Dane reveals two million economic units in urban census

Piedad Urdinola, director of Dane, presented preliminary results from the 2024 National Urban Economic Census, identifying around two million economic units in Colombia's urban areas. This census, the first in 34 years, highlights concentration in commerce and services, as well as regional gaps. The data will update public policies and statistical frameworks.

At the “Foro LR: La gran transformación; el poder de las capitales” forum, Piedad Urdinola, director of the National Administrative Department of Statistics (Dane), shared initial findings from the 2024 National Urban Economic Census. This operation, conducted in 1,121 urban areas across 1,103 municipalities and 18 non-municipalized areas, recorded 2,005,613 economic units, covering 98.2% of urban blocks. An economic unit is defined as any natural or legal person engaged in production, commercialization, or service activities in fixed, semi-fixed establishments, homes, or mobile stalls.

Urdinola explained: “We have two million economic units between natural and legal persons.” Of these, 53.1% (1,064,505) are dedicated to commerce, 32.3% (648,375) to services, 5.2% (105,148) to industry, and 1.1% to transportation. Around 85% concentrate in commerce and services, indicating a tertiary economy in urban zones. Additionally, 219,042 street vendors were identified, a key informal sector indicator.

Geographically, Bogotá leads with 360,568 units (18% of the total), followed by Medellín with 118,679, Cali with 99,208, and Bucaramanga with 52,065, according to the presentation. Complementary sources report variations, such as 43,514 for Bucaramanga and 52,065 for Barranquilla. Bogotá, Antioquia, and Valle del Cauca hold 30% nationally, while departments like Sucre, Quindío, and La Guajira have less than 1%. There are 38.5 units per 1,000 inhabitants.

The census includes an ethnic component: of 95,107 units as natural persons, 68.7% identify as black, mulatto, Afro-descendant, or Afro-Colombian; 29.3% as indigenous; 1.2% as Raizal; 0.6% as Palenquero de San Basilio; and 0.2% as Gypsy.

Juan José Ospina, technical submanager of the Bank of the Republic, stated: “For the first time in 34 years, the country has a precise photograph of its productive fabric and how companies operate in the regions. This will allow designing public policies.” These data will update business surveys and support municipal development. The next urban census is set for 2034, followed by agricultural in 2027 and mining in 2028.

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Illustration of joyful diverse Colombian workers celebrating the unemployment rate drop to 8.8%, featuring job signs, graphs, and national flag.
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Colombia's unemployment rate drops to 8.8% in March 2026

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The Departamento Administrativo Nacional de Estadística (DANE) reported that Colombia's unemployment rate fell to 8.8% in March 2026—the lowest for any March since 2001, continuing the downward trend from 10.9% in January and 9.2% in February—with 2.34 million people unemployed (down 174,000). This marks a 0.8 percentage point drop from 9.6% in March 2025. The employed population grew by 650,000 (2.7%), while the January-March quarter rate stood at 9.6%. Neiva ranked among cities with the lowest unemployment.

Dane released the third batch of preliminary results from the National Urban Economic Census. Out of two million economic units, 1.1 million include sociodemographic data on owners. Women lead with 613,953 units, ahead of men by 36,970.

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Preliminary results from the Dane's National Urban Economic Census show Colombia has 219,042 street vending units, mostly in large cities like Bogotá. This activity includes stationary, semi-stationary, or mobile forms in public spaces. Dane director Piedad Urdinola clarifies that not all are itinerant, but street vendors with fixed stalls.

The Dane reported that Colombia's GDP rose 2.2% in the first quarter of 2026, below the 2.5% recorded a year earlier. Growth was driven mainly by public spending and household consumption, while sectors such as construction and agriculture posted declines.

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Grupo Cibest warned of high labor informality and vulnerable self-employment in Colombia, despite job creation recovery. Dane data showed an unemployment rate of 8.8% in March. The report highlights challenges including 55.6% informality and wage growth without productivity gains.

President Gustavo Petro blamed the Banco de la República's high interest rates for the housing sector's contraction, which has seen 10 consecutive quarters of decline. The leader stated that these positive and growing real rates have prevented users from affording payments. Analysts, however, emphasize the drop in social interest housing as the main factor.

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DANE reported 433,678 births in 2025, the lowest in 10 years and a 4.5% drop from 2024. Non-fetal deaths rose 2.8% to 283,378 cases.

 

 

 

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