Description
About
Headquartered in Santiago, Chile, the United Nations Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC)(or CEPAL, in Spanish and Portuguese), is one of the five regional commissions of the United Nations. It was founded with the purpose of contributing to the economic development of Latin America and the Caribbean, coordinating actions directed towards this end, and reinforcing economic ties among countries and with other nations of the world. The promotion of the region’s social development was later included among its primary objectives.
In June 1951, the Commission established the ECLAC subregional headquarters in Mexico City, which serves the needs of the Central American subregion, and in December 1966, the ECLAC subregional headquarters for the Caribbean was founded in Port-of-Spain, Trinidad and Tobago. In addition, ECLAC maintains country offices in Buenos Aires, Brasilia, Montevideo and Bogotá, as well as a liaison office in Washington, D.C.
Mandate and Mission
The secretariat of the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC):
Approach
In the half century since its founding, the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean has made significant contributions to regional development, and its theories and approaches have achieved recognition in many parts of the world.
The Commission has developed a school of thought concerning medium- and long-term economic and social trends in the Latin American and Caribbean countries.
The thinking of ECLAC is a dynamic process that has kept pace with the sweeping changes occurring in the economic, social and political arenas at the regional and international levels. In its early years the Commission developed its own method of analysis and thematic focus which, with some variations, it has maintained up to the present day.
Its approach, which has come to be known as “historical structuralism” focuses on the analysis of the ways in which the region’s institutional legacy and inherited production structure influence the economic dynamics of developing countries and generate behaviours that differ from those of developed nations. This approach does not recognize the existence of uniform “stages of development”, since for “latecomers to development”, such as the countries of the region, the dynamics of the process are different than they were for the nations that underwent development at an earlier point in history. Thus, this school of thought feels that the region’s economies can be better understood by referring to the concept of structural heterogeneity that was formulated in the 1960s.
Organization Types
Region
SDG
















Secondary SDG
Partner organization
Website
Unit
Industries
Stay updated with the latest trends in South-South cooperation and access our vast repository of knowledge.
Copyright © UNOSSC/UNDP