Chile is heading into a presidential runoff on Sunday, December 14, and the stakes couldn't be higher. This isn't just about picking a new president for one of South America's most stable democracies. It's about deciding the future of commodities the entire world needs right now.
The matchup is about as polarized as it gets. On the left, there's Jeannette Jara, the Communist Party's former labor minister. On the right, José Antonio Kast, founder of the Republican Party. Both candidates agree on beefing up security and tackling migration, the two issues keeping Chilean voters up at night. But when it comes to mining, their visions couldn't be more different.
When Your Crown Jewel Becomes a Liability
Here's the thing about Chile: copper isn't just important to the economy, it is the economy. The red metal accounts for roughly 15% of the country's GDP. Together with lithium, it's generated most of Chile's 2.5% economic growth in 2025. Both minerals are absolutely critical to the global energy transition, which means the world is watching this election closely.
But there's a problem. Codelco, Chile's state-owned mining giant, is in rough shape. This company was once the pride of the nation and a reliable source of government revenue. Now? It's carrying more than $20 billion in debt, struggling with aging infrastructure and years of chronic underinvestment. Why? Because the government kept demanding profit transfers to fund other priorities, leaving Codelco scrambling for capital. Output only recently began recovering after hitting a 25-year low in 2022.
Two Candidates, Two Completely Different Prescriptions
Jara's approach is to double down on state control. Her platform calls for boosting copper output by 10%, creating a state-owned lithium company, and accelerating production through public-private partnerships. According to the Atlantic Council, she's pushing for renewable energy expansion, stronger environmental oversight, recognition of Indigenous land rights, and stricter ESG requirements across the board.
In Jara's vision, mining becomes the engine that funds Chile's social transformation: better wages, expanded social protections, and a more equitable development model. She's also focused on practical security measures like more police resources, biometric border controls, and targeted relief for cost-of-living pressures.
Kast, who narrowly lost to Gabriel Boric in 2021, is back with a very different playbook. He's consolidated support on the right with a hard-nosed law-and-order message. His economic plan promises aggressive austerity, slashing the budget from $82 billion to $77 billion, and shrinking the state wherever possible.
While Kast hasn't offered detailed mining reforms, his general philosophy is clear: bring in private capital, partially privatize Codelco, and create incentives to attract investment. He's also proposing lower taxes, less regulation, mass deportations, and a security crackdown modeled after El Salvador's Nayib Bukele. It's an agenda designed to appeal to voters exhausted by crime and sluggish growth.
Why the World Should Care
According to UNCTAD, copper demand is projected to surge by more than 40% by 2040. Any disruption or policy uncertainty in Chile's output could send prices climbing fast. Lithium is off its 2022 highs, but it's still concentrated in South America's "triangle," making it vulnerable to political shifts.
The United States has particular reasons to pay attention. It's Chile's second-largest source of foreign investment, with most of that capital flowing into mining, energy, and data infrastructure. A Kast victory would likely mean tighter alignment on security, migration policy, and free-market economics. A Jara win would maintain cooperation but introduce more regulatory caution on environmental and labor issues.
Either way, U.S. companies will be watching closely to see how the next administration handles permitting reforms, productivity improvements, and the long-overdue restructuring of Codelco. Sunday's election will determine not just Chile's direction, but potentially the price you pay for everything from electric vehicles to smartphones.




