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USAID: From The American People Latin America and the Caribbean A collaborative USAID effort protects health of vulnerable Bolivian children - Click to read this story

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Map of South America that shows the location of Bolivia
Mission Contacts

USAID Bolivia front page
Bolivia Mission Web Site

American Embassy/USAID
Unit #3914
APO AA 34032
Tel: 591-2-278-6399
Fax: 591-2-278-6654

Bolivia

Overview

For the past several decades, Bolivia has progressed significantly on political and economic fronts. However, recurring social instability arises around issues such as the government’s tight fiscal dilemma, coca cultivation and its fractious social effect, and longstanding ethnic tensions and significant poverty.

In 2003, widespread social unrest erupted around several issues, including a proposed plan to export natural gas, a recently discovered resource. The unrest left nearly 60 people dead and forced the resignation of President Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada. His vice-president, Carlos Diego Mesa, assumed the presidency and has attempted to bring stability and democratic process back to Bolivia. A recent (July 2004) referendum on Bolivia’s gas has helped President Mesa gain some legitimacy.

Although the referendum passed with overwhelming support for Mesa, who remains popular with a 70 percent approval rating, the interpretation of the referendum’s outcome into policy and practical steps remains to be seen. Additionally, the upcoming Constituent Assembly and municipal elections will also be important for President Mesa to navigate.

Bolivia is one of the few landlocked nations in South America and one of the poorest countries in the Western Hemisphere.

Ongoing issues that Bolivia faces include:

  • Fifty-eight percent of the population lives in poverty, almost one in four in extreme poverty, which is concentrated in rural areas;
  • Bolivia has the second highest of infant, child and maternal mortality rate in the hemisphere; and
  • The illegal cultivation of coca leaf brings attendant social and political problems.

The USAID Program – USAID is spending about $95 million in 2004 to increase economic opportunities in business/agricultural development and trade, especially in rural areas; increase the efficiency and transparency of government and courts at all levels; improve access to health services; improve natural resource management; and promote social and economic development in coca growing areas in order to reduce the dependence on the coca economy.

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