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Uruguay

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In the past three decades, successive governments of Uruguay have declared and proven their long-term commitment to political and economic stability, in a regional environment characterised by strong volatility. The country has consistently scored highly on metrics of quality of democratic processes, transparency and control of corruption. Building on these achievements, Uruguay has also led a stable and prudent macroeconomic policy, and maintained high trade and investment openness.

Fisheries: Commercial fishing and aquaculture performed in internal waters and in the territorial sea within a distance of 12 miles, measured from the base lines, are reserved exclusively to licensed Uruguayan-flagged vessels.

Responsible Business Conduct (RBC) is a key element of a healthy business environment – one that attracts quality investment, minimises risks for businesses, ensures stakeholder rights are respected and ultimately leads to broader value creation. This chapter reviews Uruguay’s policies to promote RBC and their alignment with the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises. It also summarises Uruguay’s plans for establishing a National Contact Point (NCP), a key mechanism allowing the government to promote and implement the Guidelines and providing a mediation and conciliation platform for resolving practical issues that may arise.

The Investment Policy Review of Uruguay assesses the investment climate in Uruguay and discusses the challenges and opportunities faced by the government. Capitalising on the OECD Policy Framework for Investment, the Review takes a broad approach to investment climate reforms in Uruguay and its continuous transition towards higher levels of development and well-being. Individual chapters are devoted to the overall economic performance and foreign investment trends, the reform of the state and state-owned enterprises, foreign investment regulations, the legal and institutional framework for investment protection, tax policy, investment promotion and facilitation, and policies to promote and enable responsible business conduct (RBC).

Uruguay has long acknowledged the long-term benefits of an open and non-discriminatory international investment environment. As such, the country retains very few restrictions on establishment and operations of foreign-owned enterprises. This chapter examines the openness of Uruguay’s investment regime in relations to barriers to entry of foreign-owned firms and exceptions to national treatment. It also benchmarks the openness of Uruguay’s FDI regulatory regime against OECD and various other emerging economies through the OECD FDI Regulatory Restrictiveness Index, showing the level of openness far above the average encountered in developing countries and even most advanced economies.

L’Uruguay compte 21 conventions fiscales en vigueur, comme l’indique sa réponse au questionnaire d’examen par les pairs. Deux de ces conventions, celles conclues avec le Chili et le Paraguay, sont conformes au standard minimum.

English

Uruguay has 21 tax agreements in force, as reported in its response to the Peer Review questionnaire. Two of those agreements, the agreements with Chile and Paraguay, comply with the minimum standard.

French

Uruguay sigue destacándose en América Latina y el Caribe (ALC) con respecto al desarrollo de una sociedad y economía digitales inclusivas. El país ha hecho esfuerzos significativos para mejorar el acceso digital de todos sus ciudadanos. Ha aumentado el número de usuarios de Internet y de suscripciones activos a servicios de banda ancha móvil y fija en la última década. Uruguay mejoró en el índice de desarrollo de gobierno electrónico del 0.56 en 2008 al 0.79 en 2018, una evolución superior al promedio de ALC (0.65) pero inferior al promedio de la OCDE (0.82). El índice de comercio electrónico B2C de la UNCTAD indica que el apoyo de la economía a las compras por Internet sigue estando por encima del promedio de ALC. Este resultado positivo se atribuye en parte al desarrollo de la banca digital en el país.

English

Uruguay can legally issue the following type of ruling within the scope of the transparency framework: cross-border unilateral APAs and any other cross-border unilateral tax rulings (such as an advance tax ruling) covering transfer pricing or the application of transfer pricing principles

Uruguay was reviewed as part of the 2017/2018 and the 2018/2019 peer reviews. This report is supplementary to those previous reports (OECD, 2019[1]) (OECD, 2018[2]).

Uruguay continues to stand out in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) in terms of shaping an inclusive digital economy and society. The country has made considerable efforts to enhance digital access and use for all. Internet users, active mobile broadband and fixed broadband subscriptions increased in the last decade. Uruguay rose in the E-Government Development Index from 0.56 in 2008 to 0.79 in 2018, which is above the LAC average (0.65) but below the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) average (0.82). The UNCTAD B2C E-commerce Index shows that the economy’s support for online shopping is still above the LAC average. This positive result is partly attributed to the development of digital banking in the country.

Spanish

Uruguay has 21 tax agreements in force, as reported in its response to the Peer Review questionnaire. Two of those agreements, the agreements with Chile and Paraguay, comply with the minimum standard.

French

L’Uruguay compte 21 conventions fiscales en vigueur, comme l’indique sa réponse au questionnaire d’examen par les pairs. Deux de ces conventions, celles conclues avec le Chili et le Paraguay, sont conformes au standard minimum.

English

This peer review covers Uruguay’s implementation of the BEPS Action 5 transparency framework for the year 2018. The report has four parts, each relating to a key part of the ToR. Each part is discussed in turn. A summary of recommendations is included at the end of this report.

En las décadas pasadas Uruguay mejoró considerablemente sus resultados en materia de desarrollo. El país tiene un buen desempeño en comparación con otros países de América Latina y el Caribe (ALC) en diversos indicadores, como educación, reducción de la pobreza, salud, sostenibilidad ambiental, corrupción y seguridad ciudadana. El porcentaje de la población que vive con menos de 5.50 USD al día (PPA de 2011) disminuyó más de cuatro veces, de 17.1% a 3.7% en el periodo 2006-16. Asimismo, el porcentaje de la población vulnerable que vive con 5.50-13.00 USD al día (PPA de 2011) disminuyó de 38.1% a 23.8% en el mismo periodo. Esta disminución convirtió a Uruguay en el país con mejor desempeño en la región por sus logros en reducción de la pobreza. Además, las tasas de mortalidad materna y de mortalidad infantil ascienden a 15 por cada 100 000 nacidos vivos y 7 por cada 1 000 nacidos vivos, respectivamente. Estas tasas se ubican muy por debajo del promedio de ALC y coinciden con el promedio de la OCDE de 14 y 5.7, respectivamente.

English

Uruguay has made strong improvements in development outcomes during the last decades. The country performs well compared to other LAC countries on a range of indicators, including education, poverty reduction, health, environmental sustainability, corruption and citizen security. The share of the population living on less than USD 5.5 a day (2011 PPP) decreased by more than four times from 17.1% to 3.7% over 2006-16. The share of vulnerable population – those living on USD 5.5-13 a day (2011 PPP) – also decreased from 38.1% to 23.8% over the same period. This decrease made Uruguay the best performer in the region for its achievements in poverty reduction. Moreover, the maternal mortality ratio and the infant mortality rate are 15 per 100 000 live births and 7 per 1 000 live births, respectively. These rates are well below the Latin America and Caribbean (LAC) average and in line with the OECD average of 14 and 5.7 respectively.

Spanish

Uruguay was first reviewed during the 2017/2018 peer review. This report is supplementary to Uruguay’s 2017/2018 peer review report (OECD, 2018[1]). The first filing obligation for a CbC report in Uruguay commences in respect of periods commencing on or after 1 January 2017.

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