The Context
Latin America has historically struggled with infrastructure timelines—major highway projects average 6–8 years from ground-breaking to ribbon-cutting, often stretching to a decade when disputes over land acquisition or environmental reviews stall progress. Paraguay’s sub-three-year completion breaks that pattern, signaling that coordinated permitting and upfront stakeholder alignment can compress timelines without sacrificing safety or engineering standards.
The Takeaway
Boards overseeing supply-chain strategy should note Paraguay’s highway velocity as a proxy for regulatory predictability. Faster infrastructure builds reduce transportation cost volatility and open secondary-market expansion earlier than forecasts typically model. If your firm sources or distributes through the Southern Cone, recalibrate logistics assumptions—what was a 7-hour transit is now under 4, and that margin compounds across the quarter.
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Source: Cronista





