the national government to put more restrictive measures in place. On July 22, the mayor announced a plan to set up 10 field hospitals in some of the most affected neighborhoods, with resources from the city of Guayaquil. From March 13 to June 3, the capital registered about 47 new cases per day; from June 3 to June 26, that figure rose to 100 daily. After 78 days of lockdown, Quito downgraded to the medium yellow level and began to reopen on June 3 with businesses and public buses operating at 50 percent occupancy. City council members and representatives of the Quito Chamber of Commerce had petitioned Yunda in a meeting on May 12 to change the capital’s lockdown level from red to yellow, given the close to $1 billion in losses in just the first two weeks of the national shutdown.
- Though Guayaquil’s reopening has progressed mostly without incident, Viteri did prohibit social gatherings on August 3. The city began reopening on May 20 after it became a yellow zone based on the country’s “traffic light” reopening system. Though Ecuador’s largest city has recorded over 9,000 COVID-19-related deaths, on May 17 the city registered just 34 deaths, below its pre-pandemic average of 38 per day.
- The Ecuadoran court system began a gradual reopening process on May 11. The courtrooms of judges who are elderly, at risk, pregnant or nursing will be first in line to be outfitted to hold virtual hearings. Legal proceedings mostly shut down March 16 when the state of emergency went into effect, though the Supreme Court did make time to hand down an eight-year prison sentence on April 7 to ex-President Rafael Correa in absentia.
- Mitigation measures: Moreno declared a national health emergency on March 11, and then announced a state of exception on March 16. During the latter, there was a nightly curfew from 9 p.m. to 5 a.m., as well as limits on the circulation of cars, and in-person classes were suspended. During the 90 days of Ecuador’s first state of exception, Moreno signed 56 executive decrees, sent three bills to Congress, and implemented a major economic relief plan. He issued a second state of exception, this one for 60 days, on June 15.
- In an effort to perform contact tracing as the city reopens, Guayaquil began sending health monitors to 17 city zones on July 8 to screen the symptoms of 1,600 people daily.
- On the evening of March 15, Moreno announced people’s movements within the country would be restricted except to buy food, medicine, and basic goods. Also banned are all non-essential commercial activities.
- Travel and border restrictions: Ecuador’s airports reopened to both domestic and international flights on June 1 at 30 percent of their usual capacity. In June, the Guayaquil airport recorded just 5.9 percent of the number of travelers it did the same month a year before. On June 23, Ecuador and Colombia announced a plan to allow nationals stranded in each other’s countries to return home via one land border crossing. Ecuador’s borders closed to nationals and residents on March 16 and to foreigners on March 15. Venezuelans in Ecuador had until August 13 to apply for a humanitarian visa to be able to stay in the country, though migrant rights groups argued the $50 application fee was too much for migrants to be able to come up with in the given time.
- School closings and restrictions: On March 12, authorities announced the suspension of all classes in educational institutions starting March 13. Some secondary classes resumed virtually on May 4, and some university ones on July 1.
Economic impact and measures
- GDP forecasts: On June 4, Ecuador’s Central Bank projected the economy will contract between 7.3 and 9.6 percent in 2020. The World Bank, meanwhile, projects a 7.4 percent contraction for the year according to new numbers released June 8, down from a 6.0 percent contraction forecast two months earlier, and 0.2 percent growth projected back in October 2019. On March 25, S&P Global downgraded Ecuador’s long- and short-term credit ratings, with default a possibility in the coming months.
- Fiscal stimulus and economic policy: Moreno announced seven new economic measures on May 19 aimed at cutting $4 billion from the national budget. The measures include a required reduction of the workday for most workers, closing or merging of 10 public entities, closing 11 embassies and other diplomatic offices, and restructuring Ecuador’s public debt. Moreno in May 2020 said that since the pandemic began, Ecuador has lost 150,000 jobs and the state is looking at a $12 billion budget shortfall. Labor groups went on a nationwide strike on May 25 in protest of the workday reduction measure.
- On July 27, Moreno issued an executive decree that requires about 1,200 companies that recorded a profit in the first half of 2020 to pay their income tax at least five months ahead of schedule. The country’s tax authority estimates it will collect $280 million through the measure, which will be distributed to 125,000 small businesses affected by the pandemic.
- Separately, a new Humanitarian Support Law, which was backed by Moreno’s party and affiliates in Congress along with the Quito Chamber of Commerce, went into effect on June 22. The law’s primary new feature is that it will allow for work hours and salaries to be reduced by up to 50 and 45 percent, respectively, for two years at a time. Experts anticipate the country’s Constitutional Court will need to rule on it to reconcile any potential conflicts with labor law already on the books.
- New taxes on higher earners was one key measure in an April 10 fiscal policy package announced by Moreno. Companies that reported over $1 million in revenues in 2018 will be taxed 5 percent, and individuals who earn over $500 monthly will be taxed on a sliding scale. Ecuador’s public debt hit $56 billion in June 2019, giving the country a 49 percent debt-to-GDP ratio.
- Moreno announced on April 12 that he’s preparing to halve the salaries of government officials from his own through those of regional governors, congresspeople, and cabinet members.
- On May 11, Moreno eliminated two ministries, folded a third into another, and closed three public works companies. The Treasury asked all government agencies on May 5 to submit plans to reduce their budgets by 10 to 15 percent.
- On March 17, Moreno introduced economic measures including postponing social security payments for 90 days and deferring taxes for the tourism and export sectors as well as for small businesses, for the months of April, May, and June.
- Social programs:
- During the emergency, the administration has ordered that no one have their utilities cut off for lack of payment. The government is also providing increased internet and cell phone data service, as well as free coronavirus tests for anyone with symptoms.
- A program that handed out $60 over two months to 950,000 families earning under $400 per month was expanded to reach 2 million as part of the April 10 package.
- Other updates:
- Unemployment in Ecuador reached 13.3 percent in June 2020, up from 3.8 percent six months earlier, according to a September report from the National Census and Statistical Institute, known as INEC. Moreover, INEC found that another 67.4 percent of workers are underemployed.
- Ecuador reached an agreement with bondholders to restructure $17.4 billion in outstanding debt, which will free up $16 billion in the national budget over the next 10 years, Moreno announced on July 6.
- Ecuador will receive $2.4 billion in credit from China between June and October, Finance Minister Richard Martínez announced on May 29.
- On March 25, the government announced that the country will receive a total of $2 billion in emergency funds from three international agencies: $500 million from the International Monetary Fund, $500 million from the World Bank, and $1 billion from bilateral debt, primarily from China. The IMF approved another $643 million in emergency financing for Ecuador on May 2.
- As of May 28, the national government owed $890 million in scheduled payments to Ecuador’s social security administration. By law, the national government contributes 40 percent of the fund’s resources but made no payments in the first five months of 2020.
- Fitch Ratings downgraded bonds issued by PetroAmazonas from CC to C (one level above default) on April 30, due to moves by the company that the ratings agency considers a distressed debt exchange. It’s the fourth downgrade for the PetroEcuador subsidiary debt in 20 months. The ratings agency downgraded Ecuador’s sovereign debt to C on April 9, saying that, “sovereign default of some kind is imminent.” Ecuador got a temporary reprieve in late April when investors agreed to let it defer some interest payments until August and reduce others.
- The rebound of the WTI oil barrel price on April 22 after historic drops was welcome news for Ecuador, where oil exports represent 5 percent of GDP. Incidentally, Ecuador left OPEC in early March. Other Ecuadorian exports—like shrimp canned fish, and cacao—were down 83 percent in the first two weeks of April compared to the same period last year. Not only is demand for exports globally down, but because Ecuador uses the U.S. dollar as its currency, its exports become more expensive when the dollar appreciates, as it is now.
- One bright spot in Ecuador’s pandemic economy? Bananas. Producers of the fruit—Ecuador’s second most valuable export after crude oil—reported their shipments doubling from the beginning of March to mid-June.
Spread
- February 9, 2021: 56,653 confirmed cases, 1,701 deaths
- January 12: 49,859 confirmed cases, 1,449 deaths
- December 15, 2020: 42,397 confirmed cases, 1,219 deaths
- November 17: 36,669 confirmed cases, 1,056 deaths
- October 20: 32,120 confirmed cases, 933 deaths
- September 22: 27,954 confirmed cases, 819 deaths
- August 25: 25,140 confirmed cases, 687 deaths
- August 4: 18,701 confirmed cases, 498 deaths
- July 7: 8,566 confirmed cases, 235 deaths
- June 9: 3,274 confirmed cases, 60 deaths
- May 12: 1,037 confirmed cases, 20 deaths
- April 14: 159 confirmed cases, 6 deaths
- March 31: 32 confirmed cases, first death
- March 18: First confirmed case
- The country—one of the last Latin American countries to confirm a case—announced its first one on March 18, 2020. President Nayib Bukele revealed the case involved a person who had traveled to Italy and whose return was not documented.
- El Salvador experienced its first death—a 60-year-old woman who had returned from the United States—on March 31.
- On November 9, the country’s Attorney General’s Office launched an investigation into the Bukele government’s pandemic spending, raiding 20 different government offices to collect evidence. Health Minister Francisco Alabí has faced legal challenges for inking a government contract in April to buy $225,000 worth of medical supplies from a company owned by family members. On July 21, he said he was not considering resigning. On July 28, Finance Minister Nelson Fuentes resigned and his replacement, José Alejandro Zelaya, faces ethics violations because two of his employees sold pandemic-related facial protective gear to the government for $750,000.
Government response
- Vaccine plan: On November 26, 2020, Bukele announced that El Salvador would acquire four different vaccines and that it had entered into an agreement with AstraZeneca to purchase 2 million doses. The vaccine is slated to be rolled out in the first half of 2021 and will be free and voluntary. Bukele also said front-line workers—medical professionals, police, and soldiers—followed by people over 50 years old and those with chronic health conditions would be prioritized.
- On February 1, 2021, PAHO announced that El Salvador would be among the first 18 countries worldwide to gain access to vaccines through the COVAX mechanism. El Salvador was one of 72 countries that in January petitioned COVAX for vaccines that do not require high levels of refrigeration, due to lack of capacity.
- On December 30, 2020, El Salvador approved the AstraZeneca-Oxford vaccine for use.
- Reopening plan: El Salvador’s management of the pandemic has been marked throughout by institutional battles that predate COVID-19’s arrival in the country and concerns the government is using the coronavirus as an excuse for repression. The same is true of the reactivation plan. The conflicts gave rise to U.S. warnings to Bukele of aid cuts, per a September 3, 2020, Associated Press report. But there’s a reason why Bukele is confident about pushing back: 80 percent of Salvadorans deem his government’s pandemic management as “very good” and another 15 percent say it’s “good,” per a June 29 CID-Gallup poll. Still, on June 14 Bukele’s government issued Decree 31 ending the quarantine—which began on March 14—on June 16. While the five-phase plan was initially set to start shortly after it was announced and run through August 20, the Bukele government repeatedly delayed entering Phase 2 and reset subsequent phase dates. With no legal clarity around reactivation, the country proceeded to a full reopening on August 24. Below are highlights of the conflict over and steps taken as part of the reopening plan:
- At the end of October 2020, the Assembly passed legislation prohibiting national quarantines and protecting individual rights. Per the law, only those who have tested positive or been exposed to the coronavirus must face quarantine. Localized quarantines can only occur in areas that have seen more than a 10 percent increase in cases. The legislation appears to be an attempt to prevent Bukele from decreeing the kinds of strict measures taken early in the pandemic.
- Despite various plans presented, El Salvador’s complete reopening of the economy began August 24. The Bukele government’s July 30 Decree (number 32) sought to reschedule reopening dates, but on August 7, the Supreme Court declared the decree unconstitutional due to its limits on rights, saying the move requires a measure from the legislature to enforce. On August 10, Bukele said of the Court: “if I were a dictator, I would have shot them all. You save 1,000 lives in exchange for five.” The court’s ruling allowed for Decree 32 to extend until August 23 to give the legislature and the president time to come to agreement, which did not happen, and the Bukele government confirmed on August 22 that—with no legislation in place to prohibit economic activities—reopening would proceed two days later.
- On August 19, the Supreme Court overturned Bukele’s veto of a legislative proposal approved June 12 that called for implementation of a four-phase reopening plan starting June 16 and ending July 6. Bukele responded to the decision by saying: “What do we do now? Go back in time?” and called the decision “inconsequential.”
- On June 24, the Bukele government submitted a proposal to the National Assembly for a new 15-day state of exception to restrict certain rights as a containment measure—despite a reopening plan being put in place. Different from a state of emergency, the prior state of exception expired in April (see “Mitigation Measures” below). On June 29, Alabí said that periods of states of exception could alternate with periods of economic reactivation. On June 30, legislators said that, rather than a state of exception, they were assessing a plan for controlled quarantines focused on areas with high rates of contagion or mortality. However, on July 4, the executive branch threatened to veto local-level states of exception, saying doing so would be unconstitutional and restrict human rights.
- As of June 17, El Salvador’s Constitutional Court was considering at least three petitions that challenge Bukele’s Decree 31 on the grounds that it restricts constitutional rights related to freedoms of movement and transportation. Meanwhile, the president, while announcing the aforementioned decree, complained that his government had developed a prior law in accordance with an agreement made with the Constitutional Court, only to have the Court deem it unconstitutional. Both the Court and the National Assembly responded by denying having come to such agreements during meetings in recent months with Bukele. Bukele also had suggested that he had held a meeting with U.S. Ambassador Ronald Johnson about the law surrounding the quarantine. The Embassy denied having authorized any laws and said it respected El Salvador’s sovereignty. On June 8, El Salvador’s Constitutional Court declared two laws, a cabinet resolution, and 11 executive decrees unconstitutional and prohibited both the executive branch and the National Assembly from continuing to publish decrees that use the argument of preventing COVID-19 as reason for violating the Constitution. On June 20, Bukele sent a letter to the Assembly demanding it restore powers he said the Court had removed.
- On June 6, Bukele made good on his promise to veto a May 30 measure by the Legislative Assembly that sought to reopen business activities on June 8.
- Mitigation measures: El Salvador began to implement containment measures before the first confirmed case. The legislature first approved both a state of emergency and a state of exception on March 14, though the state of exception, which raised concerns due to the suspension of constitutional rights, expired on April 12. For most of the period since those first steps were taken, there have been battles over extensions. Below is a on overview of milestones along the way:
- With a state of emergency having expired at midnight on May 16, Bukele’s government declared a 30-day extension without the legislature’s approval on May 17, basing the decision on a 2005 constitutional measure allowing the president to decide in the case that the legislature cannot meet—though the Assembly was scheduled to do so. The Attorney General’s office filed a challenge with the Supreme Court, which, on May 18, declared the extension to be unconstitutional. Bukele then threatened—and made good on the promise—to veto a congressional measure passed May 18 that extended the country’s quarantine for no more than 15 days and, among other things, required companies to set public health protocols for reopening. With that measure dead in the water, the Assembly spent the week of May 25 drafting the later-vetoed legislation but hit various obstacles, including Bukele’s resistance to transparency measures imposed by the Assembly.
- On May 10, the presidency published a decree with seven modifications to the stricter quarantine measures Bukele announced May 5 and that began May 7. The updates sought to address concerns about unconstitutional measures in two prior decrees. The modifications included allowing health workers to use public transportation; letting police, the military, and medical workers make purchases and conduct bank transactions without showing identification; and the establishment of a call center to attend emergency calls and handle purchases of medications. The initial set of new rules, which the National Assembly paved the way for when it passed a quarantine law early in the morning of May 5, allowed Bukele to decree that Salvadorans can only leave their homes twice a week to buy food and medicine within the towns where people reside. On May 7, the presidency added on to the restrictions by prohibiting public transportation, taxis, and Ubers, thereby severely limiting movement in a country where 80 percent of the population uses public buses for transport.
- On April 29, Bukele vetoed a transitional law passed April 17 by the National Assembly that sought to fulfil an April 15 Supreme Court resolution safeguarding the rights of those who are detained for violating the national quarantine and subject to the punitive measures outlined in an April 14 executive order. Bukele’s executive order required people to allow health officials into their homes to evaluate sanitation measures, while those who violate the national quarantine were subject to 30 days of controlled quarantine. In addition, it required those driving without a justified reason to submit their vehicles for disinfection. Also on April 29, Bukele vetoed a law designed to aid health professionals by, among other things, providing them with life insurance. The Assembly had already sought once to bypass the president’s prior veto on this measure on April 23.
- On April 12, Bukele announced it would be obligatory for people to wear masks in the street and that people who drive vehicles who do not have the right to do so could be stripped of both their licenses and cars. The latter measure contradicted an April 8 Supreme Court ruling that annulled an earlier order by Bukele to seize vehicles. The Court also annulled Bukele’s April 6 detention measure, ordered in conjunction with his April 6 announcement that the country’s quarantine would be extended for a month and that the armed forces and police should “get harsher with people in the street” and detain them for 30 days for not following quarantine rules.
- Travel and border restrictions: El Salvador’s international airport reopened for service on September 19, 2020, just over six months after it shut down. Land borders with Guatemala and El Salvador began reopening during the week of September 21, and continued with the reopening of borders in Central America in October. As of the airport’s reopening, travelers—Salvadoran or not—entering the country had to prove they took a coronavirus test within a 72-hour period prior to flying or face a $6,000 penalty. El Salvador has made good on the threat, and also fined airlines for transporting passengers with the virus. The constitutional wing of the Supreme Court declared September 11 that the government cannot prevent Salvadoran nationals from entering the country based on COVID-19 test results. Even before the airport was closed in mid-March, Bukele banned foreign travel into the country, except for residents and diplomats, while returning Salvadorans were required to be isolated for 30 days.
- School closings and restrictions: School reopenings have been repeatedly delayed since Bukele initially ordered all schools and universities to close on March 11, 2020. Education has since taken place via internet, radio, and television. In January 2021, the Education Ministry once again delayed reopening, saying schools would stay shuttered until further notice.
- Other updates:
- The wear and tear on El Salvador’s institutions throughout the pandemic has not escaped international attention. In February 2021, the Biden administration allegedly rejected a request to meet with Bukele during a trip to Washington, signaling the bilateral relationship is under review, although the Salvadoran president denied he’d sought such a meeting during the trip. On May 19, the UN secretary general urged the Bukele government to take legal routes to combat the pandemic, and to “act in a responsible manner with respect for human rights, democratic institutions, and the rule of law.” This came after a May 16 interview with France 24 in which UN High Commissioner on Human Rights Michelle Bachelet raised similar concerns. On April 29, two U.S. congressmen—Chairman of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs Eliot Engel (D-NY) and Chairman of the Subcommittee on the Western Hemisphere Albio Sires (D-NJ)—wrote a letter urging Bukele not to use the pandemic as an excuse to discard constitutional and human rights in response to images of extreme measures being taken in Salvadoran prisons.
- On May 27, the president said he plans to push for a reform that would completely overhaul the country’s governmental structure. “We have the support of 97 percent of the population,” said Bukele, who had an approval rating of 92.5 percent, per a poll published May 24 by La Prensa Gráfica. The president also said “the majority of legislators are delinquents” for failing to come to an agreement about an extension of an emergency decree related to the pandemic. He made the comments after a May 27 meeting with union leaders, who put themselves at the service of the president to pressure the Assembly, potentially through protests, but also by bringing a case against both the legislature and the Supreme Court to the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) over the two government branches’ blocking of Bukele’s latest emergency decree. Bukele had promised on May 20 to file the suit, but the head of the IACHR responded that the Commission cannot hear a case in which one branch of government sues another.
- On May 11, private sector leaders and academics quit a committee charged with overseeing the spending of $2 billion in pandemic-related funds after they said Bukele’s government failed to provide necessary information for them to effectively conduct an audit.
- In an April 21 tweet showing himself alone with a mask on and seated behind a giant desk, Bukele said rumors he had been kidnapped by extraterrestrials were unfounded.
Economic impact and measures
- GDP forecasts: In January 2021, the World Bank forecasts that El Salvador will see growth of 4.6 percent in 2021 while ECLAC forecasts that the country’s 2020 contraction will end up being 8.6 percent.
- Fiscal stimulus and economic policy: On May 5, the National Assembly approved a $1 billion plan to stimulate economic recovery that included measures such as loans for small enterprises and financing for business owners in the informal sector. On April 14, the IMF gave El Salvador a $389 emergency assistance loan—the first from the agency to the country in over 30 years, reports Latin Finance.
- Social programs:
- The government and the private sector came to a $1 billion agreement on April 23 to provide basic foodstuffs to 1.7 million families; $600 million in low-interest loans to micro-, small-, and medium-sized enterprises; $90 million in credits to the informal sector; and delays on corporate tax payments and income taxes.
- On March 21, in conjunction with imposing quarantine, the president announced a subsidy of roughly $300 per house for about 75 percent of Salvadoran households. He also threatened against corruption related to economic relief measures, saying 60 auditors would be reviewing disbursement and that “I will make a prisoner of anyone who touches even a cent.” In addition, he has frozen the prices of basic goods and warned against price gouging.
- On March 18, Bukele announced a plan suspending utility, phone, and internet bills for three months to be paid back over the course of the subsequent two years. The president also froze payments on items such as mortgages, cars and motorcycles, and credit cards.
- Other updates:
- 2020 remittances hit a record level, with U.S.-based Salvadorans sending back 4.8 percent more than the prior year.
- An August 26 report by ElSalvador.com suggests a slow recovery after the extended quarantine that could last as long as four years. In the country’s restaurant sector alone, at least 30 percent of businesses have closed and 40,000 jobs have been lost.
- On June 4, foundation FUSADES released a report in which it projected that, as a result of the pandemic, the portion of Salvadorans living in extreme poverty will rise from roughly 30 percent to more than 50 percent.
Spread
- February 9, 2021: 164,746 confirmed cases, 5,989 deaths
- January 12: 145,986 confirmed cases, 5,117 deaths
- December 15, 2020: 130,082 confirmed cases, 4,476 deaths
- November 17: 115,730 confirmed cases, 3,947 deaths
- October 20: 102,415 confirmed cases, 3,567 deaths
- September 22: 87,442 confirmed cases, 3,154 deaths
- August 25: 70,714 confirmed cases, 2,662 deaths
- August 4: 53,509 confirmed cases, 2,072 deaths
- July 7: 24,787 confirmed cases, 1,004 deaths
- June 9: 7,866 confirmed cases, 289 deaths
- May 12: 1,199 confirmed cases, 27 deaths
- April 14: 180 confirmed cases, 5 deaths
- March 17: 6 confirmed cases, 1 death
- March 15: First death
- March 13: First confirmed case
- President Alejandro Giammattei confirmed the country’s first case, involving a man who had returned from northern Italy. On March 15, the Health Ministry confirmed the first death.
- On September 18, Giammattei revealed that he had tested positive for coronavirus. The 64-year-old described himself as high risk. On the same day the government announced the culture minister had tested positive as well.
- On December 8, Edwin Asturias, the person charged with leading the country’s coronavirus response, revealed he would be stepping down to return to his job at the University of Colorado. Leadership of the pandemic fell back to the Health Ministry. Prior to that, The president sacked Health Minister Hugo Monroy on June 19 and replaced him with María Amelia Flores González, who has more than 30 years of public health experience and served in the administration of ex-President Óscar Berger. Monroy had faced criticism for a lack of transparency in his management of the health crisis. On June 16, Acción Ciudadana, a Guatemalan organization focused on transparency issues, called on country’s top prosecutor office to strip Monroy of political immunity for violating the right to access to information, given “systematic opacity” when it came to the delivery of coronavirus figures, particularly in terms of death counts. Monroy acknowledged technical errors in the counts. The new health minister began an audit of the counts on June 20, after which it launched a new COVID-19 data platform on July 18 that reflects the Ministry's ongoing efforts to review its counts.
- On August 6, the president said he is moving on to handle other issues aside from the pandemic and that his government is passing along the responsibility to the public to take care of itself. The remarks led two civil society complaints to file an August 10 legal complaint against the president for failure to meet duties. The head of one of the groups also said the complaint is aggravated by his government’s failure to appropriately assign emergency funding for the pandemic.
Government response
- Vaccine plan: In January, Guatemala’s legislature approved a motion to purchase additional vaccines. In December 2020, the president said the legislation will allow for the country to acquire 2.5 million additional vaccine doses. The type of vaccine intended to be purchased was not shared at time of the announcement. The Health Ministry inaugurated a refrigerated facility on December 15 to prepare for the arrival of vaccines. Guatemala is part of the COVAX vaccine plan through which, per El Periódico, the country will receive 6.7 million doses for 3 million people (the country has a population of 18 million) in the first half of 2021. A December 13 Prensa Libre article said experts expect the vaccine will arrive in the country in March 2021.
- Reopening plan: On October 28, Giammattei warned that “the second wave has arrived” but suggested that this required responsible behavior rather than rolling back reopening measures. Since that point, the country was struck by two hurricanes—Eta and Iota—involving widespread flooding and turning the country’s attention to natural disasters.
- The government suspended partial curfews—in place since March—starting October 1 and permitted the reopening of recreation spaces ranging from archaeological sites to national parks to gyms. Municipalities must follow a color-coded alert system announced in July that runs from red (least safe) to green (safest) that defines occupancy and circulation rates, with greater occupancy allowed in towns with lower levels of contagion. Alerts levels are assessed every 15 days. As of October 17, 122 of Guatemala’s 340 municipalities were at alert level red. The country began its process on July 26, allowing for the reopening of businesses such as shopping centers and restaurants.
- Mitigation measures: Guatemala’s containment measures were based on a state of calamity first announced on March 6, 2020, for 30 days and extended each month since then. The state of calamity allows the government to enforce a range of measures over time, such as preventing price gouging, halting gatherings, and implementing weekend and evening curfews.
- Travel and border restrictions: Six months after closing them, Guatemala began to reopen its borders with Belize, El Salvador, Honduras, and Mexico starting September 18, 2020. On September 10, Giammattei issued a decree allowing for national and international flights starting September 18 as well. Travelers entering the country are required to show they had a negative coronavirus test in the 72 hours prior to traveling or face 14 days of isolated quarantine.
- The Guatemalan government closed all forms of borders on March 17, prohibiting entry by foreigners. Prior to that, Giammattei announced March 13 that he would restrict travel from the United States and Canada, thereby expanding an earlier travel ban involving any country where community transmission had occurred. On March 15, the Health Ministry added European foreign nationals to the list. His government had already imposed travel restrictions on people returning from China as early as January. The restrictions allowed Guatemalans to enter from countries on the travel prohibition list but required them to self-quarantine.
- On May 21, 2020, Giammattei said: “Guatemala is an ally of the United States, but I don’t believe the U.S. is an ally to Guatemala, because they don’t treat us like one.” On more than one occasion in 2020, the Guatemalan government, which has criticized the Trump administration for sending coronavirus-infected deportees to the country, announced it was halting deportation flights from the United States, but those flights have generally continued.
- School closings and restrictions: In late September, the Education Ministry confirmed that schools will not reopen in 2020 and announced a hybrid system of in-person and distance learning will be implemented in 2021. With the classes concluding on December 15, the Ministry announced that public school classes would restart on February 15 and private school classes could begin January 4. Schools located in the highest alert level (red) would continue to run virtual classes. Early in the pandemic, the government announced on March 14 that schools would close for three weeks but this time period was extended.
- Other updates:
- Per a May 27 report, Guatemala is among five Latin American countries witnessing an accelerated increase in food prices. In early April, Guatemalans began taking to the streets with white flags, asking for money to alleviate hunger. After that, per the Guardian, a color-based flag system has come into use in which red flags represents a need for medicine while “black, yellow, or blue means that a woman, child or elderly person is in danger of violence.”
Economic impact and measures
- GDP forecasts: ECLAC estimates a GDP contraction of 2.5 percent for Guatemala in 2020. In November, Fundesa forecast GDP growth of between 3.0 percent and 3.5 percent for 2021.
- Fiscal stimulus and economic policy: On June 10, the IMF’s executive board approved $594 million in emergency assistance to Guatemala amid the pandemic. On March 12, Congress approved the president’s proposed state of calamity bill with a fund of roughly $30 million for prevention and containment.
- Social programs:
- On May 7, 2020, Nomada.gt detailed the 10 government assistance programs set up to mitigate the pandemic’s economic effects, ranging from a daily minimum payment of $10 for workers laid off in the formal sector, to foodstuffs and food coupons for vulnerable populations, to a daily credit going to 200,000 families to cover breakfasts for public school students.
- On April 29, Giammattei vetoed an April 3 legislative measure that would have guaranteed citizens access to basic services during the pandemic. On April 30, the legislature overturned the veto. On May 3, Giammattei, said no law was needed as he had come to an agreement with business leaders that water, electricity, phone, and internet services will not be suspended in cases of unpaid bills and that people could negotiate one-year repayment plans with these companies. On May 21, legislation guaranteeing public services during the pandemic was published in the government’s official gazette.
- On March 25, the Guatemalan Congress approved an emergency bill named the "Emergency Law to Protect Guatemalans from the Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic" with a fund of roughly $480 million to cover elderly, health, employment, security, and economic programs during the emergency.
- Other updates:
- 2020 remittances broke new records, exceeding $11 billion and accounting for roughly 14 percent of GDP.
- After decreases in March and April, remittances to Guatemala steadily rose and, in July, broke the record for the highest monthly amount. In 2019, remittances to Guatemala represented 13.1 percent of that country’s GDP.
- A July 14 report by Guatemalan business group CACIF says that the country saw a loss of 104,000 jobs and $2.1 billion in sales between March 15 and July 7.
- The crisis wrought by the coronavirus could push 300,000 Guatemalans into extreme poverty, per a June 16 joint report by the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean and the Food and Agriculture Organization.
Spread
- February 9, 2021: 156,606 confirmed cases, 3,789 deaths
- January 12: 129,805 confirmed cases, 3,294 deaths
- December 15, 2020: 114,943 confirmed cases, 3,001 deaths
- November 17: 103,488 confirmed cases, 2,839 deaths
- October 20: 90,232 confirmed cases, 2,581 deaths
- September 22: 72,306 confirmed cases, 2,206 deaths
- August 25: 55,877 confirmed cases, 1,703 deaths
- August 4: 44,299 confirmed cases, 1,400 deaths
- July 7: 25,428 confirmed cases, 677 deaths
- June 9: 6,935 confirmed cases, 271 deaths
- May 12: 2,080 confirmed cases, 121 deaths
- April 14: 419 confirmed cases, 31 deaths
- March 26: First death
- March 17: 9 confirmed cases
- March 11: First 2 confirmed cases
- The country’s first cases involved two women who traveled to Europe: a 42-year-old who arrived from Spain and a 37-year-old who returned from Switzerland.
- Honduras confirmed its first death on March 26, 2020.
- President Juan Orlando Hernández announced the night of June 16 that he and his wife had tested positive for COVID-19, becoming the first sitting Latin American head of state to do so. Hernández was subsequently hospitalized with pneumonia on June 17, after which his doctors described his state as delicate but stable. He was released from the hospital on July 2.
Government response
- Vaccine plan: The first of Honduras’ 3.8 million vaccine doses are estimated to arrive in March 2021; 1.9 million of them are Pfizer vaccines promised to Honduras through COVAX. The other 1.9 million vaccine doses are from AstraZeneca.
- The Honduran Institute of Social Security teamed up with the Honduran Council of Private Enterprise to order 1.4 million vaccines from AstraZeneca.
- Reopening plan: The country’s reopening plan began on June 8 according to the scheme drafted by the multisector body in charge of overseeing the country’s reopening strategy. The plan, announced on May 29, divides the country into three non-contiguous regions, each comprising municipalities based on their number of confirmed cases and population sizes. The first region, with those municipalities with the fewest cases, has a three-phase reopening while the third region, with the most, will go through five. Below is a list of the phases that have gone into effect so far as well as any interruptions:
- Flooding and heavy rains from Category 4 Hurricane Eta and Category 5 Hurricane Iota hit Honduras in November, forcing government-led evacuations to temporary shelters across the country and derailing its staged reopening. Difficulties in creating social distancing in shelters and access to clean water create new barriers to virus containment in the country, according to Health Minister Alba Consuelo Flores. The positive test rate for COVID-19 in temporary shelters reached 33 percent in November.
- The country moved on to Phase 1 of the government’s reopening process on July 29, except a number of municipalities with high rates of contagion and hospitalizations, which remained in Phase 0. The government’s decision came a day after the multisector body tasked with overseeing the reopening of the Honduran economy called on the government to reactivate the economy. Phase 2 began September 28.
- Before that decision, nine districts and cities, including the one that houses the capital Tegucigalpa, had reverted to Phase 0 due to a spike in cases while the rest of the country had remained in Phase 1. Phase 1 initially went into effect June 8. Prior to that, all three regions kicked off reopening on June 1 with “Week 0,” a period during which sectors had to make the necessary preparations to meet the biosafety protocols established May 4 by Honduras’ Labor Secretariat.
- Mitigation measures: The government extended the national curfew until at least February 21, 2021 following over a dozen previous extensions between April and December, 2020. The curfew runs from 9 p.m. to 5 a.m. and businesses can operate at 50 percent capacity. Since August 22, Hondurans are allowed to move around on weekends based on identification card restrictions, after months of total weekend lockdowns. Below are other measures the Honduran government has taken:
- The Honduran government planned to put all coronavirus-related movement restrictions on pause from November 4 to 8 during a national holiday to boost economic activity and tourism. The plan was cancelled and emergency evacuation orders were issued due to Hurricane Eta.
- Through an April 3 statement, Honduras’ emergency management system (SINAGER) called on local governments to identify plots of land that could be used for mass graves in case the number of deaths surpasses the country’s capacity to process corpses. SINAGER also announced that it was barring all wakes and in-hospital autopsies.
- A state of exception went into effect on March 16 for seven days that allowed for the suspension of constitutional rights for seven days. Before that decree, the country’s national risk management agency announced on March 15 the suspension of all commercial and work activities, any events regardless of number of people, and public transportation, and reminded people that failure to comply could result in criminal charges.
- On March 14, the government decreed a two-week long national red alert.
- Travel and border restrictions: In December 2020, Honduras began restricting entry of people who have been to the UK or South Africa within the last 21 days over concerns about the new coronavirus strands. Land borders with El Salvador, Guatemala, and Nicaragua reopened on October 19. Since August, travelers entering Honduras must pre-register and present a negative rapid COVID-19 test or a PCR test upon entry.
- Starting in June 2020, a four-phase reopening plan of airports went into effect. Domestic flights resumed on August 10 and international flights on August 17. Hernández announced the closing of all borders on March 15 with the exception of Honduran nationals and permanent residents.
- When it comes to deportation flights, such flights have continued in spite of a March 10 suspension by the Honduran government. Authorities announced that, as of April 29, Honduras had four temporary isolation centers that can accommodate up to 1,050 deportees. Upon arrival, deportees are required to undergo 14 days of mandatory quarantines in these centers.
- School closings and restrictions: Schools and universities remain closed under the national curfew and it is unclear when they will reopen. Some classes are taking place virtually, but only 40 percent of Hondurans have access to the internet. Initially, the government announced that all public and private schools would be closed for two weeks starting March 13.
Economic impact and measures
- GDP forecasts: ECLAC’s December 2020 report forecasts an 8 percent GDP contraction in 2020—a record for Honduras.
- Fiscal stimulus and economic policy: When it comes to international organizations, the Honduran Congress approved on July 29 a series of loans from multilateral organizations totaling more than $109 million. Prior to that, the Central American Bank for Economic Integration announced on April 21 that it approved a $200 million contingent credit line for Honduras to “strengthen the position and liquidity management capacity” of the bank. Before that, the World Bank approved a credit worth $119 million on April 10 and the IMF disbursed $143 million on March 31.
- On the domestic front, the Honduran Congress approved a measure on July 16 that allows municipalities to use up to 45 percent of the $11.4 billion national budget to combat the pandemic.
- Additionally, the BCH approved a package of monetary policies to free up $465.5 million, the bank announced April 7. Among the policies, the bank announced the reduction of mandatory investments in the national currency along with a reduction in the BCH credit interest rate. In an extraordinary session on April 2, the Honduran Congress approved a number of economic measures aimed at alleviating the country’s productive sector and supporting workers including the creation of a trust to guarantee loans for the agricultural sector and micro, small, and medium-sized businesses. The legislature also authorized the presidency to issue debt worth up to $2.5 billion.
- Social programs: As of mid-June, 70 percent of furloughed workers received bonuses as part of the Temporary Solidarity Contribution program, per government figures released June 10. On June 16, the government extended a measure until August 31 that delayed income tax payments for micro, small, and medium-sized business employees, which account for 70 percent of the workforce in the country.
- Other updates:
- Per a July 2 report from the UN World Food Program (WFP), more than 1.6 million Hondurans are suffering from food insecurity during the COVID-19 crisis, a sharp increase from the less than one million food-insecure Hondurans prior to the pandemic.
“We need to understand that health security is national and global security,” says the University of Miami president and ex-health minister of Mexico.
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- February 9, 2021: 1,946,751 confirmed cases, 168,432 deaths
- January 12: 1,556,028 cases, 135,682 deaths
- December 15, 2020: 1,267,202 confirmed cases, 115,099 deaths
- November 17: 1,011,153 confirmed cases, 99,026 deaths
- October 20: 860,714 confirmed cases, 86,893 deaths
- September 22: 705,263 confirmed cases, 74,348 deaths
- August 25: 568,621 confirmed cases, 61,450 deaths
- August 4: 449,961 confirmed cases, 48,869 deaths
- July 7: 268,008 confirmed cases, 32,014 deaths
- June 9: 124,301 confirmed cases, 14,649 deaths
- May 12: 38,324 confirmed cases, 3,926 deaths
- April 14: 5,399 confirmed cases, 406 deaths
- March 18: First death
- March 17: 93 confirmed cases
- March 10: 7 confirmed cases
- March 3: 5 confirmed cases
- February 28: First confirmed case
- The country confirmed its first case, involving a 35-year-old man in Mexico City on February 28, 2020.
- Mexico’s first death, involving a 41-year-old man with diabetes, was confirmed on March 18, 2020. As he had not traveled, his case was one of local transmission, though Mexico would not enter a phase of trying to control for community transmission until March 24.
- Mexico’s extremely low rates of testing have come under scrutiny and, while the country ranks among the world’s worst affected, confirmed case counts are thought to be dramatic undercounts. As of February 1, 2021, Mexico’s coronavirus testing rate—among the lowest in Latin America—stood at 33.8 per 1,000 people, compared to a rate of 423.1 per 1,000 in regional testing leader Chile and 905.6 per 1,000 in the United States. On January 14, a Wall Street Journal editor reported that Brazil (population 212 million) had conducted about 29 million tests and Mexico (population 129 million) had conducted only 3.6 million.
- Mexico surpassed 160,000 confirmed deaths on February 7, 2021, after having overtaken India to have the world’s third-highest number of deaths on January 28. In June 2020, López-Gatell had said exceeding 60,000 deaths would be a “catastrophic scenario,” however, the toll is likely much higher. Per official figures, from January 1 through the middle of December 2020, Mexico had seen 274,486 more deaths than would have been anticipated for this period, for an excess mortality rate of more than 40 percent. In Mexico City, the country’s epicenter, excess mortality was 2.7 times the Health Ministry’s tally of COVID-19 deaths for the period March 30, 2020, through February 3, 2021.
- On February 9, 2021, Mexico overtook Panama and Peru to have Latin America’s highest per capita mortality rate in Latin America. At that point, Mexico also had the world’s highest observed case-fatality ratio (number of deaths per 100 confirmed cases), per Johns Hopkins University.
- Confirmed cases and death counts are shared during a nightly press conference that is typically led by Deputy Health Minister Hugo López-Gatell.
- On November 30, the WHO’s director general expressed concern about rising cases and deaths in Mexico, encouraging the country’s leaders to use face masks in order to model the behavior for the population at large. Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador is rarely seen using one. Even after announcing he’d tested positive on January 24, 2021, and returning to work on February 8, 2021, he said would not start wearing a face mask. López-Gatell has given mixed messages on the importance of face mask use and drew attention when, amid escalating contagion during the Christmas and New Year’s holidays and Mexicans being encouraged to stay home, he flew on a commercial flight to take a beach vacation and was photographed at different points on the trip without a mask.
- A February 2021 El Financiero poll found that 42 percent—the largest portion—of Mexicans considered the coronavirus and health issues to be the country’s top problem. Another 39 percent disapproved of the government’s handling of health matters, compared to 34 percent who approve. A November 2020 Buendía y Laredo poll found that 59 percent of Mexicans approve of the López Obrador government’s pandemic response, though that figure is down from 73 percent in April 2020.
Government response
- Vaccine plan: The AMLO government announced its vaccination plan on December 8, including a five-stage rollout that began with a first phase starting in December focusing on health workers. What follows is an age-based schedule beginning with people 80 years and older, followed by 10-year age blocks with the goal of vaccinating those 60 years and older in February and March. In the third phase, people 50 to 59, then 40 to 49 can get vaccinated in April and May. The last phase, involving Mexicans under 40, starts in June and is expected to run through March 2022. López-Gatell said the armed forces will aid with the vaccine’s rollout.
- Despite the rollout plan, vaccinations slowed to a near trickle in early February 2021, largely due to a slowdown in shipments of vaccine supplies, notably from Pfizer. As of February 8, just 718,000 doses had been administered. During a press conference that month, Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard said Pfizer shipments would again commence during the week of February 15.
- With supplies diminishing, Mexico has sought to sign contracts with a number of vaccine manufacturers. As of February 9, the country had approved five: Pfizer, AstraZeneca, Sputnik V, CanSino, and SinoVac. In addition, CureVac, Johnson & Johnson, and NovaVax were conducting or had plans to conduct clinical trials in Mexico as of February.
- On February 2, the government launched an online platform allowing people 60 and older to register for vaccines, but faced technical problems amid a flood of users. Within a week, nearly 4 million people had registered.
- López Obrador spoke with Russia’s Vladimir Putin on January 24, during which the two leaders agreed Moscow would send Mexico 24 million doses of the Sputnik V vaccine in the coming months. Following transparency concerns about the vaccine, a February 2 article in The Lancet supported its efficacy rate of 91.6 percent. On the same day, Mexico authorized Sputnik V for emergency use.
- On January 20, the active substance to produce the two-dose AstraZeneca vaccine arrived in Mexico from Argentina to produce 6 million doses that are estimated to be ready for use as early as late March. On January 4, Mexico approved use of the AstraZeneca-Oxford vaccine. On August 13, the Mexican government announced that, in partnership with Argentina, the two countries would produce it. Production, which could reach as many as 250 million doses to be shared region-wide, will be funded by billionaire Carlos Slim in partnership with AstraZeneca. López Obrador has said distribution in Mexico will be “universal and free.”
- On December 27, a government spokesman tweeted the vaccine doses for which Mexico had thus far signed accords to arrive in 2021: 34 million doses of Pfizer (which is a two dose vaccine), 77.4 million of AstraZeneca (two dose), 35 million of CanSino (one dose), and 51.5 million via the WHO’s multilateral COVAX plan.
- On December 27, a government spokesman tweeted the vaccine doses for which Mexico had at that point signed accords to arrive in 2021: 34 million doses of Pfizer (which is a two dose vaccine), 77.4 million of AstraZeneca (two dose), 35 million of CanSino (one dose), and 51.5 million via the WHO’s multilateral COVAX plan.
- On December 24, the country began to vaccinate the first of its 1.4 million health workers after an initial shipment of 3,000 doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine arrived a day earlier. On December 11, Mexico became the fourth country in the world and first in Latin America to authorize use of the Pfizer vaccine.
- Reopening plan: The Mexican government announced its three-phase reopening plan to achieve a “new normal” on May 13, 2020, kicking off the first phase on May 18. That phase involved more than 300 towns dubbed “municipalities of hope” that had no confirmed coronavirus cases and were given the green light to reopen. After a period of preparation, on June 1 the government launched a system of regular assessment within each of the country’s 32 states to determine reopening of social, educational, and economic activities based on a color-coded system running from red (more restrictive) to green (less restrictive, schools and public spaces can reopen).
- As of February 6, 2021, the Health Ministry had 13 states at alert level red, 17 states at alert level orange, two at alert level yellow, and none at the safest level of green. This represents a sharp uptick in contagion and hospitalizations in various parts of the country, given that Mexico ended 2020 with just three states at alert level red and began the year with five.
- On June 13, López Obrador released a decalogue outlining how to prepare for the “new normal,” with recommendations including staying informed about the state of health in the country, remaining optimistic, avoiding junk food, exercising, and seeking out a spiritual—if not religious—path. On June 14, the president released a video saying the most difficult part of the pandemic was over, even though, on June 10, the WHO warned that Mexico is facing its “most dangerous moment." On July 12, the president again said the pandemic is on the decline in Mexico. On the same day, the country surpassed Italy to become the country with the fourth-highest coronavirus death toll worldwide.
- In keeping with the reactivation plan, López Obrador restarted his domestic travels on June 1, which he’d initially suspended on April 15. He made the first international trip of his presidency on July 7 when he headed to the United States for an official meeting with then-President Donald Trump to celebrate the July 1 implementation of the USMCA trade deal. Since early in pandemic days, López Obrador’s lax approach to the virus drew concern given his weekend travels that frequently occur on commercial flights.
- Mitigation measures: May 31, 2020 marked the last day of Mexico’s National Period of Healthy Distancing ahead of June 1. Below is a timeline of mitigation efforts:
- In much of the country, November 2020 events commemorating Day of the Dead were cancelled and pantheons indicated plans to keep gates shuttered. Mexico City also limited December 12 celebrations for the Virgin of Guadalupe. The day typically involves pilgrims coming from around the country to the capital. Instead, the Basilica de Guadalupe, where the Virgin’s image is housed, plans to hold virtual events.
- On May 3, López-Gatell clarified that Mexico was no longer following the Sentinel Surveillance technique, which focuses on monitoring over widespread testing, given that the country entered Phase 3 on April 21. Instead, Mexico had shifted to a method based on hospital occupancy and available beds.
- The government announced on April 21 that the country had entered Phase 3, when there would be a rapid increase in cases and hospitalizations. López-Gatell indicated that social distancing measures implemented in Phase 2 would continue and he urged all companies engaged in non-essential work that had not yet shut down to do so.
- On the evening of March 30, Ebrard declared a national health emergency. This came as López-Gatell announced suspension of all non-essential activities, no gatherings of more than 50 people in the case of essential sectors, and self-quarantine for people over 60 and at-risk health populations. Ebrard clarified that the emergency measure is not a state of exception involving armed authorities and that companies that avoided paying workers or defied rules could face sanctions. On the morning of March 31, López-Gatell shared a list of essential services, which range from tax collection to elderly care centers to supermarkets.
- On March 24, the government declared that the country had entered Phase 2 of the epidemic after the WHO categorized it among countries with community transmission. The government suspended public and private gatherings of 100 people or more. In addition, the Finance Ministry said it would provide roughly $180 million to the Defense Ministry and Navy for measures such as expanding hospitalization capacity, coordinating with states and municipalities, and deploying thousands of health professionals. On the following day, López-Gatell said the federal government would stop all non-essential operations.
- On March 20, the Health Ministry revealed a new character, Susana Distancia, to illustrate how far apart people should stay from each other. Her name is a play on words: su sana distancia, or “your healthy distance.”
- Travel and border restrictions: The U.S. and Mexican governments announced January 11 that they would be extending border restrictions—first implemented March 21, 2020 and since extended monthly for North America—until February 24. The restrictions apply to non-essential crossings but not commerce. Mexico is the top international destination for U.S. travelers and there have been numerous stories published by major media outlets that tourists, facing restrictions in much of the world, are taking trips to Mexico and contributing to contagion.
- School closings and restrictions: Schools closed in March 2020 and have yet to reopen. In October 2020, the education minister said that schools would not open in a rushed manner. He previously announced on August 3 that schools would not reopen for the August 24 start of the academic year and would remain closed until alert level green is reached. Public school students are to be taught through a televised study program broadcast by major Mexican television networks. The government said that 94 percent of Mexican families have televisions, and that students without access to television or internet will access the programming via radio.
Economic impact and measures
- GDP forecasts: On January 29, 2021, Mexico’s statistics agency reported that the country saw GDP contract 8.5 percent in 2020, the biggest drop since 1932. In a February 9 blog post, the IMF predicted the country would see 4.3 percent GDP growth in 2021, but cautioned that the impact of new outbreaks could weigh down recovery. After months of gloomy GDP indicators, Mexico saw a 12 percent bounce in the third quarter of 2020, thanks to the reopening and per preliminary figures. GDP contracted 18.7 percent year on year in the second quarter of 2020, marking its biggest tumble since it began being registered in 1993 and the fifth consecutive quarter of GDP contraction.
- On May 21, the president announced that the country will start measuring an alternative GDP index that takes into account areas such as well-being, social inequality, and happiness.
- Fiscal stimulus and economic policy:
- The austerity-focused López Obrador government has resisted a broad stimulus package, with the Financial Times reporting in January 2021 that his stimulus plan is equivalent to 1.1 percent of GDP—less than a quarter of the regional average—and an eighth of what Brazil has spent, based on proportion of GDP.
- A June 2020 FT report found that Mexico’s microloan program, which initially offered 1 million credits on March 24 and has been expanded to 4 million, had distributed about 1.5 million credits and with no loan larger than $1,100. As of May 22, López Obrador said his administration had given out $1.9 billion in microloans to homeowners, the formally and informally employed, and SMEs, with the goal to award $13 billion in credits overall.
- On April 26, a business association known as the Mexican Business Council announced a private-sector agreement with the Inter-American Development Bank to help give loans of up to $12 billion to about 30,000 micro-, small-, and medium-sized enterprises amid the pandemic. During his April 27 press conference, López Obrador expressed suspicion of the pact, saying, “I don’t like the way they come to an agreement and want to impose their plans. Things aren’t like they used to be.” Also during the morning conference, the labor minister named companies that had not complied with work suspension rules.
- On April 22, López Obrador announced an 11-point economic plan amid the pandemic. Measures include pay cuts of as much as 25 percent for high-level public workers, the elimination of 10 deputy minister posts, and a commitment to austerity. His administration’s social programs and infrastructure projects—such as the Dos Bocas oil refinery, an airport expansion, and a train system—will continue. The president had previously confirmed that these major projects would go ahead in an April 5 speech.
- In an extraordinary session on April 21, Banco de México unveiled a $31 billion stimulus and cut its benchmark interest rate by 50 basis points to 6.0 percent. Taken together with prior measures, the moves amount to 3.3 percent of the 2019 GDP and will cover financing for banks to boost credit for small- and medium-sized businesses, as well as implement hedge transactions to decrease the peso’s volatility. The Bank had previously taken the same step on March 20, when it trimmed the rate to 6.50 percent.
- Social programs: Pandemic relief comes in the form of social programs that largely amount to cash transfers. These programs, which benefit populations such as the elderly with pensions or youth with scholarships, existed prior to and separately from the arrival of COVID-19. A February 2021 assessment of the social programs by the autonomous agency Coneval suggested that the programs fell short of offering an integrated approach to development, particularly in the pandemic context. Despite these social programs, Coneval reported that, 11 months into the pandemic, as many as 9.8 million Mexicans had fallen below the poverty line during the health crisis and one in four Mexicans were living in extreme poverty.
- Other updates:
- Many Mexicans received relief from the pandemic’s economic toll in the form of cash sent home from loved ones based largely in the United States. Remittances to Mexico defied expectations in 2020, surpassing $40 billion and breaking the prior record by 11.4 percent while accounting for 3.8 percent of GDP.
- Mexico was among the world’s ten most visited countries in 2019 when its tourism sector contributed 8.7 percent of GDP. After six consecutive years of historic tourism growth, however, 2020 saw 46 percent decrease in the number international travelers and a 55 percent decrease in revenues compared to 2019.
- Official figures released on June 1 show that 12 million people, whether formal or informal laborers, stopped working in April 2020.
- López Obrador suggested that, once the COVID-19 emergency passes, he would reexamine the country’s pension system while criticizing its prior privatization. Some workers have begun to withdraw funds from their pensions amid the pandemic.
- Pemex posted a $23 billion loss in the first quarter of 2020, given a crash in oil prices related to a drop in demand amid the pandemic. On April 20, Mexico’s crude oil exports closed at -$2.37 per barrel, down 116 percent from the April 17 close, when Moody’s downgraded state oil firm Pemex bonds to junk.
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- February 9, 2021: 6,367 confirmed cases, 171 deaths
- January 12: 6,152 confirmed cases, 167 deaths
- December 15, 2020: 5,887 confirmed cases, 162 deaths
- November 17: 5,725 confirmed cases, 159 deaths
- October 20: 5,434 confirmed cases, 155 deaths
- September 22: 5,073 confirmed cases, 149 deaths
- August 25: 4,494 confirmed cases, 137 deaths
- August 4: 3,902 confirmed cases, 123 deaths
- July 7: 2,846 confirmed cases, 91 deaths
- June 9: 1,464 confirmed cases, 55 deaths
- May 12: 25 confirmed cases, 8 deaths (See note below.)
- April 14: 9 confirmed cases, 1 death
- March 26: First death
- March 18: First confirmed case
- Vice President Rosario Murillo, wife of President Daniel Ortega, confirmed on March 18 the country’s first case, involving a 40-year-old Nicaraguan man who had traveled to Panama City.
- The Health Ministry confirmed the country’s first death on March 26. Reports emerged in early May of Nicaraguans dying suddenly and without explanation—some in the middle of the street—as health experts worry the deaths could be related to COVID-19.
- An independent, citizen-run COVID-19 registry reported that, as of February 4, 2021, Nicaragua had registered 12,716 cases and 2,947 deaths, while a Confidencial investigation published October 11 claims that the coronavirus is responsible for 6,000 deaths that the government attributes to heart attacks, pneumonia, diabetes, and high blood pressure.
- Per a June 8 Guardian report, at least 20 prominent Sandinistas have died of symptoms similar to those of COVID-19. Among the deceased from Ortega’s political party are ministers, at least three current female members of the National Assembly, and senior advisors.
- Note: After not giving an update on confirmed cases between May 6 and May 11, the Health Ministry announced on May 12 that it would move to weekly reports instead of daily updates. In its weekly update on May 19, the ministry reported a 1,016 percent increase in confirmed cases over the course of one week.
Government response
- Vaccine plan: As of January 14, 2021, Nicaragua plans to use three vaccines: Russia’s Sputnik V, AstraZeneca, and India’s Covaxin. Vice President Rosario Murillo claimed that the government has purchased 7.4 million doses of the vaccines. They aim to vaccinate 55 percent of the population (about 3.7 million people), though they have not announced a start date. In February, 504,000 doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine are expected to arrive through the WHO’s COVAX program. Nicaragua is also receiving financial support from the Central American Bank for Economic Integration and the Inter-American Development Bank.
- Reopening plan: The country has not gone into lockdown and so does not have a reopening strategy.
- Mitigation measures: After being absent for over two weeks as Hurricane Eta approached Nicaragua’s Caribbean coast, Ortega made a public appearance on November 8, stating there were no storm-related deaths, while taking the opportunity to note that the country has the lowest coronavirus mortality rate. Earlier this year, Ortega set a new record for being absent after going missing from the public eye for 38 days between June and July. The president re-emerged on July 20 at an event commemorating the forty-first anniversary of the Nicaraguan revolution. Ortega, wearing a face mask for the first time during the pandemic, praised his administration’s efforts during the crisis but did not announce any mitigation measures. The president previously went missing for 34 days between March and April, after which he delivered a televised address saying that Nicaragua hadn’t “stopped working, because if this country stops working, it dies.” Ortega’s administration has not instituted extensive mitigation measures and has even promoted large events. As a result, civil organizations in the country and health organizations across the region have taken the following steps:
- From June to September 2020, Nicaragua spent more than 10 million dollars on medical supplies. This was revealed to be part of the conditions to receive a loan from the IMF.
- As of February 2021, testing for the virus only occurs at the Ministry of Health building in Managua, resulting in long lines. This single location makes accessibility difficult for residents of the country’s border areas and Caribbean coast.
- In the wake of the storms’ destruction in indigenous regions, experts warned of the precarious conditions of make-shift shelters where few are adhering to social distancing guidelines.
- PAHO has repeatedly called on the Nicaraguan government to provide them with precise and transparent information regarding contagion within the country. Moreover, PAHO requested the Ortega administration that it allow a group of representatives from the organization into Nicaragua to strengthen the country’s monitoring strategy and mitigation response, according to a July 20 report by the Nicaraguan newspaper Confidencial. The government has not approved their request.
- In a June 10 statement, leaders from Nicaragua’s private sector called on the government to institute 14 health, economic, and social measures to mitigate the effects of the pandemic in the country.
- Before that, in a June 1 letter, over 30 medical associations in Nicaragua warned that the “exponential increase” in COVID-19 cases in the country has already led to the collapse of both the public and private healthcare systems. The group urged Nicaraguans to come together in a voluntary national four-week quarantine to slow contagion.
- Since then, Nicaragua’s private sector and the Pan-American Health Organization both joined the call for a voluntary quarantine and stricter health measures in mid-June. A month earlier, in a televised May 1 message, Ortega denounced stay-at-home and social distancing orders as “extreme” and “radical” measures that would “destroy the country.”
- Some of the minimal mitigation steps that the government has taken include cleaning and disinfecting some street markets and public transportation units in mid-April. Moreover, per a May 6 report by Confidencial, the government began rotating public employees, asking some to work from home and sending others on vacation to avoid contagion. Murillo stated in mid-April that health authorities had been visiting households across the country to verify their sanitation measures and give each family information about preventive measures. Before authorities confirmed the country’s first case, Ortega’s administration announced in early March that it would ban wakes and funerals for those who die of the virus.
- Travel and border restrictions: After they suspended their services in May 2020, most of the airlines that operate in the country announced on July 24 that they would not resume flights in and out of Nicaragua until at least September.
- In February 2021, the U.S. State Department warned citizens against travel to Nicaragua due to its handling of the pandemic and the weakness of the country’s justice system.
- An estimated 88,560 Nicaraguans living abroad have re-entered the country since the pandemic started through December 2020.
- On December 3, Venezuelan airline Conviasa resumed flights between Havana, Cuba, and Nicaragua.
- As of November 18, Avianca was the only international airline making trips to the country, which requires travelers to take PCR tests within 72 hours after arrival.
- U.S. airlines United, Spirit, and American were set to resume flights to the country the first week of October, but postponed travel until 2021.
- Though the government did not officially order the country’s borders closed, the government prevented the return of Nicaraguan migrants and canceled repatriation flights in mid-April, in late June, and then again in late July. Via a July 27 Twitter thread, the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights called on the Ortega government to respect the rights of the hundreds of Nicaraguan migrants who are stranded across border regions in Guatemala, Panama, and Costa Rica after being denied entry into Nicaragua.
- School closings and restrictions: The Education Ministry called on public schools to open on July 21 to start the second semester of the school year. The ministry previously ordered schools to open on April 20 to finish the first semester, though attendance remained low. Schools were initially closed for two weeks in mid-April. Starting in May, a number of universities began offering some courses virtually while others have taken steps to cut the number of students and faculty present on campus any given day by assigning them days of the week.
- Other updates:
- In response to protests by Central American cargo truckers in Costa Rica’s Peñas Blancas near the Nicaraguan border, the Costa Rican government reduced restrictions on October 9 by eliminating the requirement that trucks use GPS tracking and extending truckers' ability to stay in Costa Rica during their trips from five to 10 days.
- An Inter-American Dialogue poll conducted between July 1 and 9 found that 60 percent of Nicaraguans qualify Ortega’s management of the pandemic as “terrible,” with 50 percent of Nicaraguans considering COVID-19 to be the most urgent problem the country faces.
- According to a June 16 report by Confidencial, the government has concealed hundreds of coronavirus-related deaths in the first weeks of June. Similarly, a May 12 report by the Associated Press found that Nicaragua’s government was actively trying to conceal the number of coronavirus-related deaths in the country by burying patients with symptoms similar to COVID-19 quickly after they die—at times within hours of their deaths and without notifying family members.
- Though Nicaragua and Costa Rica reached an agreement on May 30 to reopen their shared border and allow the passage of foreign cargo, Nicaragua did not reopen its borders until May 31. The new agreement outlines that truckers may transit into Costa Rica but will only be allowed five days within the country’s borders. Ortega had ordered on May 18 the suspension of merchandise transited into Nicaragua from Costa Rica in response to that country’s decision to partially close down its borders to foreign cargo earlier that day, leaving 1,000 Nicaraguan truckers stranded. Costa Rica began testing Nicaraguan truckers entering its country on May 8 and said 61 had tested positive when it announced its border closure.
Economic impact and measures
- GDP projections: On December 16, ECLAC revised its annual projections for the region, estimating a lighter economic contraction of negative 4 percent GDP growth for Nicaragua. June projections from the World Bank showed that Nicaragua’s economy would contract by 6.3 percent in 2020.
- Figures from 2020 show an over 20 percent contraction in business for the country’s textile industry. There was a 14 percent contraction in business for Nicaragua’s free trade zones.
- Fiscal stimulus and economic policy: On December 8, the World Bank Board of Directors approved $20 million in financing for a Nicaragua COVID-19 Emergency Response Project meant to aid in the provision of medicines and lab and hospital equipment, targeting 6.3 million of the country’s most vulnerable inhabitants. The loan can be used over two years and three months and matures in 30 years. The Inter-American Development Bank announced on August 1 that it approved a loan for Nicaragua totaling $43 million, one that will be strictly supervised by multilateral organizations like the Pan-American Health Organization. The Central Bank of Nicaragua instituted four monetary measures on June 22, including reducing the country’s reference rate, and injected $116 million into the country’s economy. As of May 10, 2020, Nicaragua’s government had received at least $15.3 million in economic aid to mitigate the pandemic’s effects from the Central American Bank for Economic Integration, Taiwan’s government, and the Pan American Health Organization. However, the government has not announced any economic measures in relation to these funds.
- Social programs: None have been announced during the pandemic.
- Other updates:
- Per July 7 by Confidencial, the Nicaraguan government has received over 30,000 coronavirus tests in donations from the Pan-American Health Organization, Central American Bank for Economic Integration, and Russia. The fate of these tests remains unknown as the government does not report the total number of tests it has administered.
Spread
- February 9, 2021: 328,476 confirmed cases, 5,531 death
- January 12: 285,093 confirmed cases, 4,561 deaths
- December 15, 2020: 196,987 confirmed cases, 3,411 deaths
- November 17: 148,721 confirmed cases, 2,893 deaths
- October 20: 124,739 confirmed cases, 2,585 deaths
- September 22: 107,284 confirmed cases, 2,285 deaths
- August 25: 88,381 confirmed cases, 1,919 deaths
- August 4: 69,424 confirmed cases, 1,522 deaths
- July 7: 40,291 confirmed cases, 799 deaths
- June 9: 17,233 confirmed cases, 403 deaths
- May 12: 8,783 confirmed cases, 252 deaths
- April 14: 3,574 confirmed cases, 95 deaths
- March 17: 86 confirmed cases, 1 death
- March 10: 8 confirmed cases, first death
- March 9: First confirmed case
- A 40-year-old Panamanian woman who had traveled to Spain became the country’s first confirmed case of coronavirus.
- On March 10, 2020, Panama became the second country in Latin America and the first Central America to confirm a coronavirus-related death.
Government response
- Vaccine rollout: Panama’s plan is to use 3.3 million doses from Pfizer, close to 1.1 million doses from AstraZeneca, 200,000 doses from Johnson & Johnson, and 3.0 million doses of Sputnik V. The first batch of vaccines arrived on January 20, 2021 of just 12,840 doses of the Pfizer vaccines, although Panama expected 40,000 doses. Pfizer noted there were production issues on their end. The second shipment of vaccines is expected in February with Pfizer promising that all 450,000 doses will arrive by the end of March. The Pfizer vaccine will be prioritized for people over the age of 60, the chronically sick, people in nursing homes, teachers, health workers, the armed forces, police, and firefighters. The first shipment of the AstraZeneca vaccine is expected to arrive in the second half of February. It will be between 216,000 and 364,800 doses, provided through the COVAX program. Panama is still waiting to hear back from the Russian government over its request for the Sputnik V doses.
- Reopening plan:
- First Wave: President Laurentino Cortizo first announced the six-stage reopening process on May 11, 2020, and phase one began on May 13 with the resumption of technical services. Panama entered the second phase of its reopening process on June 1, under which the country had a nightly curfew between 7 p.m. and 5 a.m. As part of the second stage, infrastructure projects and non-metallic mining restarted while sites of social activity, including churches and sports facilities, reopened at 25 percent capacity. The use of face masks was mandatory. The Health Ministry announced on June 24 that the next four reopening phases would vary by province and be determined based on contagion rate and size of population in each area. On August 17, aspects of the third and fourth reopening phases went into effect nationally. The government announced on August 25 a new plan to continue the country’s reopening process. On September 7, all construction-related activities and industries reopened. Then, on September 28, restaurants, beaches, retail stores, and national tourism resumed. The plan’s last phase came October 12 when international tourism resumed and the national curfew was lifted.
- Second Wave: After a surge in cases attributed to the patriotic celebrations during November, Health Minister Luisa Francisco Sucre reissued a total quarantine from December 25 to 28, 2020, and from January 1 to 4, 2021. Two provinces, including Panama City, had their lockdowns extended from January 4 to 14. Starting January 14, restrictions will continue to be lifted across the country, depending on each provinces’ progress. As of February 7, restrictions were lifted in the hardest hit areas to reopen restaurants, beaches, rivers, and spas. Gender-based restrictions on shopping were also removed.
- See below for further reopening measures:
- A December 15, 2020, executive decree laid out new labor norms as of January 1, 2021, when private companies could begin to gradually reincorporate parts of their suspended labor force depending on their sector.
- Minera Panamá—originally scheduled to reopen under phase six of the country’s reopening plan—was given the green light to reopen, per a July 7 government announcement. The copper mine suspended over 4,000 worker contracts since the government ordered it to close in early April. Before closing down, around 200 workers tested positive for COVID-19 and five died.
- On May 10, Panama’s Health Ministry published a number of health and safety guidelines that both the public and private sectors had to meet before reopening began.
- Mitigation measures: As part of the government’s new reopening plan (see above), Panama implemented new mitigation measures as of September 14, 2020, when a curfew went into effect across most of the country. Panama’s movement restrictions based on gender were also lifted nationally on September 14, though they were briefly reinstated in January 2021. Previous measures included:
- With the end-of-year surge of COVID-19, Panama shored up its health sector by contracting foreign doctors from Colombia, Cuba, Mexico, the United States, and Venezuela.
- Between April and May, 2020, Panama went through at least five weekends of complete quarantine that were mandated by Cortizo.
- Panama’s national quarantine began on March 25, 2020, without a specified end date. Before that, on March 12, Cortizo announced a state of emergency, which granted the government 180 days starting on March 13 to mobilize up to $50 million to mitigate the effects of the pandemic.
- Travel and border restrictions: Panama’s airports opened to international travel on October 12, 2020, requiring passengers to sign an affidavit before boarding flights and then taking a $30 COVID-19 test upon arrival within 48 hours. The government announced on August 21 it had suspended all incoming international flights until at least September 21 from the original March 22 suspension. Before the total suspension, the government monitored incoming flights from China, Italy, Iran and South Korea in early March. Capacity in ground transportation vehicles remains limited to 50 percent. Panama reopened its land borders in late January 2021 with a negative test necessary to enter the country.
- School closings and restrictions: Public and private schools resumed remote classes on July 20 via a virtual platform launched on June 22. According to Education Ministry figures released August 10, three in ten Panamanian students don’t have access to remote classes. The government initially decreed a national temporary suspension of classes in both public and private institutions from March 11 to March 20, after which the Education Ministry extended the suspension multiple times. While students continue learning remotely, school staff and administration were allowed to enter buildings starting October 12. The government is set to use schools for phase two of its vaccine distribution plan.
- Other updates:
- Via a July 31 statement, the Inter-American Court of Human Rights ordered Panama to protect the health and life of the hundreds of migrants stuck in the country due to the pandemic, particularly those in the Darién region, by providing adequate COVID-19 tests and treatment. Per a mid-May La Estrella de Panamá report, 2,532 migrants of different nationalities were stuck in Panama due to border closures across the region, impeding them from continuing their journey north.
Economic impact and measures
- GDP forecasts: ECLAC’s December 16, 2020, projections for the country point to an 11 percent GDP contraction in 2020. The IMF’s economic outlook for the country, updated in October, projects a 9 percent GDP contraction in 2020. The fund’s Western Hemisphere director, Alejandro Werner, notes that the country has one of the best debt standings in the region and is set to recuperate in 2021 with 4 percent growth.
- Fiscal stimulus and economic policy: Overall, the government has spent $1.4 billion on pandemic-related expenses so far, per a February 9, 2020 presentation by Minister of Economy and Finance Héctor Alexander. On May 27, 2020, the government extended until July 17 its grace period to pay the income tax that was due on March 31. The extension first went into effect on March 20. The government announced on May 26 that it had restructured its budget by $2 billion to free up funds for the government’s response to the pandemic. In the international front, Panama has relied on the following economic policies:
- On January 19, 2021, the IMF announced it will provide a $2.7 billion line of credit to Panama. The two-year arrangement is part of the IMF’s Precautionary and Liquidity Line and is meant to help countries recover from “extreme external shocks.”
- On the international front, Cortizo announced on April 13 that the Panamanian government had secured $1.3 billion in credit lines from multilateral organizations. Panama received $500 million from the IMF and an equal amount from the World Bank to invest in employment, health, and security, and $300 million from the Inter-American Development Bank for medium and small companies and the agricultural sector.
- On March 26, 2020, the Panamanian government sold $2.5 billion in sovereign bonds in the cross-border market in order to divert funds from the country’s budget to combat the pandemic. Panama was the first country in the region to issue sovereign bonds amid the pandemic.
- The government has passed a number of measures aimed at stimulating the economy including a package increasing manufacturing competitiveness, a bill to make it easier for foreigners to invest in retail estate, and measures to make the country more attractive for filming.
- In February 2021, Fitch Ratings and Moody’s downgraded Panama’s risk rating from BBB to BBB-, citing the poor economic management of the pandemic as rationale for the downward revision.
- Social programs: On June 30, Cortizo signed a measure instituting a moratorium on a number of payments—including mortgages, a variety of loans, and credit cards—until December 31, 2020. The president had previously reached an agreement with the Panama Banking Association on May 4 to put in place such a moratorium, when Cortizo also signed a measure to suspend payments on public services—including electricity, internet, and phone bills—for the next four months. The utilities moratorium expired on July 1, though clients that are still unable to pay for services can continue appealing for relief.
- Before that, Cortizo launched Panama Solidario on March 27, 2020, an initiative to collect and distribute funds and resources to Panama’s poorest communities. After protesters across Panama complained they had not received any aid from the program as of mid-April, the president announced April 29 that the digital platform for Panama Solidario would be available starting April 30, through which funds began to be disbursed in May.
- A March 20, 2020, executive order mandates that companies suspend worker contracts if a business has to temporarily close, meaning that employees will not be paid but won’t necessarily be fired. Figures from Panama’s Ministry of Labor and Workforce Development show that, as of April 15, nearly 50,000 Panamanians saw their employment contracts suspended in one month.
- Other updates:
- Due to reduced personnel, the Panama Canal has seen a traffic clog that has delayed the passage of cargo ships some 10–15 days according to October reports.
- In May, crossings through the Panama Canal—which is used by 6 percent of global trade—dropped by 21 percent due to decreases in international trade, according to figures from the Panama Canal Authority (APC). The ACP announced on March 25 that ships attempting to cross through the Canal had to meet a number of safety requirements, including that all aboard each ship be healthy.
- Moody’s projected in mid-April that Panama’s public debt will expand to 53 percent of the country’s GDP with the deficit growing 2.2 percent.
Spread
- February 9, 2021: 139,819 confirmed cases, 2,862 deaths
- January 12: 117,590 confirmed cases, 2,437 deaths
- December 15, 2020: 95,353 confirmed cases, 1,991 deaths
- November 17: 72,857 confirmed cases, 1,613 deaths
- October 20: 56,073 confirmed cases, 1,231 deaths
- September 22: 34,828 confirmed cases, 705 deaths
- August 25: 14,228 confirmed cases, 231 deaths
- August 4: 5,852 confirmed cases, 59 deaths
- July 7: 2,502 confirmed cases, 20 deaths
- June 9: 1,187 confirmed cases, 11 deaths
- May 12: 737 confirmed cases, 10 deaths
- April 14: 161 confirmed cases, 8 deaths
- March 20: First death
- March 17: 11 confirmed cases
- March 10: 1 confirmed case
- March 7: First confirmed case
- Paraguay’s Health Ministry confirmed the country's first case on March 7. The 32-year-old man, who was quarantined in his home, had traveled to Ecuador for business.
- The country’s first death was confirmed on March 20 and involved a 69-year-old doctor.
- Vice President Hugo Velásquez tested positive for COVID-19, the government announced on January 16.
Government response
- Vaccine rollout: On February 2, 2021, the government announced an “action plan” for vaccination including three phases. The first phase involves healthcare workers and adults over 60 years of age, followed by adults between 18 and 59 years old, high-risk groups, essential workers, and indigenous populations, and lastly airport and land border workers, police and military personnel, and the rest of the population. Starting February 10, healthcare workers became able to sign up for vaccine appointments using an official Health Ministry online form. Earlier, on January 15, the Health Ministry announced a budget of $90 million to acquire vaccines outside the WHO COVAX plan, and on the same date, the country became the fourth in Latin America to approve emergency use of the Russian Sputnik V vaccine. The government had announced on December 13, 2020, that COVID-19 immunizations will start in the second quarter of 2021, with 4.3 million doses guaranteed for 30 percent of the population, based on negotiations with the COVAX Facility. In December 2020, Health Minister Julio Mazzoleni announced that Paraguay was in talks with five foreign pharmaceutical firms to purchase up to 4 million vaccine doses (for the country of roughly 7 million)—in addition to those already secured via COVAX—that are expected in May or June 2021 for a price of about $40 million.
- Reopening plan: On January 31, 2021, the government extended stricter health regulations for a second time for commercial, professional, and educational establishments, as well as sports facilities, social, and religious spaces through February 21, subject to further extensions. Starting December 7, 2020, the government tightened restrictions for two weeks after new cases rose to over 1,000 per day.
- Mitigation measures:
- Starting January 11, 2021, through the end of the month, the government announced new measures to stop the spread of COVID-19, including a midnight to 5 am curfew; only delivery services and pharmacies may remain open for 24 hours a day; alcohol sales outside restaurants are banned from 10 pm to 5 am; public social gatherings are capped at 100 people and private social gatherings at 12 people.
- In August 2020, the Health Ministry announced that an additional 1,420 health professionals were trained in the National Health Institute to augment the number of those able to serve in intensive care units, as COVID-19 case numbers continue to increase. The Health Ministry’s National Blood Program on July 8 called for Paraguayans who have recovered from the virus to participate in trials to donate blood plasma to help allow active cases to combat the disease.
- In April 2020, the government released a new online tool, MapaInversiones, by which the public can access government information on how it’s using resources amid the health emergency, part of a transparency campaign supported by Inter-American Development Bank. On March 16, the presidency declared a health emergency in the entire country under Decree 3456.
- Travel and border restrictions: On October 15, 2020, the government reopened the three main land border crossings with Brazil. Arrivals must provide negative results from a PCR test taken 72 hours before traveling and must quarantine for two weeks upon arrival. Foreign Minister Federico González announced that, beginning October 21, the Asunción airport would reopen for international flights, and that visitors staying less than one week in the country can forgo the quarantine requirement if they present a negative test. On September 7, the government approved a controlled air traffic protocol announced at the end of August for “bubble” flights to operate between Paraguay and Uruguay.
- School closings and restrictions: On January 11, 2021, the government announced that university classes will reopen with a cap of 20 students attending in person, and up to 50 students at a time may sit for university entry exams in person. School closures were first announced on March 10, 2020.
- Other updates:
- Paraguay’s Superior Court for Electoral Justice announced on July 27 that the country’s municipal elections are postponed until October 10, 2021 as a result of the pandemic. They were originally scheduled for November 2020.
Economic impact and measures
- GDP forecasts: Paraguay’s GDP is projected to grow 3.5 percent in 2021, per a December 2020 ECLAC report, after a 1.6 percent contraction in 2020.
- Fiscal stimulus and economic policy:
- On June 30, 2020, the government’s Agricultural Enabling Credit branch distributed over $23.2 million in loans to over 15,700 agricultural producers to mitigate the pandemic’s impact.
- On May 6, 2020, the government announced the creation of a special commission to supervise government purchases toward fighting COVID-19, including controlling the use of resources under the March 26 health emergency law that made $1.6 billion available for pandemic relief. Of this sum, the government said it would put $514 million toward public health services and $408 million toward job protection.
- The Finance Ministry announced on April 23, 2020, it would issue $1 billion in sovereign bonds to fight the pandemic, after on April 15, the government announced measures including distributing $100 million to 1.2 million informal workers, $100 million to help finance the private healthcare subsidies, $20 million to care for the elderly, and $10 million for economic relief for 160,000 low-income families.
- On March 13, 2020, Abdo Benítez announced the allocation of roughly $81 million for health measures and a reduction in interest rates reduced to 3.75 percent from 4 percent. The government announced it would distribute around $100 million to some 10,000 small and medium companies affected. On March 31, the Health Ministry announced it would make available $100 million for medical equipment and ICU beds, as part of an emergency package of $500 million.
- Social programs:
- When Alto Paraná became the country’s hotspot due to an increase in cases in early August, 2020, the government announced it would begin issuing money transfers worth roughly $72 to over 28,000 low-income inhabitants across the department’s 22 districts to provide economic relief.
- The Finance Ministry revealed on June 17 that the government had distributed $1.2 billion to different programs under the March 16 health emergency to fight the pandemic, with $243 million of that sum going into health, education, and security services in April and May.
- On July 14, the Social Welfare Institute head announced that starting July 17 those who lost their jobs during the pandemic may collect a third wave of subsidy payments as part of the $100 million social welfare emergency program announced on March 26. In an expansion to the original decree, this measure included workers who earn more than double the minimum salary. On May 13, the Development Ministry announced it would distribute an additional $4.8 million in the form of direct debit deposits to roughly 165,229 Paraguayans via the Tekoporã social welfare program, after an earlier Ñangareko program announced on March 25 provided money transfers for food and hygiene products to roughly 33,000 families whose income has been affected by quarantine.
- Other updates:
- On June 22, the Central Bank cut the benchmark interest rate by 50 basis points to 0.75 percent, allowing for looser monetary policy to boost the economy.
- On April 17, Abdo Benítez announced that the purchase of health materials bought by any company or organization shall be audited by the state. Previously, on March 30, the president announced a reduction of state salaries to save roughly $52 million. The measure decrees that no official salary should exceed $5,635 a month—the presidential salary.
Spread
- February 9, 2021: 1,196,778 confirmed cases, 42,626 deaths
- January 12: 1,040,231 confirmed cases, 38,399 deaths
- December 15, 2020: 987,675 confirmed cases, 36,817 deaths
- November 17: 939,931 confirmed cases, 35,317 deaths
- October 20: 874,118 confirmed cases, 33,875 deaths
- September 22: 776,546 confirmed cases, 31,586 deaths
- August 25: 607,382 confirmed cases, 28,001 deaths
- August 4: 439,890 confirmed cases, 20,007 deaths
- July 7: 309,278 confirmed cases, 10,952 deaths
- June 9: 203,736 confirmed cases, 5,738 deaths
- May 12: 76,306 confirmed cases, 2,169 deaths
- April 14: 10,303 confirmed cases, 230 deaths
- March 19: First three deaths
- March 17: 117 confirmed cases
- March 10: 11 confirmed cases
- March 6: First case
- Peru’s first case involved a 25-year-old man who had recently returned from a trip that took him to Spain, France, and the Czech Republic.
- The country’s health ministry announced the first death from the virus on March 19, 2020: a 78-year-old man with an underlying heart condition.
- In the second week of April 2020, Peru ramped up its testing 15-fold. Through the end of May, Peru conducted more than 1 million COVID-19 tests.
- One of Peru’s top infectious disease experts warned on May 17, 2020, that the country’s health system is on the verge of collapse. Ciro Maguiña, associate dean of Peru’s Medical College, was a member of the president’s COVID-19 health experts task force before resigning on May 11 over what he said were “harmful” statements by then-Health Minister Victor Zamora about the country’s medical professionals. Five other members of the task force resigned in the week after Maguiña.
- In September 2020, Peru became the country with the highest per capita death rate in the world, though it had fallen to the seventh spot by February 11, 2021. An August Ipsos poll also found that two in every three Peruvians know someone who’s passed away from the virus, up from one in 20 back in April. Three in four Peruvians reported having experienced anxiety—mostly over lost income—during the national quarantine, which first went into effect March 15, according to a national survey taken during the last full week of May. Peru’s new case rate growth—along with hospitalizations and excessive deaths—finally started to slow in October and November only to pick up again in January, 2021.
- For every confirmed COVID-19 fatality, there are probably two more that can be attributed to the disease, a Health Ministry epidemiologist confirmed in an interview on June 7, 2020.
- As Lima opened up, Peru’s second-largest city, Arequipa, was the country’s latest hotspot as of mid-June 2020, overwhelming the local health system. On July 22, local medical experts asked the Vizcarra administration to take over Arequipa’s pandemic response, citing mismanagement and deceptive practices by city officials. Before that, the Amazonian city of Iquitos emerged as a hotspot in May, and a visit from Zamora on May 11 didn’t help assuage medical professionals’ concerns. Local health officials estimated at that time that up to 90 percent of COVID-19 fatalities in the city—the largest one in the world not accessible by car—were due to lack of medical equipment and low staffing numbers as so many doctors and nurses have fallen ill. During his trip, Zamora promised the construction of two new plants, but cautioned those will take several weeks to build. A local official in the indigenous community of Pucacuro confirmed that 600 of 800 residents had COVID-19 as of May 25, just over a month after the district mayor and aides arrived in the isolated community to distribute food, albeit without masks or certificates of good health.
- Interim President Francisco Sagasti, who came to power on November 16, 2020, after a tumultuous week that saw President Martín Vizcarra removed from office seven days earlier, in one indication of his priorities, visited a state hospital mere hours after receiving the votes necessary to take office. There were also reports he’d asked Vizcarra’s Economy Minister Maria Antonieta Alva to return to the cabinet.
Government response
- Vaccine plan: Peru began vaccinations on February 9, two days after a shipment of 300,000 doses of the Chinese Sinopharm vaccine arrived in the country. Peru is set to receive 38 million doses of the Sinopharm vaccine, along with 20 million more from Pfizer. At a reported $72.50 per dose, the Sinopharm vaccine is one of the most expensive on the market, and Peru was the first Latin American nation to purchase from the Chinese state-owned firm. On December 14, Sagasti proposed that the South American bloc PROSUR set up a pool in order to grant members equal access to vaccines.
- Reopening plan: Then-President Vizcarra announced a four-phase reopening plan on April 29, 2020. In industry and mining sectors, for example, non-metallic mineral and paper production began in May, large-scale underground mining and medium-scale open-pit mining in June, medium-scale underground mining in July, and tobacco production in August. Sagasti has thus far kept Vizcarra’s original curfew, mobility restrictions, and social distancing measures in effect.
- On July 15, 2020, Vizcarra replaced Zamora with Pilar Mazetti as health minister. Mazetti was one of 14 out of 18 ministers Vizcarra kept in his cabinet after the Peruvian Congress gave a vote of “no confidence” to Vizcarra’s cabinet on August 4, forcing the president to confirm a new one, which he did on August 6.
- Machu Picchu reopened to tourists on July 1, 2020, albeit at only about 15 percent of its usual volume. Just 675 people will be allowed per day, compared to a 4,110 daily average in 2019. Tourists must follow established paths and directions around the historic site’s ruins, and visits are capped at two hours. The heritage site shut back down again on January 31, 2021.
- Around 6 million Peruvians—roughly one third of workers—returned to work on May 25, 2020, as the country entered the second phase of its reopening plan. In late April, just one in four Peruvians was working during the national shutdown.
- Commercial and shopping centers opened at 50 percent capacity in 16 of Peru’s 24 districts on June 18, 2020. Gamarra, a sprawling commercial district in Lima with some 30,000 daily visitors pre-pandemic, became the first major shopping center to reopen on June 15. Previously, the government closed two of Lima’s largest produce markets on May 16 after 80 percent of merchants tested positive for COVID-19, and another two markets on May 20 where 40 percent of vendors tested positive.
- Mitigation measures: Lima and nine other regions went back into a month-long mandatory 24-hour quarantine on January 31, 2021, in the face of a second wave, while 16 others are under curfew for at least seven hours per day. In 2020, Vizcarra declared a national emergency on March 15 and instituted a nationwide curfew on March 18, which was in effect through June 30. Reopening began on July 1, but less than two weeks later, the Lima government and nine surrounding municipalities agreed to ask the government to go back on lockdown after cases failed to abate.
- Amid concerns over price gouging, on the evening of June 24, 2020, Vizcarra gave private health clinics 48 hours to reach an agreement on set prices they will bill the government to attend to uninsured COVID-19 patients, or else he would invoke Article 70 of the Constitution, which permits the government to expropriate private property in the case of “national security or public necessity.” The clinics and the executive arrived at a “tense” agreement over prices hours later.
- Vizcarra’s approval rating jumped 35 points in March 2020 during the first week of his pandemic response to 87 percent, according to Ipsos, but by late August fell to 60 percent. Some 96 percent approve of the curfew and 95 percent support the national quarantine.
- On April 20, 2020, an association of Peruvian indigenous peoples filed a formal complaint with the government for a lack of a plan to address the pandemic within the country’s 1,800 communities. Although the committee chair said technical tests ahead of time were successful, Culture Minister Sonia Guillén blamed a faulty internet connection for her not being able to hear and respond to lawmakers’ questions in congressional hearing on May 12 about her ministry’s COVID-19 response plan for Peru’s indigenous communities. This was the fourth committee meeting on the topic and the first Guillén attended.
- Peru instituted a gender-based quarantine system on April 2, 2020, in which women were allowed to circulate three days a week and men the other three. The system was scrapped nine days later, however, for lack of efficiency and because markets were overly packed on days women circulated and became hot spots for contagion.
- Travel and border restrictions: The March 15, 2020 national emergency put strict controls on people’s movement within the country. The decree closed all of Peru’s borders as of 11:59 pm March 16, as well as prohibited domestic travel between Peru’s 196 provinces.
- Domestic flights resumed July 15, 2020. A flight from Santiago—the first international flight in Peru in seven months—landed in Arequipa on October 19. As of February 2021, limited international flights were permitted to 36 destinations in 17 countries.
- Vizcarra said on April 16, 2020, that he would allow limited domestic travel so that Peruvians who’ve been stranded in regions where they don’t reside can return home.
- School closings and restrictions: Peru’s public schools, originally scheduled to start the 2020 school year on March 16, never got to open their doors as all classes went online. While most classes remained online for the rest of 2020, in-person classes resumed in rural communities with low to no incidences of COVID-19 on July 1. The 2021 school year is set to begin on March 15, with mixes of in-person and virtual learning.
- Other updates:
- A judge released political heavyweight Keiko Fujimori from jail on May 1, 2020, citing the threat of catching COVID-19 behind bars among the reasons. The former presidential candidate and Popular Force party head was three months into a 15-month pre-trial detention sentence while she waits to be tried on charges of corruption and money laundering.
Economic impact and measures
- GDP projections: Peru’s GDP contracted 12.9 percent in 2020, below the -7.7 drop for the region as a whole, per an ECLAC December 2020 report. Goldman Sachs said in late February 2020 that Peru, along with Chile, counts as Latin America’s most exposed economy to the coronavirus. Fitch Ratings estimates that increased public spending will raise Peru’s debt-to-GDP ratio to 44 percent in 2022, up from 27 percent in 2019.
- Fiscal stimulus and economic policy:
- On April 29, 2020, Peru’s Congress passed a law that allows workers who’ve made contributions to private retirement funds to withdraw up to $12,900 from those funds penalty-free. Vizcarra apparently had reservations about letting up to 25 percent of all private retirement funds, worth about $11 billion, to be withdrawn, but the president has no veto power in Peru. In March, the president’s cabinet approved by decree penalty-free withdrawals of about $300 in April and May, worth 3.7 percent of all the monies in private funds, or about $1.5 billion, per Alva.
- The Central Bank issued a first set of bonds, worth $1.2 billion and aimed at boosting credit for Peruvian businesses, on April 23, 2020. It’s part of a plan by the bank, led by Julio Velarde, to issue a total of $8.9 billion in bonds that will reach an estimated 350,000 businesses. The government increased the maximum lending amounts by up to 50 percent, based on the business’s size, in a series of updates to the plan announced by Alva on May 28. Peru also plans to issue bonds worth up to $4.4 billion to fund the state’s response to the health crisis.
- Social programs:
- The government launched the program Reactiva Perú on April 6, 2020, which aims to guarantee up to 98 percent of business loans totaling at $9,000 or less for companies that need funding to pay their employees and/or their suppliers.
- The Vizcarra administration announced a plan on April 13, 2020 to subsidize the salaries of non-essential workers whose jobs are completely suspended by the pandemic, as well as payments to the national healthcare system, for three months. During those 90 days, workers who’d normally earn up to $700 monthly are eligible to receive about $225 per month paid to them directly from the government. On June 24, the administration amplified the conditions under which a company can furlough its workers.
- In the first couple months of the pandemic, the government issued various payments to groups including self-employed and informal workers (roughly three-quarters of households), low-income households, and rural households. It’s believed that many contracted the virus while waiting in long lines at banks to receive these payments, as 60 percent of Peruvians are unbanked, as well as in markets. BBVA bank reported that online banking transactions were up 58 percent in the first half of 2020, compared to the year before, including a 72 percent rise in transactions via mobile. That said, online banking still is not widespread, with just 16 percent of banked Peruvians saying they used online services in 2019.
- Other updates:
- After ending the first quarter roughly 6 points down from the beginning of 2020, investment levels in Peruvian mutual funds recovered in the second quarter, ending 4.2 percent above where they started at the beginning of the year, reported Peru’s largest financial holding company on July 8.
- Close to one-third of Peruvians—and three-fifths of the poorest citizens—lost their jobs in the first five weeks of the national emergency, according to a national survey released April 27, 2020. The survey found that just one quarter of Peruvians were working at the time: 10 percent were able to work from home, 9 percent are essential workers, and 6 were working clandestinely. Another 20 percent were not working but still had their job, and 25 percent were not working before the pandemic hit.
Spread
- February 9, 2021: 169,346 confirmed cases, 1,897 deaths
- January 12: 144,781 confirmed cases, 1,659 deaths
- December 15, 2020: 111,232 confirmed cases, 1,312 deaths
- November 17: 81,050 confirmed cases, 971 deaths
- October 20: 58,830 confirmed cases, 774 deaths
- September 22: 42,660 confirmed cases, 617 deaths
- August 25: 30,720 confirmed cases, 395 deaths
- August 4: 19,324 confirmed cases, 237 deaths
- July 7: 8,714 confirmed cases, 157 deaths
- June 9: 5,185 confirmed cases, 142 deaths
- May 12: 2,299 confirmed cases, 114 deaths
- April 14: 923 positives, 45 deaths
- March 17: 5 positives, first death
- March 13: 3 confirmed cases
- Governor Wanda Vázquez confirmed the U.S. territory’s first three cases on March 13.
- On April 28, the Health Department said it was attributing a March 17 death to COVID-19, making a 54-year-old Puerto Rican man the island’s first death from the virus. The agency previously reported that the island’s first pandemic-related death was on March 21, involving a 68-year-old Italian tourist.
- Starting on April 9, the Health Department began including suspected coronavirus deaths in its official death count, in line with guidelines set forth by the CDC.
- Note: Starting June 11, Puerto Rico’s Health Department began differentiating between results from molecular and serological tests, referring to the former as cases and deaths that have been confirmed and the latter as probable cases and deaths. Therefore, the numbers listed after June 23 reflect the total of both tests. Before this change in methodology, the island’s Health Secretary Lorenzo González acknowledged on April 17 that the department had been reporting inaccurate data, given that the department had been counting cases multiple times due to testing individuals more than once. Then, on April 24, González announced that the agency had deciphered its data. As a result, the numbers prior to April 14 reflect the total number of positive tests as reported by the agency, not the number of confirmed cases.
- Puerto Ricans elected Pedro Pierluisi as governor on November 3, 2020. He took office on January 2, 2021.
Government response
- Vaccine rollout: Puerto Rico began receiving vaccines in December. However, delays in vaccine deliveries disrupted the island’s original distribution plan and slowed vaccination efforts. As of February 2, 2021, 339,000 people have been vaccinated. The vaccine will be provided free of charge to all who would like to receive it.
- Reopening plan: Puerto Rico began its reopening process on May 4 and went through four phases between May and July. Since then, however, the governor has instituted a number of changes, going back and forth between closing and reopening. Here is the latest:
- After restrictions were temporarily tightened from December 3 to January 7, Puerto Rico’s new governor, Pedro Pierluisi announced that beginning January 8 beaches are reopened to the public and the weekly Sunday lockdown is lifted. Beginning February 8, 2021, Pierlusi cut back curfew hours to 12:00 a.m. to 5:00 a.m.
- Previously, in anticipation of the Christmas holiday, Vázquez on December 3 reintroduced a 24-hour lockdown on Sundays and extended the 9 pm to 5 am curfew until January 7. Additionally, beaches are closed except to those exercising. Alcohol sales are banned on weekends.
- Vázquez announced that beginning on November 16 a mandated 30 percent capacity limit will be enforced in restaurants, churches, shopping malls and gyms. These measures are to be enforced by unarmed members of the national guard. Public transportation began operating again on October 16.
- At a September 10 press conference, Vázquez announced that the island would begin reopening once again. From September 12 through October 2, most commercial spaces reopened at 25 to 50 percent capacity, and beaches were open without restrictions.
- Previously, Vázquez announced on July 31 that the island’s reopening process would be halted starting in August.
- The use of face masks at all times remains mandatory, as has been the case since April.
- Mitigation measures: From December 3 until January 7, Puerto Rico tightened restrictions in an attempt to limit coronavirus cases during the height of the island’s Christmas tourist season. Looser restrictions were re-introduced on January 8, marking the end of the busy holiday season.
- Vázquez instituted an island-wide lockdown and curfew on March 15, 2020, which she and her predecessor have now extended over a dozen times between March and February 2021. Additional restrictions across this time period included a ban on alcohol sales during certain hours, limiting the capacity of business, and closing bars, casinos, clubs, theaters, and gyms.
- Despite a spike in cases, Vázquez announced on September 10 that most restrictions would be lifted in September and there would be further relaxed restrictions in October continuing through December. During this period, the island-wide curfew continued, which made it the longest of its kind in any U.S. jurisdiction. Vázquez also dissolved the medical and economic task forces created in March to advise her during the pandemic.
- Vázquez announced on August 19 a series of stricter measures to run between August 22 and September 11. She instituted a 24-hour lockdown for every Sunday, except for essential services, and ordered most commercial businesses to operate at 25 percent or risk being closed for 30 days.
- Previously, in a March 2020 press conference, Vázquez announced the suspension of cruises entering ports. The governor had already declared an island-wide state of emergency on March 12.
- Travel and border restrictions: Vázquez announced on July 16 that the island would not open to international tourism on July 15 as was previously planned. However, the U.S. territory hasn’t and can’t close its borders without approval from the federal government.
- Before that, the governor announced on June 30 that starting July 15 passengers arriving in Puerto Rico would have to take a test 72 hours prior to their flight and then present their negative results to officials at the airport. Those who do not comply may be administered a rapid test at the airport, and if they test positive, they may be ordered to undergo a two-week quarantine and a test to get out of isolation.
- Vázquez asked the Federal Aviation Agency on April 8 to stop Puerto Rico-bound flights from six U.S. cities considered to be coronavirus hotspots, and, while the agency did not grant the request, it did limit Puerto Rico-bound commercial flights to the San Juan international airport starting late March in response to a request from Vázquez.
- School closings and restrictions: The virtual fall semester began on August 17 even as the platform for it experienced extensive technical issues. A plan to return to in-person learning, originally scheduled for September 17, is on hold. Universities, on the other hand, were given the green light to reopen starting July 1. Public schools and universities transitioned to online learning in mid-March, after which the Education Department announced on April 23 that students in kindergarten through twelfth grade would automatically pass the 2019–2020 school year.
- Other updates:
- Tropical Storm Isaias struck the island between July 29 and 30, leaving hundreds of thousands without power and water. Before the storm’s arrival, Vázquez declared a state of emergency, urged residents to evacuate areas that were susceptible to flooding, and announced that those who needed to transit during curfew hours would not be fined. Before that, on June 30, Vázquez declared a state of emergency over a worsening drought. With over 80 percent of the island experiencing a moderate to severe drought by the end of June, water rationings and other water usage restrictions were in place in some sectors for 25 days.
- The federal oversight board that manages Puerto Rico’s finances (FOMBPR) sued Vázquez’s government on June 8, demanding that her administration turn over documents relating to an attempted $38 million contract to buy overpriced rapid test kits from a construction firm with no experience in producing medical products but with ties to Vázquez’s political party. The board stated that it had requested documents related to this purchase and others during the pandemic two months before. The Puerto Rican legislature previously opened an investigation into the purchase in mid-April, after which Vázquez signed an executive order on April 22 granting civil immunity to private and public medical facilities and medical personnel working on the island during the pandemic. The mandate shields against claims of negligence or medical malpractice.
Economic impact and measures
- GDP forecasts: The FOMBPR warned on May 26 that the island is likely to experience a deficit in the coming years as its surplus may plunge by up to 65 percent between 2020 and 2032, leaving the government unable to meet its debt obligations as the island attempts to restructure a debt exceeding $70 billion.
- Fiscal stimulus and economic policy: Vázquez signed into law on June 14 a second package of economic measures to mitigate pandemic-related economic fallout. The new law automatically extends commercial licenses and permits by six months and eliminates for three months the 4 percent tax on professional services. The governor announced the island’s first economic package on March 23, worth $787 million. That one, which at the time of its announcement was the largest one presented by U.S. states and territories, included a 90-day moratorium on a number of payments and an incentive of $1,500 to businesses with 50 employees or fewer that had to close and don’t qualify for federal aid. The FOMBPR approved a revised fiscal plan for the island on May 27 that temporarily suspends all cuts to the government’s budget.
- Social programs: The U.S. territory received $2.2 billion on April 22 as part of the CARES Act, the $2 trillion federal economic relief package.
- Puerto Ricans are eligible to receive the federal economic incentive of $1,200 available to most U.S. citizens under the CARES Act. In the case of Puerto Rico, the local Treasury Department could not disburse funds from the federal stimulus until the U.S. Treasury approved the island’s plan for distribution on May 1.
- Vázquez unveiled her administration’s plan for the federal funds during a press conference on May 14, outlining dozens of programs focused around three pillars: strengthening the government’s response to the pandemic, reviving and protecting the island’s economy, and maintaining “continuity in government operations.” On April 13, Vázquez signed a resolution to place a moratorium on personal loans, car loans, mortgages, and credit cards until the end of June. The new measure, which is voluntary and up to each individual to use, also bars interest fees and other penalties in relation to these payments.
- Other updates:
- U.S. officials announced on September 18 a $13 billion aid package for Puerto Rico, aimed at repairing damage from Hurricane Maria three years after the hurricane hit the island.
Spread
- February 9, 2021: 46,153 confirmed cases, 506 deaths
- January 12: 27,846 confirmed cases, 269 deaths
- December 15, 2020: 10,418 confirmed cases, 98 deaths
- November 17: 4,208 confirmed cases, 68 deaths
- October 20: 2,623 confirmed cases, 52 deaths
- September 22: 1,934 confirmed cases, 46 deaths
- August 25: 1,536 confirmed cases, 43 deaths
- August 4: 1,300 confirmed cases, 37 deaths
- July 7: 965 confirmed cases, 29 deaths
- June 9: 846 confirmed cases, 23 deaths
- May 12: 717 confirmed cases, 19 deaths
- April 14: 492 confirmed cases, 8 deaths
- March 28: First death
- March 17: 29 confirmed cases
- March 13: First 4 confirmed cases
- Uruguay’s Ministry of Health confirmed the country’s first four cases on March 13. The first cases were all people who had traveled to Milan and entered Uruguay between March 3 and 6.
- The government confirmed its first virus-related death on March 28, involving Rodolfo González Rissotto, a 71-year-old man who previously served on the country’s Electoral Court.
Government response
- Vaccine plan: The government announced on January 23, 2021, that it purchased some 3.8 million vaccines to immunize 2.8 million Uruguayans (80 percent of the country’s 3.5 million population). Of those, 2 million are the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine, and close to 1.8 million are from Chinese laboratory Sinovac, which are set to arrive between February and March. An additional 1.5 million vaccines are slated to arrive in March from the WHO’s COVAX program for $2.5 million. Vaccination will not be mandatory in Uruguay.
- Reopening plan: On February 8, 2021, the government began reopening museums with crowd control measures, as well as social distancing in an initiative to support cultural programs. The government approved a protocol to reopen certain businesses under strict health guidelines starting June 29, 2020, such as hotels—where guests will have their temperature taken upon arrival, restaurants, bars, and cafés. Most shopping malls started reopening June 9, with businesses and shoppers required to wear face masks and follow social distancing and hygiene protocols.
- Mitigation measures:
- Given a rise in cases, the government announced heightened measures beginning December 1, 2020, including closing government offices and switching to remote work. President Luis Lacalle Pou encouraged private offices to go remote as well but did not require it. The restrictions were set to last through December 18, with the possibility of extension.
- On November 13, the Labor Ministry launched a campaign to reinforce health protocols among the country’s businesses, and deployed one hundred inspectors to ensure they comply with existing guidelines to avoid outbreaks in COVID-19 cases. The inspections focus on businesses including supermarkets, restaurants, offices, and shopping centers.
- Lacalle Pou announced in a July 21 press conference that while he would not roll back some opening measures already in effect, he was implementing stricter health guidelines to slow contagion, including banning private house parties and putting more buses in circulation in the capital to lessen crowding.
- Uruguay has been credited with acting swiftly to mitigate the outbreak, with the president announcing a health emergency on March 13, 2020, when the first cases were confirmed. While never establishing mandatory quarantine, the country enforced a high testing rate, which contributed to the slow rise in cases; by May 5, the government reached its objective of carrying out over 1,000 daily tests. On February 7, 2021, the country’s testing rate was 255.97 per 1,000 people, the third highest in Latin America, after Chile and Panama. On May 10, the Montevideo government also made the use of face masks on public transport mandatory.
- Travel and border restrictions: On January 27, 2021, the government announced the reopening of borders only to nationals and foreign residents, a return to a December 2020 “partial border closing.” Air, land, and sea borders remain shut to tourists and all other non-commercial traffic until further notice. The government first announced the total closing of land, sea, and air borders on March 25.
- On November 4, 2020, the government announced stricter protocols for incoming international travelers, including a mandatory seven-day isolation period monitored by public health workers.
- On September 22, 2020, the government announced it will require arriving travelers to take another test if they’re staying in the country for more than four days.
- On September 1, 2020, Uruguay and Brazil signed an agreement to continue mitigating contagion in border territories that involved PCR testing on both sides, mandatory use of face masks and social distancing, and capping the number of people allowed into commercial establishments.
- On August 18, 2020, the Tourism Ministry announced that Uruguay will reopen borders to incoming travelers from the European Union, as a “gesture of reciprocity” after Europe announced in June that out of all Latin American nationalities, only Uruguayans are allowed to enter via air travel.
- As of July 16, 2020, nationals and foreigners entering the country must submit to a temperature test upon arrival, as well as present a negative result from a PCR test taken within 72 hours of traveling.
- On May 25, 2020, Lacalle Pou announced measures agreed to with his Brazilian counterpart in the border city of Rivera. Uruguay’s Ministries of the Interior and Defense also announced they would establish more checkpoints across the border to increase health checks, ensure higher testing, and reduce movement of vehicles and people.
- School closings and restrictions: While government workers returned to remote work in December, in-person classes will continue through the academic year, though extracurricular activities are suspended. Students had resumed in-person classes beginning October 13. Students who live with at-risk people in their homes have the option to attend via distance learning. On October 1, the government started to reopen food halls in 286 public and private schools, a measure that will guarantee meals for 210,000 children nationwide. Per The Conversation’s grading of four countries that have reopened schools amid the pandemic, Uruguay beat Israel, Japan, and Sweden, receiving As for slow and phased reopening, masks and distancing in schools, and masks and distancing in communities.
- Other updates:
- On October 13, the government announced plans to invest $2.5 million in the WHO’s COVAXX Facility in order to acquire 1.5 million doses of the COVID-19 vaccine when it becomes available. (The population of Uruguay is about 3.5 million.)
- On May 15, the Health Ministry signed a first-time cooperation agreement with two state health service providers, the Medical Providers Federation of the Interior and the State Health Services Administration, to reinforce care for the elderly, regardless of what health insurance they may have. Over one month earlier on April 17, Lacalle Pou announced the formation of a commission of experts led by the Director of the Planning and Budget Office Isaac Alfie to advise the government on a gradual exit strategy to the health emergency.
- In a move to address domestic dangers early on, the government announced on March 28 measures to stop the rise of gender violence during social distancing, including an awareness campaign on social and mainstream media, a hotline for emergencies, and a protocol created alongside the Health Ministry for personnel to detect possible instances of domestic violence.
Economic impact and measures
- GDP forecasts: A December 2020 ECLAC report projected Uruguay’s GDP to grow 4 percent in 2021 and estimated a 4.5 contraction in 2020.
- Fiscal stimulus and economic policy: On February 8, 2021, the Economy Ministry presented the country’s macroeconomic outlook and informed that over $1.2 billion was allocated to fight the pandemic. The country also received $1.57 billion in 2020 investments. Examples of the country’s lauded economic mitigation efforts follow.
- The government announced $7.7 million in subsidies on November 12, 2020, to help both public and private transportation businesses get back up to speed and comply with new health protocols, given that most are operating at passenger capacities of about 50–70 percent of pre-pandemic levels.
- On April 29, the government announced an investment stimulus plan that includes new tax exemptions for large-scale investments.
- On March 24, the government announced it would disburse funds to 55,000 workers over 65 years old in both the public and private sectors as a way to make sure they stay at home.
- Social programs:
- The Coronavirus Fund, set up in March 2020 which drew money from salaries of public workers who make over $1,800 monthly, invested over $711 million (or 1.3 percent of GDP) over the course of the health emergency, the Economy Ministry announced in February 2021. The government previously announced in January that social spending in 2020 amounted to $385 million, $117 million more than in 2019.
- In February 2021's update, the Economy Ministry noted that $690 million were distributed in loans, 55 percent of that to micro-businesses, 30 percent to small ones, and 40 percent to medium businesses.
- On December 3, the government extended unemployment benefits through March 31, 2021, adding a monthly benefit of $118 for three months after someone returns to the workforce.
- As an incentive for businesses to reintegrate employees, the Social Welfare Bank of Uruguay contributed $114 monthly to employers from July 1 to September 30 for every employee reincorporated or hired. Also, the Central Bank and the National Internal Audit agency flexibilized credit loan payments for those who cannot pay, and the Mortgage Bank of Uruguay delayed debt payment deadlines.
- On April 1, the Senate approved the COVID-19 Solidarity Fund, made up of loans from domestic and international financial institutions, to cover government disbursements during the health emergency.
- On March 26, the government declared the creation of a Coronavirus Fund, drawn from the salaries of public workers who make over $1,800 monthly, and Lacalle Pou along with ministers and legislators will also give 20 percent from their own salaries. The contributions will be periodic for two months, and the measure is subject to extension.
- On March 19, the government announced the Social Development Ministry would receive $22 million to reinforce social programs, such as building refuge centers and extending salaries on the Social Uruguay Card, a government-funded resource for the most disadvantaged to access food and basic need products.
- Other updates: On April 16, the Central Bank announced monetary policy adjustments, including extensions to credit maturities, temporary reductions to bank reserves to stimulate credit lines, and temporary relaxation of stock market regulations.
Spread
- February 9, 2021: 131,096 confirmed cases, 1,247 deaths
- January 12: 117,299 confirmed cases, 1,078 deaths
- December 15, 2020: 108,480 confirmed cases, 965 deaths
- November 17: 98,050 confirmed cases, 858 deaths
- October 20: 87,644 confirmed cases, 747 deaths
- September 22: 68,453 confirmed cases, 564 deaths
- August 25: 41,158 confirmed cases, 343 deaths
- August 4: 21,438 confirmed cases, 187 deaths
- July 7: 7,693 confirmed cases, 71 deaths
- June 9: 2,632 confirmed cases, 23 deaths
- May 12: 423 confirmed cases, 10 deaths
- April 14: 193 confirmed cases, 9 deaths
- March 26: First death
- March 17: 33 confirmed cases
- March 13: First two confirmed cases
- The country confirmed its first two cases on March 13, 2020, from two Venezuelans who’d traveled from Spain the week before. Local media outlet Efecto Cocuyo constructed a timeline in which the first cases appeared on February 25 in the state of Barinas.
- Vice President Delcy Rodríguez confirmed the country’s first death on March 26, 2020: a 47-year-old man who passed away in an area outside Caracas.
- On July 9, 2020, Constituent Assembly head and chavista strongman Diosdado Cabello announced he’d tested positive for COVID-19. The following day, Energy Minister Tareck El Aissami (whom the U.S. Department of Justice has indicted on drug trafficking charges) also confirmed his positive diagnosis. On August 3, after no public appearances since July 9, Cabello purportedly held a conversation with Nicolás Maduro, but said he couldn’t appear on camera because he was in “treatment.” Three days later, another video surfaced purportedly of a masked Cabello walking out of a house to greet supporters from a distance. As Cabello is the most visible face and voice of chavismo after Maduro, some doubted if it was in fact him in both videos. By contrast, El Aissami released a similar video on August 7, though without the same doubts about veracity.
- More than 7,000 Venezuelans are being infected each day—according to a September 9, 2020 Academy of Science report. That day, the official number of new cases was 1,188.
- Despite claims by Maduro that the country has 1 million tests and is completing up to 3,000 per day, the UN says Venezuela conducted 1,779 tests total between March 13 and 31, 2020. Just two laboratories in Venezuela are authorized to process PCR tests, compared to 81 in Colombia and more than a hundred in Argentina and Chile, according to a September 7 Financial Times article.
- Despite initial projections the health crisis could accelerate the Venezuelan exodus, the reverse is happening. Through the end of August 2020, 100,000 Venezuelans had returned, according to the Wall Street Journal, with many walking hundreds of miles as the pandemic has shut down bus services. In March, the number of Venezuelans in Colombia fell for the first time in five years to 1,809,000, down 16,000 from the month prior. A late May survey of 390 Venezuelan migrants found that 31 percent plan to return to their home country, as the pandemic had made their already vulnerable situations in their host countries untenable. Four in 10 said they’d lost their jobs due the pandemic and another five had lost income. Two-thirds said they were relying on donations for food. Maduro officials say the returning migrants represent a “threat” to the country and claim that 83 percent of Venezuela’s confirmed cases as of June 8 came from the 50,000 migrants who had come back during the pandemic.
- Opposition legislator and oncologist José Manuel Olivares said that health professionals accounted for 22 percent of Venezuela’s deaths as of August 3, 2020. A government survey of the country’s 47 hospitals dedicated to treating COVID-19 patients found that just 57 percent have regular water supply, 43 percent have insufficient or no PPE kits for medical professionals, and there are just 15 ambulances in the entire network, according to an independent media analysis of the survey published June 7. The report also estimated the country had about a third to a quarter of the ICU beds recommended by the WHO.
Government response
- Vaccine plan: On February 9, 2021, Maduro announced that the first shipment of Sputnik V vaccines were to arrive in the country the following week. In November, 2020, the de facto president said he’d secured 10 million doses of that vaccine from Russia, enough to inoculate about 17 percent of the population. The country is woefully behind in its vaccination plan and might not reach any type of herd immunity until 2023 or later, especially after the Maduro and Guaidó governments missed a deadline to agree on how to pay for doses through the COVAX facility on February 9.
- Reopening plan: After an initial reopening at the end of May, Rodríguez announced on June 5, 2020 that the country would be instituting a new “7 + 7” plan, where the country goes on a strict lockdown for seven days, followed by seven days of more economic activity.
- Mitigation measures: After initially implementing a quarantine in select urban areas, Maduro expanded it nationwide on March 17, 2020. A so-called state of exception first went into effect on March 13.
- Unlike many countries where people with COVID-19 are told to treat their symptoms at home under quarantine, Maduro updated his government’s policy on April 7, 2020, so that anyone with a confirmed case of COVID-19 must report to a hospital or containment center. As the pandemic has worn on, these tactics have intensified, with officials labeling those who’ve come in contact with the virus as “bioterrorists” and asking neighbors to turn them in, per an August 19 New York Times report. Those who are “caught” being sick, as well as migrants returning after losing employment in other countries, are sent to spartan containment centers, where conditions are squalid and testing is negligible as it’s assumed everybody in there has the virus. In a September 21 report, Amnesty International qualified the state-run quarantines in Venezuela, along with El Salvador and Paraguay, as forms of repression, as there’s a high risk the detentions are arbitrary and human rights can be violated.
- On June 1, 2020, the Maduro government’s Health Ministry and the Guaidó-aligned health experts commission of the National Assembly signed an agreement to work jointly to combat the pandemic. It was the first public cooperation agreement between the dueling administrations since Juan Guaidó became interim president in January 2019. The Pan-American Health Organization (PAHO) agreed to coordinate the crisis response in Venezuela, on the condition that both administrations signed off on its participation and would allow its staff to carry out their work without interference, which they did.
- Over the weekend of April 25–26, 2020, there were reports that masked colectivo street gangs—which support and are supported by the Maduro government—threatened residents in a Caracas neighborhood that they would use “any means necessary” against those they accuse of violating national quarantine measures. An August 7 Reuters article cited examples of security forces punishing and using violence against people on the street for infractions of pandemic measures.
- Travel and border restrictions: The government tightened restrictions on domestic terrestrial travel on June 22, including shutting down the Caracas Metro and closing main highways, as new hot spots emerged. International air travel only resumed in November 2020 with select flights permitted to the Dominican Republic, Iran, Mexico, and Turkey, which Maduro called “brother nations.” By January 2021, that list was updated to only allow flights to and from Bolivia, Mexico, and Turkey.
- Though the border with Colombia is not fully closed, the Maduro administration is only permitting 1,200 migrants to return per week, a figure that represents less than a tenth of those waiting along the border to reenter.
- The Maduro administration on June 17 asked the UN to intervene to manage the “humanitarian bomb” of migrants returning from Brazil, where caseloads are high and government regulation low.
- School closings and restrictions: Rodríguez announced that schools were closed indefinitely on March 16, 2020. In early February 2021, Maduro indicated he wanted to resume in-person learning but was still evaluating options.
- Other updates:
- Just 31 percent of voters headed to the polls in December 6, 2020, legislative elections. Turnout in the last such elections in 2015 hit 74 percent. On July 7, Maduro authorized the Venezuelan military to oversee biosecurity measures for the vote.
- Per a July 7, 2020, report, the Center for Justice and Peace documented five ways the Maduro government stepped up political persecution during the pandemic: arbitrary detentions, attacks and raids on residences, censorship, and harassment.
- Doctors in the state of Lara sent a letter to the UN Human Rights Commission on June 10, 2020, to denounce what they said was repression by the state after the detention of four local doctors, two for supposedly violating quarantine and another for complaining on social media about a lack of PPE for doctors. All were later released.
- Cabello threatened academics on May 13 with persecution and arrest for disseminating information about the spread of the coronavirus in the country. Venezuelan academics published a paper on May 8 that estimated the official number of cases was underreported by up to 95 percent, and projected the country will hit a peak of 4,000 cases per day in mid-June. Such reports generate “alarm” and “terror,” said Cabello during his regular television program. During the crisis, the Maduro regime jailed journalists and one medical researcher for sharing information on the crisis, usually on charges of “treason” or “spreading hate” under a restrictive 2017 social media law.
- Washington upped its pressure on Maduro to step down by unveiling a Democratic Transition Framework for Venezuela on March 31. The plan’s goal is “to help Venezuelans escape the national crisis that falling oil prices and the coronavirus have now deepened,” wrote U.S. special envoy Elliott Abrams in a Wall Street Journal op-ed.
- Maduro was early victim of a new policy by Twitter to mitigate the spread of false information about COVID-19. He complained in a March 23 national address that the platform deleted tweets he’d sent promoting a man’s claims to have concocted a plant-based cure for the virus.
Economic impact and measures
- GDP forecasts: Venezuela’s economy contracted 30 points in 2020, compared to 15 points in 2019 and 14 in 2018, according to ECLAC’s December report.
- Fiscal stimulus and economic policy:
- On August 20, 2020, the Venezuelan opposition announced that the U.S. Treasury had approved the transfer of monies seized from corrupt chavista officials to the Guaidó administration via the digital currency exchange AirTM. In an announcement that evening, Guaidó said that with the funds, his administration would distribute $300 to 62,000 health workers over the course of three months. Maduro initially blocked the platform in Venezuela, but AirTM was able to provide instructions to users for how to circumvent the block.
- The Maduro government instituted price controls for 27 food products through the end of October in an effort to combat price speculation, Vice President Rodríguez announced April 25. The measure—which would affects Empresas Polar, the country’s largest food producer and one of the last large private companies in the country—responded to increased protests and looting of stores as health, food, and gasoline shortage crises converge.
- Citing the pandemic as an accelerator for the migratory crisis and situation of migrants in their host countries, the European Union committed $158 million in immediate humanitarian aid for Venezuelan migrants in a meeting on May 26. Spain, which is contributing almost half of the funds, says it is prioritizing Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru as recipients for its monies. Additionally, the European Investment Bank approved $440 million worth in new credit lines for programs that attend to the migrants.
- On March 17, the IMF denied a request by the Maduro government for a $5 billion emergency loan over the virus because there was “no clarity” as to who the country’s leader is—Maduro or Guaidó. The ask was a shift for Maduro, who derided the institution as recently as February 2020.
- On March 24, Michelle Bachelet, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights and former president of Chile, called for an easing of global sanctions against a handful of countries, including Venezuela and Cuba, to allow for these countries to receive humanitarian and medical supplies. Speaking on a March 26 AS/COA panel, Carrie Filipetti of the U.S. State Department noted that Washington’s sanctions on Caracas do in fact include “carve-outs” for humanitarian assistance.
- Social programs:
- On March 22, Maduro announced that layoffs would be prohibited through December 31, all residential and commercial rent payments were suspended for six months, and that the government would help small- and medium-sized businesses make their payrolls. He also mentioned that interest payments on loans would be suspended for six months as well.
- Other updates:
- Venezuelan exports of goods fell almost 70 percent in the first six months of 2020, the biggest drop in Latin America and more than double the next biggest drop, according to a November 3 report by the IDB.
- On April 20, global oil prices fell again so far that, given the discounts state oil firm PDVSA’s been offering, the country was losing money on its barrels. Over 95 percent of Venezuelan exports come from oil production, which is down about 75 percent from its peak at the turn of the century. One symbol of the collapse: by June, Venezuela—a founding member of OPEC with the world’s largest proven oil reserves—was only the sixth-largest oil producer in Latin America, after Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, and Mexico.
*Editor's note: This article previously stated that an April 14 Brazilian measure involved relaxing labor provisions for employees between the ages of 29 and 55 years old. However, the measure applied to employees between 18 and 29 and over 55.
Ernesto Aguilar, Daniela Cobos, Lee Evans, Pía Fuentealba, Diogo Ide, Luisa Leme, Maria de Lourdes Despradel, Ragnhild Melzi, and Adán Toledo have contributed to this content.