Peru in Brief: Political and Economic
Conditions and Relations with the
United States

Maureen Taft-Morales
Specialist in Latin American Affairs
January 23, 2013
Congressional Research Service
7-5700
www.crs.gov
R42523
CRS Report for Congress
Pr
epared for Members and Committees of Congress

Peru in Brief: Political and Economic Conditions and Relations with the United States

Summary
This report provides an overview of Peru’s government and economy and a discussion of issues
in relations between the United States and Peru.
Peru and the United States have a strong and cooperative relationship. Several issues in U.S.-Peru
relations are likely to be considered in decisions by Congress and the Administration on future aid
to and cooperation with Peru. The United States supports the strengthening of Peru’s democratic
institutions, its respect for human rights, environmental protection, and counternarcotics efforts. A
dominant theme in bilateral relations is the effort to stem the flow of illegal drugs, mostly
cocaine, between the two countries. In the economic realm, the United States supports bilateral
trade relations and Peru’s further integration into the world economy. The United States is Peru’s
top trading partner. The U.S.-Peru Trade Promotion Agreement (PTPA) went into effect February
1, 2009. The Obama Administration requested $74 million in foreign assistance for Peru for
FY2013 to advance these objectives.
Ollanta Humala, of the left-wing Gana Peru, was sworn in as Peru’s president in July 2011 for a
five-year term. Gana Peru initially won 47 seats out of the 130 seats in the unicameral Congress,
requiring Humala to rely on political alliances with lesser parties in order to pass legislation. As
Humala has moderated his stance, he has lost left-leaning allies within his and other parties. Deep
social divides over how to pursue development continue to undercut political stability. The more
radical elements of Humala’s original support base and his party urge the pursuit of more leftist
policies, such as nationalization of strategic industries, which Humala called for during the
election campaign. Forces that resist more radical policies include a strong business sector; a
conservative, wealthy elite; a centrist middle class; and a divided Congress. Social unrest,
especially over exploitation of natural resources, remains a challenge for the Humala government.
It has established an office of conflict prevention and taken other actions to reduce social conflict.
Since 2001 Peru’s economy has been stronger than all others in the region, with its growth due
mostly to the export of natural resources. High economic growth, along with social programs, has
helped to lower Peru’s overall poverty rates. Nonetheless, in some jungle, mountain, and rural
areas of the country, over 60% of the population continue to live in poverty. The income
distribution gap remains quite large as well. This economic disparity has contributed to rising
social unrest. President Humala submitted, and the legislature approved, a bill increasing royalties
mining companies must pay. The government estimates the royalties will generate about US$1
billion a year, which it will use to finance social development programs intended to narrow both
the social divide and the economic distribution gap.

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Peru in Brief: Political and Economic Conditions and Relations with the United States

Contents
Background ...................................................................................................................................... 1
Current Political Conditions ............................................................................................................ 2
Addressing Social Conflicts ...................................................................................................... 3
Humala and the Peruvian Congress ........................................................................................... 4
Petition for Fujimori’s Release from Prison .............................................................................. 4
Socio-Economic Conditions ............................................................................................................ 5
Poverty Decreasing, Economic Disparity Still High ................................................................. 5
Challenges of Funding and Managing Social Development Programs ..................................... 6
Debate over Exploitation of Natural Resources ........................................................................ 7
Peru’s Relations with its Neighbors ................................................................................................. 8
Relations with the United States ...................................................................................................... 9
U.S. Assistance and Congressional Interests ............................................................................. 9
Counternarcotics Efforts .......................................................................................................... 10
Trade and Environment ........................................................................................................... 12

Figures
Figure 1. Map of Peru ...................................................................................................................... 2

Tables
Table 1. U.S. Assistance to Peru by Account and Fiscal Year ....................................................... 10

Contacts
Author Contact Information........................................................................................................... 13

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Peru in Brief: Political and Economic Conditions and Relations with the United States

Background
Peru has had a turbulent political history, alternating between periods of democratic and
authoritarian rule. Political turmoil dates back to Peru’s traumatic experience during the Spanish
conquest, which gave rise to the economic, ethnic, and geographic divisions that characterize
Peruvian society today. Since its independence in 1821, Peru has had 13 constitutions, with only 9
of 19 elected governments completing their terms. Peru’s most recent transition to democracy
occurred in 1980 after 12 years of military rule. The decade that followed was characterized by a
prolonged economic crisis and the government’s unsuccessful struggle to quell a radical Maoist
guerrilla insurgency known as the Shining Path (Sendero Luminoso).1 President Alan García’s
first term (1985-1990) was characterized by many observers as disastrous. Of the leftist American
Popular Revolutionary Alliance (APRA), García’s antagonistic relationship with the international
financial community and excessive spending on social programs led to hyperinflation (an annual
rate above 7,600%) and a debt crisis.
By 1990, the Peruvian population was looking for a change and found it in the independent
candidate Alberto Fujimori. Initially applauded for his aggressive economic reform program and
stepped up counterinsurgency efforts, Fujimori became increasingly autocratic, dissolving the
legislature in 1992, overseeing the writing of a new constitution in 1993—which allowed him to
run again, and win, in 1995—and engaging in strong-handed military tactics to wipe out the
Shining Path that resulted in serious human rights violations. Reelected in 2000, Fujimori’s
government collapsed with revelations of electoral fraud and high-level corruption, and he fled
the country later that same year. In a landmark legal case, on April 7, 2009, former President
Fujimori was convicted and sentenced to 25 years in prison for “crimes against humanity,” on
charges of corruption and human rights abuses. Analysts regard the court’s decision as a
considerable accomplishment for Peru’s judicial system, which has been considered weak and
subject to political influence.
Peru then entered a period of relative political stability, economic growth, and poverty reduction,
initiated by a capable interim government, headed by President Valentin Paniagua (November
2000-July 2001), and continued by Peru’s first president of indigenous descent, Alejandro Toledo
(2001-2006). Toledo pushed through several significant reforms that increased tax collection,
reduced expenditures and the budget deficit, and negotiated a free trade agreement with the
United States.
Softening his populist rhetoric, Alan García launched a political comeback and won the
presidential race in 2006. Many observers cast him as “the lesser of two evils” compared to his
opponent, Ollanta Humala, who espoused nationalist, anti-globalization policies. García (2006-
2011) maintained orthodox macro-economic policies. Economic growth continued under García,
and so, too, did popular protests over the failure of that growth to improve social conditions for
Peru’s poorest people, and over the exploitation of natural resources.

1 Between 1980 and 2000, armed conflicts between Peruvian government troops, the Shining Path, and others resulted
in some 69,260 deaths and disappearances. See Commission on Truth and Reconciliation in Peru, Final Report, Annex
2, August 28, 2003. For more information, see David Scott Palmer, ed., The Shining Path of Peru, New York: St.
Martin’s Press, 1994.
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Peru in Brief: Political and Economic Conditions and Relations with the United States

Current Political Conditions
Following his unsuccessful bid for the presidency five years ago, Ollanta Humala moderated his
stance from an extreme leftist, populist, nationalist approach allied with Venezuela’s President
Hugo Chavez, running again under a more center-leftist approach modeled after Brazil’s former
President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva. Humala was sworn in as Peru’s president in July 2011 for a
five-year term. He defeated Keiko Fujimori, a conservative member of Congress and daughter of
disgraced former President Alberto Fujimori. In his first address as president, Humala promised
to maintain free-market policies while also working to narrow the wide economic distribution gap
and eliminate the social exclusion of Peru’s poor, mostly indigenous population. He reiterated that
commitment in a speech to the Peruvian Congress as he completed his first year in office.
Acknolwedging that his government had not done all it pledged to do, Humala said his goal was
to cut Peru’s poverty by half, to 15% by the end of his term in 2016. Initially, Humala’s cabinet
encompassed a broad range of the political spectrum, from orthodox economists to former
military officers and left wing radicals pursuing a consensus-based pragmatic approach. Humala
has shuffled his Cabinet three times in a year, dismissing all of his top leftist advisers in a major
cabinet re-shuffle in late 2011, and consolidating a more centrist approach since then.
Figure 1. Map of Peru

Source: Perry-Castaneda Library Map Col ection.
After he was elected, Humala began negotiations with the mining sector, so that, once
inaugurated, he was quickly able to propose an increase in mining royalties paid to the
government. Mining companies accepted the increase as inevitable, since both presidential
candidates had advocated it, and were willing to accept moderate increases in exchange for a
stable set of royalty payment rules. The Peruvian Congress passed the bill, which became
effective in January 2012. The increased royalties are expected to provide an additional
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Peru in Brief: Political and Economic Conditions and Relations with the United States

US$1 billion annually to the national budget to fund Humala’s proposed social inclusion
programs and infrastructure projects.2
Addressing Social Conflicts
President Humala also committed himself to reducing the social conflicts that have impeded
government functions over the last couple of administrations. Peru’s Ombudsman for Human
Rights reported that there were over 200 civil conflicts across Peru as Humala came into office.3
The first law Humala signed was a prior consultation law, requiring mining, energy, and logging
companies to consult with indigenous and rural communities about projects planned in their
communities, which had been the source of much social conflict. Former President Alan García
had vetoed a similar law, and violent conflicts over land use continued throughout his term. The
law brings Peru into compliance with the International Labor Organization’s Convention on
Indigenous Peoples, which Peru ratified in 1993. The convention requires that companies consult
indigenous groups before entering their ancestral territories to exploit natural resources.
Implementing regulations went into effect on April 4, 2012. As a complement to the new law, the
Humala administration also created an office of conflict prevention. As part of that effort, the
ministers’ council released its first report on social conflict in December 2012, saying that 15
mining conflicts were under the auspices of state conflict prevention measures such as early alert
mechanisms and communication strategies.4
Because the prior consultation law does not grant local communities veto power over investments
in their area, however, and does not require consultation for government coca eradication efforts,
tensions are likely to continue. Some businesses worry that the new consultation process could
add bureaucratic impediments to their projects. And some conflicts have political or other roots
besides land use issues. Although the government said it hoped to reduce the number of conflicts
by increasing dialogue among communities, investors, and the state, major conflicts have
continued, and some critics say not much has changed. The Humala government has declared two
states of emergency in the northern Cajamarca region of Peru, but protests against mining efforts
there have continued, often turning violent.
In the southeastern region of Madre de Dios, the government is contending with illegal mining,
which has also led to violence, pollution, and destruction of the Amazonian rainforest. Estimating
there to be up to 50,000 small-scale miners in the area, the government decreed stricter penalties
for illegal mining in February 2012, has removed thousands of miners, and plan to remove all
illegal miners working near national parks.5 The ombudsman reported 84 new conflicts registered
in 2012, involving 24 deaths and 649 injuries. That brought the total number of social conflicts
for the year to 227, with 72 percent of them active, and more than 65 percent of them involving
environmental issues. The ombudsman’s office reported three cases as resolved in 2012,
including one in the Ancash region involving a $1.3 billion expansion of a mine.6

2 “Peru’s Humala signs bills to raise mining taxes,” Reuter News, September 28, 2011.
3 “Peru: Humala’s Biggest Challenge,” LatinNews.com Weekly Report, vol. WR-11-25, June 23, 2011.
4 “Social conflicts in Peru left 24 dead, 649 hurt last year-ombudsman,” Business News Americas, January 16, 2013
5 Rob Walker, “Peru’s Gold Rush Pits Illegal Miners against Government,” BBC News, July 11, 2012.
6 “Social conflicts in Peru left 24 dead, 649 hurt last year-ombudsman,” Business News Americas, January 16, 2013.
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Deep social divides over how to pursue development continue to undercut political stability. The
more radical elements of Humala’s original support base and his party, Gana Peru, urge the
pursuit of more leftist policies, such as nationalization of strategic industries, which Humala
called for during the election campaign. Forces that resist more radical policies include a strong
business sector; a conservative, wealthy elite; a centrist middle class; and a divided Congress.
Humala and the Peruvian Congress
As Humala alienates the leftist forces that helped him win the election, his position in the
Congress becomes weaker. Humala’s party does not have an outright majority; it has 43 seats to
Fujimori’s party’s 36 seats in the 130-seat chamber. His weak alliance with former President
Alejandro Toledo’s centrist Peru Posible party, which gave him a two-seat majority, has
dissolved; Toledo’s bench now has 15 members. Some members of Humala’s own party have left
as well, in response to his shift away from the left and the crackdown on anti-mining protests.7
Unable to agree on candidates, the Congress has left key positions including seven Constitutional
Tribunal judges, the head of the human rights office, and three members of the central bank’s
board, vacant for over a year. Nonetheless, Humala has been able to push through reforms in his
first year, and in July 2012 his party was able to hold onto the leadership position in the Congress.
Petition for Fujimori’s Release from Prison
Another potentially destabilizing element was thrown Humala’s way when former President
Fujimori’s family petitioned the Justice Ministry for his release from prison on humanitarian
grounds because he has mouth cancer. Fujimori was convicted for crimes against humanity,
including for his role in the extrajudicial execution of 15 people, the forced disappearance and
murder of nine students and a professor from a university, and two other abductions. The
international organization Human Rights Watch opposes granting Fujimori amnesty, saying it
“would be incompatible with Peru’s obligations under international law,” and that humanitarian
pardons “should only be granted on the basis of an independent, thorough, and conclusive
medical determination of the gravity of the prisoner’s condition and the seriousness of the risk
continued detention might pose.”8 Some opposed to his release warn it could lead to social unrest
and greater influence by Fujimori; he is said to have played a key role in the last elections, in
which his daughter lost her bid for the presidency but other supporters of his won seats in the
Congress. A Mercy Commission is looking into the case, and will make non-binding
recommendations to the President. Humala, who once led a failed coup attempt against Fujimori,
says he will ultimately decide whether to grant the pardon, but “cannot rush” the Commission.9

7 “Peru: Country Outlook,” Economist Intelligence Unit, October 1, 2011; and “Country Report: Peru,” Economist
Intelligence Unit
, March 2012, p. 4.
8 Diego Moya-Ocampos, “International Human Righats Organisation Opposes Eventual Amnesty to Former Peruvian
President,” IHS Global Insight Daily Analysis, October 12, 2012.
9 “Peruvian President Interviewed on Year’s Achievements, Challenges,” BBC Monitoring Americas, January 11, 2013.
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Socio-Economic Conditions
Peru’s economy has been stronger than virtually all other Latin American economies since 2001.
Its gross domestic product (GDP) growth rate averaged 8.8% from 2001 to 2008.10 During the
2008-2009 global financial crisis, Peru’s economy slowed to 0.9%, but was one of the few in
Latin America to maintain positive growth. Meeting with then-President García in Washington in
early June 2010, President Barack Obama called Peru an “extraordinary economic success
story.”11 In 2011, Peru’s economy grew by 6.9%.12 The Economist Intelligence Unit predicts 5.8%
GDP growth in 2012 and continued strong growth in 2013.13 Most of Peru’s growth is due to the
export of natural resources such as copper, gold, silver, zinc, lead, iron ore, fish, petroleum,
natural gas, and lumber.
Peru has been integrating into the world economy, signing free trade agreements with the United
States and other key trade partners such as Canada, Chile, China, Japan, Singapore, South Korea,
and Thailand. Peru signed an agreement with the European Union, which goes into effect in
February 2013. Peru hosted the third South American-Arab Countries Summit in October 2012,
during which 21 Middle Eastern and 11 South American countries agreed to create an investment
bank to fund joint projects between the Union of South American Countries (UNASUR) and the
Arab League, and Peru signed a commercial and technical agreement with the Gulf Cooperation
Council (comprising Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab
Emirates).14
Poverty Decreasing, Economic Disparity Still High
García, during his second (non-consecutive) five-year term, largely continued the orthodox
economic policies of his predecessor, Alejandro Toledo, concentrating on reducing the fiscal
deficit. The U.S. State Department described Peru’s economy as “well managed” under García,
and maintained that better tax collection and growth were increasing revenues.15 President
Humala has followed suit, appointing a conservative economic team that is continuing existing
free-market economic and trade policies. He also insists, however, that he will enact policies to
eradicate poverty by spreading Peru’s wealth to the country’s poorest population. President
Humala has maintained that “Economic growth and social inclusion will march together,” and
that he will expand social programs to reduce the number living in poverty.16

10 The World Bank, Peru: Brief, September 16, 2011, at http://web.worldbank.org.
11 Federal News Service, “Remarks by President Barack Obama and President Alan Garcia of Peru after their Meeting
(as released by the White House),” June 8, 2010.
12 “Country Report: Peru,” Economist Intelligence Unit, March 2012, p. 3.
13 “Country Report: Peru,” Economist Intelligence Unit, October 2012.
14 Diego Moya-Ocampos, “Third South American-Arab Countries Summit Issues Declaration,” IHS Global Insight
Daily Analysis
, October 3, 2012, and “Peruvian President Expects Arab Countries’ Investments Following Summit,”
IHS Global Insight Daily Analysis, October 4, 2012.
15 Bureau of Western Hemisphere Affairs, U.S. Department of State, Background Note: Peru, May 2009,
http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ei/bgn/35762.htm.
16 “Ollanta Humala is Sworn In As New Peru President,” BBC News, July 28, 2011; “Peru’s Humala Renews Poverty
Vow after Year in Office,” BBC News, July 28, 2012.
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Peru’s rapid and sustained economic growth has substantially reduced poverty and increased
employment. Peru’s poverty rates have been dropping since 2000. The percentage of Peruvians
living in poverty fell from 54.3% in 2001 to 31.3% in 2010.17 Peruvians living in extreme
poverty, unable to purchase the most basic basket of necessities, fell from 24.1% to 9.8% during
the same period. Social unrest has continued to rise in recent years, however, as Peru’s poor have
felt that the country’s economic prosperity has not reached them. Indeed, the percentage of the
population living in poverty in some mountain, jungle, and rural areas is over 60%. The disparity
between rural and urban populations remains marked: as of 2010 over half (54.2%) of the rural
population lives in poverty, while 19.1% of the urban population does so. The income distribution
gap remains significant: the top 20% of the population garners 52.6% of the nation’s income,
while the lowest 20% garners only 3.9% of the income. According to the World Bank, “poverty
rates are still high for a country with income levels like Peru’s.”
Similarly, the factors weighed in the World Bank Human Opportunity Index, which measures
“how personal circumstances (birthplace, wealth, race or gender) impact a child’s probability of
accessing the services that are necessary to succeed in life” (timely education, running water,
sanitation, electricity), have improved greatly in Peru since 1995, but remain significantly lower
for Peru’s poorer population as compared to the wealthier population.18 Overall, for example,
chronic malnutrition among children under the age of five declined from 28.5% in 2007 to 23.2%
in 2010. But among the poorest 20% of the country’s population, 47% of children displayed
stunting from malnutrition, as opposed to only 5% of children among the wealthiest quintile. The
infant mortality rate was 64 deaths per 1,000 live births among the poorest quintile, and 14 per
1,000 among the wealthiest quintile. On the 2010 World Bank Human Opportunity Index, Peru
scores about 70 on a scale of 100 for universal access to services. It compares poorly to the rest of
Latin America, however, ranking 14th out of 18 countries.
As mentioned above, President Humala and the Peruvian Congress have already approved an
increase in mining royalties expected to generate US$1.1 billion a year to fund social
development programs aimed at closing that social and economic distribution gap. The President
also announced an increase in the minimum wage and a minimum pension to poor people over
age 65. His administration proposed, and in March 2012 the legislature passed, a law to expand
natural gas use, especially for low-income sectors.
Challenges of Funding and Managing Social
Development Programs

According to the Economist Intelligence Unit, “several years’ worth of large surpluses” provided
ample finance for the García administration’s social policies, but implementation of those policies
was hampered by the limited capacity of Peru’s institutions.19 The same holds true for the Humala

17 Poverty figures in this section from: Organization of American States, Peru’s Foreign Minister Trusts in a Fair
Electoral Process in his Country
, Press Release E-290/05 (citing UN Economic Commission for Latin America and
Caribbean figures), December 14, 2005; World Bank, Peru Country Brief, May 18, 2009, pp. 1-3,
http://go.worldbank.org/AHUP42HWR0; and The World Bank, Peru: Brief, September 19, 2011, April 4, 2012; and
World dataBank at http://databank.worldbank.org, April 4, 2012.
18 Socioeconomic information in this section drawn from The World Bank, Peru: Brief, September 16, 2011; and
World Data Bank at http://databank.worldbank.org; quintile data is from 2000, October 19, 2011 and April 4, 2012.
19 Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU), Country Report: Peru, London, May 2009, pp. 3, 4, 15.
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administration, which faces the challenge of making the government more effective in order to
continue and expand the positive trends of the past decade.
A case in point where increased effectiveness is needed is that of the Camisea natural gas project.
Peru began to decentralize government functions in earnest in 2002. Some analysts reported that
provincial and local governments were therefore not prepared, only two years later, to absorb the
$1.13 billion in revenue generated by the Camisea project that the national government
transferred to them between 2004 and 2009.20 The nascent sub-national governments appear to
have lacked the skills to manage the social and environmental risks, resulting in reported damage
to many indigenous communities, their livelihoods, and their ecosystems. The governments also
reportedly lacked the fiscal management skills to marshal the funds effectively, and poverty in
those areas remained as high as 60%. U.S. assistance programs help provide training and
technical assistance to sub-national (and national) institutions to plan and manage social services,
improve citizen access to information, and prevent and mitigate conflict.
Debate over Exploitation of Natural Resources
Social unrest and debate over exploitation of natural resources is likely to remain a challenge for
the Humala government. Work at the Conga gold and copper mine in Cajamarca, in northern
Peru, has been suspended since late November 2011 due to violent protests there. Opponents
worry that the $5 billion project—the country’s largest foreign investment project ever—will
contaminate water resources that provide the region’s water for drinking and agriculture by
draining lagoons and filling them with mining waste. Many residents of the dairy and agricultural
region say they want sustainable development based on agriculture and eco-tourism instead.
The government hired a team of international experts to reassess the project’s environmental
impact assessment, which the García administration had approved in 2010. After receiving the
report on April 17, 2012, President Humala imposed additional conditions on the project, and
Cajamarca’s regional president, Gregorio Santos Guerrero, continues to oppose it. A group of
civil society groups announced that they would proceed with a mass strike unless the president
declared the project “un-viable.”21 The company involved, Yanacocha, whose U.S. parent
company is Newmont Mining, is considering the new requirements. The mining consortium says
that it will carry out its work in an environmentally sensitive way, and correct errors made in the
past.22 Investors see the outcome of the case as an important indicator of Peru’s business
environment.23 Four other regions are experiencing protests against mining and energy projects as
well.

20 World Resources Institute, Bank Information Center, Oxfam, “People, Power, and Pipelines: Lessons from Peru in
the governance of gas production revenues,” June 16, 2010.
21 “Cool Response to Peru Government’s Conga Review,” Latin News Daily Report, Daily Briefing, April 24, 2012,
Main Briefing.
22 Ibid.
23 “Resource Nationalism: Conga’s Outcome to Set Precedent for Future Mining Projects in Peru,” American Metal
Market, March 25, 2012.
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Peru’s Relations with its Neighbors
Peru generally has friendly relations with its South American neighbors, although tensions with
Chile arise occasionally. Peru’s Congress triggered renewed tensions in 2005 when it declared
new maritime borders; Chile claims that the maritime borders had been agreed to in fishing pacts
signed in the early 1950s. In 2008 the García administration asked the International Court in the
Hague to arbitrate the dispute; the oral stage of the process is scheduled to begin in December
2012. Peru’s chancellor, Rafael Roncagliolo, says Peru wants “to maintain the most peaceful
relations possible with Chile” during the process.24
Actions on both sides of the border led to tensions again in 2009. Chile conducted multinational
military exercises that rankled Peru, and Peru arrested a member of its Air Force for allegedly
spying and providing classified defense information to Chile.25 During the presidential campaign,
Humala made inflammatory remarks regarding Chile, demanding Chile apologize to Peru for
assaults during the War of the Pacific in 1879 and warning Chile not to discriminate against
Peruvians residing in Chile, or Peru would do the same against Chileans within its borders.26
Shortly after he was elected, however, Humala traveled to Chile, saying he wanted to get relations
between the two countries off on a good foot.
Peru and Ecuador resolved their sometimes violent border disputes by signing a peace accord in
1998, of which the United States was one of four guarantor states. Peru and Ecuador coordinate a
border integration project with U.S. and other international support.
Peru is a member of the Union of South American Nations (UNASUR), which seeks the
“equitable, harmonious, integrated development of South America.”27
Peru joined the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) in 1998, which promotes economic
relations between Peru and Asian countries. Peru is an active member, hosting the APEC summit
in 2008.
A member of the United Nations since 1949, Peru was a member of the Security Council in 2006
and 2007. Peruvian diplomat Javier Pérez de Cuellar served two terms as U.N. Secretary General
from 1982 to 1991. About 200 Peruvian troops participate in peacekeeping operations as part of
the U.N. Stabilization Mission in Haiti.28

24 EFE, “Perú Afirma Que Quiere “Relaciones Serenas Y Libres De Tensiones” Con Chile,” http://www.emol.com/
noticias/internacional/2012/04/23/537105/peru-afirma-que-quiere-relaciones-serenas-y-libres-de-tensiones-con-
chile.html, April 23, 2012.
25 U.S. Dept. of State, Background Note: Peru, January 3, 2012, http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ei/bgn/35762.htm.
26 AP, “Canciller peruano: Victoria de Ollanta Humala no perjudicaría relaciones con Chile,” http://www.emol.com/
noticias/internacional/2011/04/06/474590/canciller-peruano-victoria-de-ollanta-humala-no-perjudicaria-relaciones-con-
chile.html, April 6, 2011.
27 UNASUR, http://www.comunidadandina.org/sudamerica.htm.
28 U.S. Dept. of State, Background Note: Peru, op. cit.
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Relations with the United States
Peru and the United States have a strong and cooperative relationship. The United States supports
the strengthening of Peru’s democratic institutions and its respect for human rights. The two
countries also cooperate on environmental protection and counternarcotics efforts. In the
economic realm, the United States supports bilateral trade relations and Peru’s further integration
into the world economy. President-elect Humala met with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and
President Barack Obama in Washington in early July 2011. Humala said he wished to further
strengthen ties between the two countries, and Clinton said that “the United States stands ready to
be his partner.”29 Presidents Obama and Humala met briefly at the Summit of the Americas on
April 14, 2012, in Cartagena, Colombia.
U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta met with President Humala and Defense Minister Pedro
Cateriano in Peru on October 6, 2012. The officials said the two militaries cooperate in areas
including humanitarian assistance, such as joint disaster response training; internal security;
defense reform; U.N. peacekeeping; and regional security, and they discussed further
collaboration. Panetta said the United States was prepared to work with Peru “on joint planning,
information sharing [and] trilateral cooperation with Colombia to address our shared security
concerns in this area,” and on updating their Defense Cooperation Agreement, which dates from
1952, to improve cooperation.30 The officials also reportedly discussed Peru’s desire to acquire 20
U.S. helicopters, and to use counternarcotics resources for counterinsurgency efforts as well.31
(See “Counternarcotics Efforts” below.)
U.S. Assistance and Congressional Interests
According to the Department of State, the goals of U.S. assistance to Peru are to help it
consolidate democratic rule, invest in its people, combat narcotrafficking and terrorism, and
reform state institutions to improve public infrastructure and service delivery.32 Congress has
supported these goals through appropriated funding. Nonetheless, funding for Peru has been
declining since at least FY2010, when the United States provided almost $120 million in
assistance to Peru. Funding decreased to $97 million in FY2011. Total funding for FY2012 is
estimated to be $84 million, including $45 million for Development Assistance; about $2 million
for Foreign Military Financing; $5 million for USAID Global Health Programs; $620,000 for
International Military Education and Training; $29 million for International Narcotics Control
and Law Enforcement; and $2 million for Nonproliferation, Antiterrorism, Demining and Related
Programs.
Congress designated funding to Peru as part of several other regional programs. In the
Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2012 (P.L. 112-74), Congress stipulated that “not less than”
$10 million of Development Assistance, and “not less than” $10 million of Economic Support
Funds shall be made available for Peru, Central American countries, and the Dominican Republic

29 Diego Urdaneta, “Peru President-Elect Meets Obama, Clinton,” AFP, July 6, 2011.
30 Department of Defense, FDCH Regulatory Intelligence Database, October 6, 2012.
31 Diego Moya-Ocampos, “Peru Considers Satellite Monitoring for Coca Region,” IHS Global Insight Daily Analysis,
October 15, 2012.
32 U.S. Dept. of State, Peru: Foreign Assistance Program Overview, Congressional Budget Justification, Foreign
Operations, Annex: Regional Perspectives, Fiscal Year 2012.
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Peru in Brief: Political and Economic Conditions and Relations with the United States

for labor and environmental capacity building activities relating to free trade agreements with the
United States. In its Joint Explanatory Statement, Congress said that $10 million should be made
available for biodiversity conservation programs in the Andean Amazon region.33
The Obama Administration requested $74 million for Peru for FY2013, a decrease of almost $10
million from FY2012. The FY2013 request includes $47 million for Development Assistance;
about $2 million for Foreign Military Financing; $585,000 for International Military Education
and Training; $23 million for International Narcotics Control and Law Enforcement; and
$500,000 for Nonproliferation, Antiterrorism, Demining and Related Programs.
Peru and the United States signed a $35.6 million Millennium Challenge Threshold program for
2008 to 2010 that supported Peru’s efforts to reduce corruption in public administration and
improve child immunization coverage. The program, implemented by the U.S. Agency for
International Development (USAID), was extended to July 2011. The nationwide immunization
program is completed. To allow the completion of one remaining anti-corruption program, the
Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC) has extended the end date until September 2012. No
FY2013 funding for MCC programs is expected. These activities will be incorporated into
USAID programs for the remainder of FY2012 and probably into FY2013.
Table 1. U.S. Assistance to Peru by Account and Fiscal Year
Fiscal Year
FY2012-13
Increase /
($ in thousands)
2011 Actual
2012 Estimate 2013 Request
Decrease
TOTAL
96,581
83,550
73,665
-9,885
Development Assistance
49,789
45,000
47,300
2,300
Foreign Military Financing
3,500
1,980
1,980
-
Global Health Programs - State
50
-
-
-
Global Health Programs - USAID
9,123
5,000
-
-5,000
International Military Education and
619 620 585 -35
Training
International Narcotics Control and
31,500 28,950 23,300 -5,650
Law Enforcement
Nonproliferation, Antiterrorism,
2,000 2,000 500 -1,500
Demining and Related Programs
Source: Congressional Budget Justification, Foreign Operations, Fiscal Year 2013.
Counternarcotics Efforts
A dominant theme in the relations between the two countries is the effort to stem the flow of
illegal drugs, mostly cocaine, from Peru to the United States. Peru is one of the three Andean
countries that produce virtually all of the world’s coca. According to the State Department, Peru
“has the world’s highest potential production of pure cocaine.”34 Estimates of Peru’s total area of

33 Joint Explanatory Statement for Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2012, P.L. 112-74, http://rules.house.gov/
Media/file/PDF_112_1/legislativetext/HR2055crSOM/psConference%20Div%20I%20-%20SOM%20OCR.pdf
34 This and other figures in this section are from U.S. Dept. of State, Bureau for International Narcotics and Law
(continued...)
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Peru in Brief: Political and Economic Conditions and Relations with the United States

coca production vary widely. According to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, the
area remained fairly stable in 2010, increasing by only 2% over the previous year, from almost
60,000 hectares in 2009 to just over 61,000 hectares in 2010. The U.S. government, using a
different methodology, estimated that 40,000 hectares were under cultivation in Peru in 2009, and
53,000 hectares in 2010, constituting a 33% increase. Within the country, there have been
significant changes in production. The upper Huallaga valley, formerly the country’s largest
producer of coca, experienced a strong drop in cultivation, due mostly to intensive eradication
there. Producing almost a third of the country’s coca, the valley of the Apurimac and Ene rivers,
known as the VRAE region, is now Peru’s largest coca cultivating region. Other areas, such as the
Maranon, Putumayo, and parts of the Amazon basin increased their coca production by as much
as 90%. According to the State Department, 93% of the coca grown in Peru is illegal and intended
for cocaine production. The rest is for traditional domestic consumption. The State Department
also reports that Peru is a major importer of precursor chemicals that are used to produce cocaine.
The cultivation of coca and production of cocaine has contributed to social problems in Peru.
Coca eradication is highly controversial in Peru, with coca farmers violently resisting it. Some
coca farmers have become allied with remnants of the Shining Path terrorist organization. Now
closely linked with narcotics trafficking, the Shining Path conducted 136 terrorist acts in 2010,
killing civilians and members of the police and military.35 Drug addiction has become a serious
problem, with an estimated 150,000 addicts across the country, but an insufficient number of
treatment and rehabilitation centers to treat them. Illicit coca cultivation and production has
damaged the environment, contributing to the deforestation of 2.5 million hectares over 30 years,
and the pollution of forests and streams from 118 million liters of precursor chemicals dumped in
them over a period of 5 years.
U.S. counternarcotics programs in Peru focus on three areas: eradication, interdiction, and
alternative development. The Obama Administration’s request for FY2013 includes a total of $47
million in counternarcotics funding, consisting of $25 million in development assistance and $22
million in International Narcotics Control and Law Enforcement (INCLE) funds.36 According to
the 2011 INCSR, from 2009 to 2010 alternative development programs led to a 24% increase in
the legal incomes of participating families, and to a 25% decrease in their level of poverty.
The Peruvian government released a new national drug plan in November 2011. It focuses on
combating organized crime, trafficking in narcotics and precursor chemicals, money laundering,
and financial crimes; and on increasing or improving drug-use prevention, rehabilitation,
eradication, and alternative development. When he took office, President Humala said he was
reevaluating Peru’s counternarcotics policy, and also that he saw the United States as a “strategic
partner” in combating illegal drug production and trafficking.37 The United States has required
total eradication of coca before a farmer can enter into alternative development programs in Peru;
critics say farmers should be allowed to make a gradual transition to alternative crops so that they

(...continued)
Enforcement, International Narcotics Control Strategy Report [INCSR], Peru, vol. I, Drug and Chemical Control,
March 2012, and March 2011, unless indicated otherwise.
35 U.S. Dept. of State, Office of the Coordinator for Counterterrorism, Country Reports on Terrorism 2010, Peru,
Washington, DC, August 18, 2011, http://www.state.gov/s/ct/rls/crt/2010/170259.htm.
36 U.S. Dept. of State, Congressional Budget Justification, Foreign Operations, Fiscal Year 2012, Annex: Regional
Perspectives, Peru, Washington, DC, pp. 814-815, http://www.state.gov/documents/organization/137937.pdf.
37 “Ollanta Humala is Sworn in as New Peru President,” BBC News: Latin America and Caribbean, July 28, 2011.
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Peru in Brief: Political and Economic Conditions and Relations with the United States

maintain a source of income. When the Humala administration stopped eradication shortly after
assuming office, many observers thought it indicated a major shift in policy, especially
considering that Humala had support from coca growers in his campaign. But the Humala
administration quickly resumed eradication in August 2011, and soon removed the officials he
had initially placed in charge of counter-narcotics policy, some said out of concern their policies
might antagonize the United States.38
In September 2011, President Humala declared a 60-day state of emergency in several coca-
producing areas with a Shining Path presence. These areas were also the site of protests by coca
farmers opposed to the government’s forced eradication of their crops. Days after the state of
emergency was declared, the defense minister announced that the military was going to “take
total control of the VRAE.”39 According to the government, the military intervention to re-take
control of the region was to be coupled with the development of infrastructure such as roads,
communications, schools, and hospitals by army engineers. Nonetheless, the imposition of full
military control of the area for the first time since the administration of former President Alberto
Fujimori, now imprisoned for human rights violations and other crimes, raises concerns for many
over human rights and development issues. Protests over coca eradication are expected to
continue.
Securing the VRAE is complicated by the presence there of remnants of the Shining Path
(Sendero Luminoso) insurgency movement, who reportedly operate alongside local drug
traffickers. A Shining Path faction killed two police agents and injured two others on October 14,
2012. In response, the Humala Administration said it planned to monitor the Shining Path via
satellite, and was in discussions with U.S. officials to allow helicopters provided by the U.S. for
counter-narcotics operations to be used for counterinsurgency operations as well.40
Trade and Environment
The United States is one of Peru’s top trading partners. Of Peru’s $46 billion in exports in 2011,
almost 12.76% went to the United States; Peru exported more to China (15%) and Switzerland
(12.9%). Almost 20% of Peru’s imports came from the United States.41 Both the executive branch
and Congress have promoted trade with Peru, and protection of its environment, often linking the
two. The U.S.-Peru Trade Promotion Agreement (PTPA) went into effect February 1, 2009.
Congress passed environmental amendments to the PTPA that commit Peru (and the United
States) to enforce its domestic environmental laws, and adopt new laws to fulfill obligations
under multilateral environmental agreements. Other amendments to the PTPA call for the two
countries to take steps to enhance forest sector governance and promote legal trade in timber
products.
On April 17, 2012, a conservation non-profit organization invoked those amendments in
petitioning the U.S. Trade Representative to investigate and verify the legal origin of wood

38 “Humala Stops Rocking the Boat,” Latin American Weekly Report, vol. WR-12-02 (January 12, 2012).
39 “Peru: Security; Militarisation of the Vrae - Then and Now,” Latin American Weekly Report, vol. WR-11-38,
September 22, 2011, p. 4.
40 Diego Moya-Ocampos, “Peru Considers Satellite Monitoring for Coca Region,” IHS Global Insight Daily Analysis,
October 15, 2012.
41 U.S. Dept. of Commerce, Bureau of Census, via Global Trade Atlas, April 25, 2012.
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Peru in Brief: Political and Economic Conditions and Relations with the United States

shipments from Peru.42 An Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA) report indicated that
millions of dollars worth of illegal wood from the Peruvian Amazon were exported to the United
States between 2008 and 2010.43 If the U.S. government finds evidence of illegality, it can take
actions, including prohibiting the companies involved from exporting to the United States until
Peru produces evidence that each company is complying with the law and regulations. EIA noted
that Peruvian agencies are exercising greater oversight over the industry; to conduct its analysis,
the group used data from a government agency it said was reformed and strengthened under
provisions of the PTPA.
As mentioned above, Congress stipulated in the FY2012 appropriations law that both
Development Assistance and Economic Support Funds shall be made available for Peru for labor
and environmental capacity building activities relating to free trade agreements with the United
States. In its Joint Explanatory Statement, Congress said that $10 million should be made
available for biodiversity conservation programs in the Andean Amazon region.
In 2009 the United States announced it would be entering into an Asia-Pacific trade agreement
known as the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP). Peru is one of the negotiating partners. According
to the USTR, the TPP will be “a means to advance U.S. economic interests with the fastest-
growing economies in the world, and a tool to expand U.S. exports.”44 Critics assert that any
economic benefits deriving from the agreement “will be relatively small and the regulatory costs
could be significantly high—especially for the emerging market and developing countries
engaged in the negotiations.”45
Peru and the United States signed a debt-for-nature swap in 2008 that reduces Peru’s debt to the
United States by more than $25 million over seven years, until 2015. In exchange, Peru agreed to
use those funds to support grants to protect its tropical forests.

Author Contact Information

Maureen Taft-Morales

Specialist in Latin American Affairs
mtmorales@crs.loc.gov, 7-7659


42 Andrea Johnson and Fiona Mulligan, US Government Requested to Use Free Trade Agreement to Take Action on
Illegal Timber Exports from Peru; Environmental Organization Submits Formal Petition To US Trade Representative
With Evidence On Dozens Of Shipments In Violation Of International Laws and US-Peru FTA
, Environmental
Investigation Agency, press release, Washington, DC, April 19, 2012.
43 “NGO Alleges Illegal Logging Shipments from Peru; Will urge USTR to Act,” Inside U.S. Trade, vol. 30, no. 15
(April 13, 2012).
44 U.S. Trade Representative, 2012 National Trade Estimate Report on Foreign Trade , Peru, 2012, p. 307.
45 Kevin Gallagher, Bamboozled by the TPP: The Small Benefits and Real Costs of the Trans-Pacific Partnership
Agreement
, Global Development and Environment Institute, Tufts University, Globalization Commentaries, Medford,
MA, January 23, 2012. For further information on the TPP, see CRS Report R40502, The Trans-Pacific Partnership
Agreement
, by Ian F. Fergusson and Bruce Vaughn.
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