As Middle East volatility and trade uncertainty ripple through supply chains, businesses along Alameda and in the financial district are rethinking expansion plans and workforce strategies.
A shift in corporate preferences toward mixed-use neighbourhoods is creating windfall opportunities for early movers in Santiago's commercial property market.
Once a beacon for Latin American innovation, the city's tech district confronts a year of tightening capital, brain drain to Miami, and policy uncertainty that threatens its competitive edge.
As international arrivals to Chile's capital surge past pre-pandemic levels, hospitality entrepreneurs and established operators are racing to capture a market expected to generate $2.1 billion annually by 2027.
As cloud kitchens proliferate across Ñuñoa and Providencia, traditional hospitality roles are disappearing while demand for logistics and tech-savvy food workers surges.
Exporters and importers across the Lastarria business district warn that escalating international conflicts, currency volatility, and supply chain disruptions are creating the toughest trading environment in a decade.
Rising geopolitical tensions and shifting work patterns are forcing landlords and tenants across the city's prime business districts to rethink their commercial property strategies.
Record visitor numbers are forcing hotels, restaurants and attractions across the city to compete fiercely for talent, upending decades of stagnant wages in the sector.
As hybrid and remote arrangements become permanent, Santiago's traditional business districts face a reckoning while emerging neighbourhoods compete for skilled workers.
As housing and living expenses soar across the capital's prime districts, employers are struggling to retain mid-level professionals—and the implications for Santiago's competitive edge are becoming impossible to ignore.
Rising labour costs, shifting consumer preferences, and supply chain pressures are forcing Santiago's restaurants and retailers to rethink operations as mid-year trading reveals winners and losers.
From your morning commute to your grocery bill, the startup explosion in Lastarria and Ñuñoa is already changing how everyday residents live and spend.
Rising geopolitical tensions and economic volatility are forcing international firms to rethink their real estate footprint in the capital, creating both challenges and opportunities for local landlords.