Economic Development

A path to peace through inclusion

May 09, 2017

Latin America

May 09, 2017

Latin America
Veronica Lara

Deputy editor

Veronica specialises in market environment topics. Until July 2014 she was The Economist Intelligence Unit’s commerce and regulations analyst for 29 countries, spanning the Americas, the Middle East, Africa and Australasia.

She has written for various publications at the EIU, on subjects such as financial inclusion, international trade, and public policy aimed at attracting investment and promoting innovation. Since joining the Content Solutions team, she has been leading projects on city competitiveness and technology.

Veronica holds master’s and bachelor’s degrees in international relations from New York University and the University of Pennsylvania, respectively. Before coming to the EIU, she covered industries as diverse as defense, healthcare and mining for a research advisory firm. She also managed accounts for institutional investor clients at AllianceBernstein.

Colombia has unique challenges resulting from its particular history.

The peace accord agreed late last year between the government and the FARC paramilitary group gives Colombia a historic opportunity to improve the living standards of all its people. More than half a century of conflict cost an estimated 220,000 lives and led over 5m people to flee their homes, with severe consequences for the country’s prosperity, especially in the rural areas where violence was concentrated.

The accord makes a “peace dividend” of economic growth whose benefits are shared by every Colombian, not just some of those living in its big cities, a real possibility—and also a necessity—if the peace accord is to succeed in practice.

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