Trade of Ecuador

print Print
Please select which sections you would like to print:
verifiedCite
While every effort has been made to follow citation style rules, there may be some discrepancies. Please refer to the appropriate style manual or other sources if you have any questions.
Select Citation Style
Share
Share to social media
URL
https://mainten.top/place/Ecuador
Feedback
Corrections? Updates? Omissions? Let us know if you have suggestions to improve this article (requires login).
Thank you for your feedback

Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.

Also known as: República del Ecuador, Republic of Ecuador

Exports include crude oil and derivatives, shrimp, bananas, coffee, cut flowers, cocoa, and Panama hats. Ecuador’s principal export destinations are the United States, Peru, China, Chile, and Panama.

Imports include machines and primary industrial materials, motor vehicles, consumer goods, and food and chemical products. Imports come mainly from the United States, China, Colombia, Panama, and Brazil.

Services

The service sector accounts for about half of Ecuador’s gross domestic product, with transportation and tourism making up the bulk of the industry. Tourism has become an economic mainstay for Ecuador. Many tourists visit the Galapagos Islands (which were designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1978), but improvements to tourist facilities have increased the number of visitors to the mainland as well. Notably, in the early 2000s the government expanded Quito’s airport and renovated Guayaquil’s airport, adding an international terminal. In 2000 extensive renovation of Guayaquil’s waterfront was completed—namely, its transformation into a pedestrian walkway and the addition of shops and public art. In Quito the Telefériqo (cable car) glides to the top of a 13,000-foot (4,000-metre) mountain, and Ecuador’s most-visited landmark, Mitad del Mundo (“Middle of the Earth”), a monument and museum at the Equator, has undergone many renovations. Cities such as Baños and Puyo provide entry for excursions into the Amazon rainforest and offer opportunities for outdoor adventuring.

Labour and taxation

About three-fifths of Ecuador’s labour force works in the service industry, with the majority engaged in retail and wholesale trade, as well as restaurant and hotel work. About two-fifths of Ecuadoran women are economically active, but they are less of a presence than their counterparts in other South American countries. Moreover, rather than improving the quality of life for women, their involvement in the workforce has simply meant more women performing menial labour, most often in domestic service, agriculture, family-run businesses, and the informal sector. In the early 21st century, on average, about one-tenth of Ecuadoran workers were unemployed.

Ecuadoran law provides workers (except members of the police, the military, and most public sector employees) with the right to form and join trade unions of their choice. About one-tenth of the workforce is formally organized, but the proportion of employees who maintain membership in a labour union is much higher. The National Teachers’ Union and the Union of Social Security Workers are the two largest single labour unions. Collective bargaining agreements affect about one-fourth of the organized workforce. Widespread use of subcontracted labour (whereby companies do not directly employ workers) proliferated in many industries, especially on plantations; however, legislation passed in 2006 limits the percentage of subcontracted workers a company can employ and enables these workers rights to freedom of association, to bargain collectively, and to legal protection against antiunion discrimination.

The tax system in Ecuador has been subject to frequent change. Both an income tax and a value-added tax are levied. Private firms are required to distribute a portion of profits among their employees.

Transportation and telecommunications

For much of its history, Ecuador relied on horse or mule transport on difficult trails or on canoe transport on coastal or Amazon river systems. Railroad development faced great difficulties, and the Quito-to-Guayaquil rail line (with a branch to Cuenca)—although locally important—is slow, antiquated, and subject to disruption by floods, landslides, and earthquakes. This is even more the case for the rail line from Quito to San Lorenzo on the coast via Ibarra. Transport was revolutionized by the paving of the Pan-American Highway, the main Ecuadoran roadway, which extends along the highlands from the Colombian border to Riobamba and then descends to the Peruvian border. It is supplemented by a network of all-weather roads. The main highland centres are connected by asphalt roads, with asphalt or cobblestone secondary roads to regional market towns. Many rural centres are still served only by unsurfaced roads, impassable during wet periods; roads to the east of the Andes are also relatively poor. There is some concern that highway development will lead to deforestation and have adverse effects on the survival of remote Indigenous groups. The more likely reason for slow development, however, has been cost.

Goods are brought to market through labour-intensive methods by independent truckers and by peasant women and itinerant vendors, who bring small amounts of goods to market on foot, with burros or mules, or by bus. Numerous regional bus companies provide cheap, frequent, and far-ranging rural transport.

Air transport has grown, especially for the important Quito-Guayaquil connection and for international travel. The major airline is Sociedad Ecuatoriana de Transportes Aereos (SAETA), which flies internationally. SAN-SAETA, however, flies only between major cities in Ecuador. Several other international carriers also serve Ecuador, landing at the major airports of Guayaquil and Quito. Domestic airlines serve local airports, and air service to centres such as Cuenca and Machala has been established. Other air services provide access to points in the Oriente.

Guayaquil is the country’s chief port, with facilities at Puerto Nuevo. Other modern ports include San Lorenzo, Esmeraldas, Manta, and Puerto Bolívar. Rivers, particularly in the Guayas basin, also serve as transportation arteries.

Ecuador’s telephone systems are state owned; most Ecuadorans use cellular phones. Cable television and high-speed Internet connections are available. Internet cafés have opened throughout the country.

Government and society

Constitutional framework

A president serves as the chief of state and head of government. The president and vice president are elected by popular vote and serve four-year terms. Members of the cabinet are appointed by the president. Legislative power is vested in the unicameral National Assembly; members are popularly elected to four-year terms. Constitutional conventions became a common feature of Ecuador’s political system in an effort to eliminate the instability of the period from the mid-1990s to the early 21st century, when many individuals served as president and none completed a four-year term. A new constitution—the country’s 20th since its independence in 1830—was approved by voters in a referendum held in September 2008. In December 2015 the National Assembly enacted 15 amendments to the constution, including the removal of term limits for elected office, the implementation of which was to be transitional until 2021. (Under the 2008 constitution the president and the vice president had been limited to two consecutive terms in office.)