BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM
In 2005, more than half of Paraguay’s population lived in poverty. By 2025, that share had fallen to 16 percent. A third of the country’s population crossed that threshold over two decades; around 300,000 more did so in just the last two years. A World Bank analysis published in April 2026 examined the drivers behind those results. Its central finding: the primary force behind poverty reduction in 2025 was growth in labor income, with the largest gains at the bottom of the income scale. People rose out of poverty because they found better, more stable work, not because transfer programs expanded or headline GDP growth trickled down on its own.
The structural advantage of cheap, clean power
Some of Paraguay’s enabling conditions are geographic. The Itaipu and Yacyreta hydroelectric dams give Paraguayan industry access to abundant, affordable, and clean electricity, a structural advantage that attracts manufacturing investment and supports green industries in a way most landlocked countries cannot replicate. But infrastructure investment extended well beyond power generation. Road networks, riverine ports, and digital connectivity reduced the cost of moving goods and information across the country and into regional markets. Cheap energy is only useful if businesses can connect to customers.
Regulatory reforms that made it easier to hire
Two sets of policy changes stand out. A new law automated registration for small and medium enterprises and introduced flexible labor contracts, cutting the cost and complexity of operating formally. A modernized maquila regime, a manufacturing incentive framework, was extended from ten to twenty years and opened to services, broadening the base for formal employment.
Together with a new Investment Law, an updated public-private partnership framework, and a modernized capital markets system, these reforms helped Paraguay earn two investment-grade credit ratings within 18 months, the only country in Latin America to achieve that this decade. “Macroeconomic stability matters,” the World Bank report noted. “Investors think about years, not months.”
A feeding program that links nutrition to local economics
Paraguay’s Hambre Cero, or Zero Hunger, now feeds over one million children across the country’s public school system. In rural areas, where poverty runs deepest, it has made a documented difference to children’s opportunities.
What sets the program apart from standard food assistance is its sourcing model: food is purchased from family farmers and small businesses in the same communities it is served. A real-time administrative system tracks every component, from meals planned to meals served, letting the government assess whether the program is working rather than assume it is.
Targeting where the gaps remain
The national poverty rate has fallen, but not evenly. Departments including Caaguázú, Caazapá, and San Pedro still record poverty rates well above the national average. Reaching those areas requires the same approach that worked elsewhere: infrastructure, jobs, and programs directed at the right places.
Paraguay and the World Bank completed the country’s first poverty map in more than two decades, covering all 263 districts. That map now guides where investments flow and how programs like Hambre Cero are targeted. Where it has been applied, the pattern holds: identifying specific gaps at the district level places resources more precisely than broad national programs allow, and the outcomes reflect it.
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