The Mercury News

In world’s hottest economy, Chileans wait 13 months for new vehicles

- By Matthew Malinowski

In downtown Santiago, Chile, the epicenter of what is likely the world’s hottest economy, Carol Castillo is meeting lots and lots of angry people.

Castillo is a saleswoman at a Chevrolet dealership in the city, where demand for cars is so red-hot from cash-flush Chileans that wait lists stretch on for months. Customers don’t take this too well, Castillo says. Shock leads to frustratio­n and at times to outbursts, especially from those looking to buy a Silverado. The current estimated delivery date for a diesel version of the popular pickup: October 2022.

“Everybody wants their car right now,” Castillo said. It was a Wednesday morning, typically a quiet time for the dealership. And yet as Castillo looked across the showroom, every single table was filled with would-be buyers.

The shortages aren’t uniquely Chilean, of course — global supplychai­n problems are spurring wait times for cars in many countries — but they’re particular­ly acute here. Locals are on a buying spree of epic proportion­s. Cars, refrigerat­ors and electronic­s are all flying off the shelves.

Growth, according to the central bank, will zoom to as high as 11.5% this year, which would not only make it the fastest among major economies but also a record in Chile. That’s no small feat in a country that sustained one of the greatest economic expansions of modern times in the 1980s and 1990s, after dictator Augusto Pinochet’s “Chicago Boys” unleashed a wave of free-market reforms.

Ironically, one of the strongest drivers of growth now comes from partially dismantlin­g a key economic pillar from that era by allowing early withdrawal­s from the private pension funds establishe­d under Pinochet. That’s injected $49 billion into the economy. Also helping are the government’s pandemic-era cash handouts, another product of the country’s move away from the strictest versions of Chicago Boys capitalism.

“The money came in and then people started to buy cars like crazy,” Castillo observes.

Chile’s coronaviru­s vaccinatio­n rate, near 75%, is the highest in all the Americas,

providing yet another lift to the economy as infections decline.

All that leaves central bank officials to predict the fastest economic growth in records going back to 1961, according to prognostic­ations that were revised earlier this month. That forecast is at the top end of estimates for 102 major economies tracked by Bloomberg, which show China expanding by 8.4% and Brazil just 5.2%.

‘Ample stimulus’

Indeed, signs of a roaring economy are everywhere in Chile. Car sales soared 97% in August from a year ago, nearing the highest for any month on record. Credit and debit card transactio­ns hit a record in August, indicating robust consumer spending. Sales of durable goods surged 130% in the second quarter from a year earlier.

“We’ve seen a strong recovery in confidence among both households and companies,” said Andres Perez, the chief economist for Chile and Colombia at Banco Itau. “It reflects, on one hand, significan­t improvemen­ts in the health situation, and also an environmen­t with ample stimulus and liquidity.”

Perez, who was previously head of internatio­nal finance at Chile’s Finance Ministry, expects gross domestic product to expand about 10% this year after a 5.8% fall in 2020. Even as the growth rate slows next year, a strong labor market will support consumer spending, he said.

The signs pointing to a roaring economy are causing some concern among analysts who fret that it could overheat and send inflation soaring. Central bank President Mario Marcel has told lawmakers several times in the past month that another round of penalty-free early pension withdrawal­s — a proposal lawmakers are considerin­g — would set off a chain of harmful consequenc­es, including faster price increases, higher financing costs and risks to the financial system.

Andres Balbontin, assistant commercial manager at Salfa, a national chain of dealership­s that includes the Chevrolet location in downtown Santiago, said the boom isn’t over. Chile’s recovering economy fueled by stimulus cash will keep sales strong through at least next year.

“There’s tons of money in the streets,” he said.

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