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‘Goldilocks’ of Latin America democracy? Uruguay’s model of stability.

Uruguay was ranked the strongest democracy in the Americas – beating out Canada and the United States – in a recent Economist Intelligence Unit report. The top spot underscores how this small South American nation, nestled between Brazil and Argentina, stands out in a region often associated with corruption and political turbulence.

Its social equality and relative stability is linked to historic and geographic advantages, like a lack of natural riches that helped the country avoid the marked inequality and social hierarchies that emerged in the colonial period and define many regional neighbors today.

Why We Wrote This

As countries across the Americas struggle with political, social, and economic crises, Uruguay is emerging as something of a model of stability for the region.

Free and universal education, public health care, and a solid social security system have carried forward that legacy, creating a social balance that reflects the Uruguayan ethos of “nadie es más que nadie,” or nobody is worth more than anybody else. It now has the largest middle class in the Americas, including over 60% of the population.

There are disparities, to be sure. The cost of living is high, and there are concerns that Uruguay isn’t immune to the political polarization jostling the globe.

“Economic inequality generates instability. It’s like a pressure cooker,” says Javier Rodríguez Weber, an economic historian. “In Uruguay there is less tolerance for inequality than in other countries.”

The strongest democracy in the Americas isn’t the United States or Canada, but a small, quiet nation home to 3 million people and four times as many cows.

Nestled between Argentina and Brazil, Uruguay has long been considered something of an exception in a region of headline-grabbing political turmoil and economic crises. It boasts the highest GDP per capita and lowest poverty rates in Latin America, with a social safety net rivaling some European countries.

To be sure, it’s no utopia: Disparities exist, and many lament what can be a prohibitively high cost of living.

Why We Wrote This

As countries across the Americas struggle with political, social, and economic crises, Uruguay is emerging as something of a model of stability for the region.

But geographic and historic advantages have laid the foundation for Uruguay’s success story, including lots of pasture, few people, and the absence of a marked social hierarchy dating back to the colonial period, in addition to a culture that prizes civility and moderation. As protests simmer in Peru, migrants fill border cities in Mexico, politicians sow divisions in the U.S., and inflation soars in Argentina, the Uruguayan model seems to be working. How it got here – and what conditions are keeping that balance in place – is increasingly under the microscope.

“There’s a rejection of any politician looking to profit from extreme polarization. That means finding balance,” says Javier Rodríguez Weber, an economic historian at the University of the Republic in Montevideo. Uruguay functions under what’s “like the Goldilocks rule: not too hot, not too cold.” 

Erika Page/The Christian Science Monitor

Main downtown street of Montevideo, Uruguay, March 17, 2023.

Tolerance for inequality

Uruguay’s social equality today is linked to its relative lack of natural riches historically. With no gold or silver to be found during the colonial era, the wealthy in Montevideo were poor compared to elites in Buenos Aires or Mexico City. No entrenched aristocracy or marked social hierarchy took hold as it did in other parts of Latin America.

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