Argentina
From Safopedia
| Society of American Foresters | International Society of Tropical Foresters |
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Argentina |
| Patricio MacDonagh, Universidad Nacional de Misiones, Argentina |
| Argentina, with an area of 3.7 million square kilometers and a population of 33 million has outstanding natural resources. This is complemented by a powerful domestic market, which is integrated into an expanded market, the Mercosur, of 200 million consumers. The annual gross domestic product (GDP) per capita, the highest in Latin America, reaches US$ 7,000. The Argentine economy is a market economy based on private enterprise as the leading force, as well as relatively open world markets, and the attraction of foreign investments. With a current annual inflation of under 10%, a US$321 billion GDP, a relatively uninterrupted growth during the last few years, after a serious crisis in 2001, with annual growth rates reaching up to 8% during the period, increasing domestic savings rates and investments, and balanced public budgets.
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The Forestry Sector Today |
| The forestry sector, supported by a large domestic market with growing purchasing power, includes increasing linkages between the silvicultural and industrial components. This major integration of the forest industry chain includes the participation of medium and large size national and international companies, which have transformed the sector's silvicultural and industrial technological profile as well as their own business management. Responding to international demand and new sawmills, new board and pulp and paper industries are being established or are projected for the near future.
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Productive Forest Profile |
| Argentina has 1.2 millions hectares of plantations, with 80 % of them concentrated in the Mesopotamia region, which include 385,000 ha in Misiones, 329,000 ha in Corrientes, and 131,000 ha in Entre Ríos. The species composition at the country level are 656,000 ha of Pinus, 279,000 ha of Eucalyptus, and 109,000 ha of Salicacea.
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Forest Industry |
| The Argentine forest industry has a processing capacity of more than 11 million annual tons, and its current activity reaches approximately 70% of this capacity. The most important companies produce pulp and paper and lumber, and are located in the Misiones, Corrientes, Entre Ríos, and Buenos Aires. According with 1997 official records based in a supply-products matrix, the forest sector provide 235,000 permanent jobs
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Conclusion |
| Overall, the forestry sector in Argentina provides a significant amount of production and employment, on the relatively small share -- 13% -- of the country’s land base. Timber production and manufacturing industries are concentrated the most in the northeastern part of Argentina, in the fertile areas with high rainfall amounts in the Mesopotamia regions from Entre Ríos to Misiones. Forests in the Northwest are dry and less productive, with more local uses. Patagonia forests extend throughout the eastern range of the Andes at higher elevations and on moister sites, but are valued more for recreation and watersheds than for intensive timber production. |

