Media blindspot report for Paraguay
Friday, April 10, 2026

An analysis of the most important news from Paraguay, showing which outlets covered them, which ignored them, and how each side framed the same events.

How to read this report

Each story includes a coverage bar showing what percentage of outlets from each political leaning reported it. When one side has little or no coverage, that's a “blindspot”: millions of readers on that side probably never saw it.

Left Center Right

Media map of Paraguay

Left

    Center

      Right

        Left-wing blindspots

        Paraguay's economy leads regional growth amid cabinet changes

        The World Bank projects Paraguay's economy to grow by 4.4%, leading the region. President Peña swore in Oscar Lovera as the new Minister of Economy with orders to maintain social programs. The livestock industry reported a 20% drop in slaughter during the first quarter, while fuel price increases are on the horizon.

        Context: Paraguay's strong economic outlook contrasts with fiscal pressures, including concerns about public debt and rising energy costs, making the transition of the Minister of Economy a critical moment for policy continuity.
        Coverage by political leaning
        Ctr 40%
        Right 60%
        🔎 Why it matters: Paraguay leads South American growth projections but faces fiscal challenges with increasing debt, fuel prices, and a slowdown in the livestock industry.

        Infrastructure and Sports Events in Focus in Asunción

        Questions arise about the state of infrastructure works in Asunción, as the city hosted a master rowing tournament and began the football season of the Intermediate Division.

        Context: Infrastructure development in Asunción has been a recurring campaign promise, with accountability for public spending on works becoming a key civic concern.
        Coverage by political leaning
        Ctr 67%
        Right 33%
        🔎 Why it matters: Progress on infrastructure in Asunción faces public scrutiny, but the debate lacks left-wing voices that could pressure more on social equity impacts.

        70% access to health while land titling advances

        On World Health Day, data showed that approximately 70% of Paraguayans have access to healthcare services. Meanwhile, the agrarian reform agency emphasized that granting property titles to farmers integrates them into the formal economic system.

        Context: Access to medical care and land formalization are two pillars of Paraguay's social development agenda, both lagging behind regional standards despite economic growth.
        Coverage by political leaning
        Ctr 50%
        Right 50%
        🔎 Why it matters: Paraguay's 70% healthcare service access rate highlights persistent gaps, while land titling efforts aim to bring rural populations into the formal economic system.

        Weekly summary

        3
        Stories analyzed
        0
        Outlets monitored
        ?
        Articles verified

        Main topics:

        Most balanced outlet:

        The right didn't cover or downplayed:
        The left didn't cover:

        “”