


Entrepreneurship often begins with instinct, hard work, and a close-knit circle of clients.
At that early stage, operating informally can feel not only sufficient but practical. But as a business starts to take shape, new demands emerge, ones that cannot be met by effort alone. Formalization stops being a bureaucratic step and becomes a prerequisite for growth.
In Panama, that transition is now more accessible than it was a few years ago. Registering a company can be completed in a matter of days, provided the necessary information is in place and procedures are followed. Digitalization and administrative streamlining have played a key role in making this shift toward formality more attainable.
This decision is not just about complying with tax obligations or legal requirements. At its core, it is about access: to business bank accounts, formal contracts, financing opportunities, and public or private calls that require legal status.
In Panama, the Authority for Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises plays a central role in this process. Its work goes beyond outlining legal requirements. It provides training, technical guidance, and business development programs aimed at strengthening small and medium-sized enterprises.
According to official information, these initiatives focus on improving administrative, financial, and commercial management. The emphasis is on sustainability: organizing finances, setting goals, structuring business plans, and enabling access to funding when conditions are met.
The impact of this support is reflected in cases like that of Aracelis Delgado, founder of La Casa de los Sabores. She has noted that training programs helped her develop long-term strategies, define clear objectives, and understand the importance of moving beyond informality to strengthen her business.
Beyond local efforts, Panama has also benefited from initiatives backed by the United States government to support the entrepreneurial ecosystem, particularly among women entrepreneurs. These programs combine training, mentorship, and access to financial tools, according to institutional reports on bilateral cooperation.

In Colombia, the picture reveals a different dimension of the same challenge. Data from the National Administrative Department of Statistics show that small and medium-sized enterprises last, on average, around five years. Business survival remains a structural issue.
Statistics alone do not explain why businesses close, but they do point to a broader reality: sustaining a company over time requires more than a good idea. It demands administrative structure, financial planning, and access to support programs, many of which are only available to formally registered businesses.
Remaining informal may offer a sense of flexibility, but it also comes with clear limitations. Without legal registration, a business cannot enter into certain contracts, participate in tenders, access formal credit, or clearly separate personal and business finances.
Formalization does not eliminate the risks inherent to any economic activity, nor does it guarantee immediate success. What it does is redefine the conditions under which a business operates. It establishes clear rules, builds a financial track record, and allows for more predictable growth.
In contexts where opportunities increasingly depend on traceability and formal status, taking this step is not just about compliance. It signals an intention to endure.
Formalization does not transform an idea overnight. What it does is reshape its horizon. In both Panama and Colombia, where institutional tools are increasingly available and processes more transparent, formalizing is emerging as a strategic decision for those who want their business to move beyond day-to-day survival and grow on more solid ground.

Checking your vote...
The country that proved forests can generate prosperity.
Guyana’s challenge: turning an oil boom into sustainable growth.
Medellín’s lessons for Ecuador’s security crisis.
Ecotourism in Latin America: wealth that depends on territory conservation.
Connection was easy; the struggle is keeping the learning alive.
Security that transforms territories is what makes daily life possible.
