Colombia · Politics
Key Facts
—The appointment. President-elect Abelardo de la Espriella named Miguel Gómez Martínez as his finance minister on June 30.
—The handover. The new government takes office on August 7, replacing that of Gustavo Petro.
—The inheritance. The total fiscal deficit reached 6.4 percent of output in 2025, near a modern high.
—The debt. Public debt has passed 1,200 trillion pesos ($353bn) for the first time.
—The signal. Gómez has pledged to respect the independence of the central bank, a pointed break from the outgoing government.
—The lineage. He is a grandson of a former Colombian president and a former head of the state development bank.
Colombia’s incoming finance minister has signalled a sharp turn back toward markets, days after a right-wing outsider won the presidency. The change of tone at the top of the economy is as striking as the change of face.
On June 30, President-elect Abelardo de la Espriella named the economist Miguel Gómez Martínez to run the finance ministry. It was only the second cabinet post the incoming president had filled.
For a reader abroad, the significance is less the name than the direction. A government that campaigned on rupture is starting with the job that matters most to investors.
Why the Colombia finance minister choice matters
The appointment lands in the middle of the worst fiscal picture Colombia has faced in a generation. The total deficit rose from just over five percent of output in 2022 to more than six percent by 2025, and analysts expect little relief this year.
The primary deficit, which strips out interest costs, was the widest in three decades last year outside the pandemic. Public debt has climbed above twelve hundred trillion pesos, about 353 billion dollars, crossing that line for the first time.
Two rating agencies have already stripped Colombia of its investment-grade standing, and borrowing costs have risen accordingly. Whoever runs the finance ministry inherits a repair job, not a steady ship.
A deliberate break from Petro
The clearest message in the appointment is one of contrast. In an interview confirming his selection, Gómez said he would respect the independence of the central bank.
That single line is a rebuke to the outgoing administration. President Petro repeatedly attacked the bank’s decisions, and his finance minister once walked out of a rate-setting meeting in protest.
The incoming vice-president framed the choice as a move away from stale economic thinking without embracing rigid orthodoxy. The pitch is competence and predictability after years of open conflict between the government and the monetary authority.
Gómez himself set the tone plainly, saying business needs to be freed from the constraints that stop it from growing. It is the language of a government that wants to be read as friendly to investment.
Who he is, and the doubts around him
Gómez brings a long public and private record. He has led the state development bank, served as ambassador to France, sat in Congress, and run the country’s flower-exporters’ association.
He also carries one of the most storied names in Colombian politics, as a grandson of a former president. That lineage places him firmly within the country’s conservative tradition.
Not everyone is convinced. Some analysts have described him as more of a business advocate than a hardened economic technocrat, and critics recalled a brief, contested spell as a university dean.
The scale of the task will test that judgment quickly. A looming power crunch tied to dry weather, a fragmented Congress and a fragile currency all sit on the new minister’s desk from day one.
The handover and what investors will watch
The transition is already under way, if uneasily. The outgoing finance minister is coordinating the handover for the departing government, and the first formal meeting of the two sides was set for early July.
The incoming team has pressed for an audited, public process, a demand that hints at the mistrust between the sides. The new government does not take office until August 7, so the repair cannot begin in earnest before then.
For foreign investors, the appointment is the first hard signal of how the new government will govern the economy. A credible, market-respecting finance ministry could ease borrowing costs and steady the peso.
The harder question is whether tone becomes policy. Signalling respect for the central bank is easy in an interview; closing a deficit this wide, through a divided Congress, is the real test that lies ahead.
Frequently Asked Questions
Who is the new Colombia finance minister?
Miguel Gómez Martínez is the economist named by President-elect Abelardo de la Espriella to run the finance ministry from August 7. He has previously led the state development bank, served as ambassador to France, and sat in Congress.
How does he differ from the Petro government?
He has pledged to respect the independence of the central bank, a clear break from an outgoing government that repeatedly clashed with it. He has also signalled a more business-friendly, market-oriented stance.
What fiscal problem does he inherit?
Colombia’s total fiscal deficit reached about six percent of output, its primary deficit was the widest in three decades outside the pandemic, and public debt passed twelve hundred trillion pesos for the first time.
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