Political Upheaval
By Nadia Martinez
In These Times
Latin America
challenges the
Washington Consensus.
The
presidential palaces of Latin America are famous for their imposing
Spanish colonial grandeur. Not long ago these marble edifices on grand
plazas were inhabited mostly by military strongmen. That these leaders
were elites of European descent went virtually without question.
Today,
Chile's presidential palace, La Moneda, is the home of a single mother and
torture survivor. In Buenos Aires' famous Casa Rosada lives a man who is
perhaps the biggest thorn in the side of the International Monetary Fund.
In Bolivia it is an indigenous coca farmer, in Brazil a metalworker and in
Uruguay a former leader of left social movements who call these palaces
home.
In
election after election, Latin Americans are choosing leaders who promise
a shift from traditional elite-driven politics to more participatory and
active democracies that focus on fulfilling the needs of the poor. With
nearly a dozen national elections coming up this year, including
especially significant ones in Mexico and Brazil, this is an important
time to assess how far the new leaders of Latin American politics, diverse
as they may be, are likely to go in achieving real change. And at a time
of virtually one-party rule in the United States, the prospects for real
democracy in Latin America offer an intriguing model for the rest of the
world.
Under
the US Radar
To the
extent that U.S. officials have paid any attention to the new Latin
American leadership, it has been largely fixated on Venezuelan President
Hugo Chávez. In February, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld played the
Hitler card, describing Chávez as "a person who was elected legally-just
as Adolf Hitler was elected legally-and then consolidated power and now
is, of course, working closely with Fidel Castro and Mr. Morales and
others." Other U.S. officials have used Chávez' fiery attacks on President
Bush to raise the specter of a Cuban socialist model being imposed by
Chávez and his new allies throughout Latin America.
In
general, however, Latin America is low on the Bush administration's radar
screen. Although the U.S. government was deeply involved in Latin America
during the '80s, providing military and other assistance to governments
fighting internal civil wars, successive administrations have been less
concerned with the region since the fighting there stopped. The war in
Iraq has pushed Latin America even lower on the priority list.
According to Adam Isacson, a senior policy associate at the D.C.-based
Center for International Policy, U.S. military assistance to Latin America
has not dried up. Rather it has been refocused "to fight the war on drugs
and efforts to maintain close contact with the militaries of countries
that are lifting trade barriers, privatizing and pursuing laissez-faire
economic policies."
By
pulling back from direct political involvement in the region, the U.S.
government created an opening for Latin American social movements of small
farmers, trade unionists, human rights activists and urban poor to
organize and elect new leadership. Their efforts have been bolstered by
the failure of the policies that the U.S. government has pushed in the
region-fighting drugs and expanding free market reforms. On drugs, the
U.S. government's attempt to crack down on Latin American suppliers was
key to the rise of Bolivia's newly elected president, Evo Morales. A
native Aymara and leader of the country's coca farmers union, Morales is a
staunch opponent of U.S. coca crop eradication programs. Although the coca
plant is used to produce cocaine, for Bolivians coca in its natural form
is as much a part of their culture as coffee is to ours. His courage to
stand up to the United States in defending the rights of coca farmers made
him a national celebrity even before he went into politics.
In
February, shortly after taking office, Morales urged the United States to
change its drug war policy in Bolivia. He said, "The [U.S.] zero-coca
policies haven't worked. ... We don't want a false drug war." Then, during
Chile's presidential inauguration in March, Morales gave Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice a traditional Bolivian musical instrument called
the charango, decorated with coca leaves - a symbolic reminder that coca
farming is legal in Bolivia.
The U.S.
coca eradication efforts in Bolivia and elsewhere have had little to no
effect on cocaine use at home or on coca cultivation. Sanho Tree, a fellow
at the Institute for Policy Studies, explains that after the United States
put the squeeze on Bolivia and Peru in the early '90s, coca cultivation
exploded in Colombia. Now, after five years of hammering at Colombia,
production is moving back to Peru, Bolivia and other countries. "The drug
war hasn't been able to solve this balloon effect," he says. "In fact,
constricting global supply simply creates greater financial incentives for
more campesinos to plant coca, and in a region where there is so much
poverty, we will never make coca disappear by making it more valuable.
Morales' victory should be occasion for Washington to re-evaluate its
failed drug war rather than to propagate alarmist rhetoric."
While he
is committed to pushing for a political program that will benefit the poor
and indigenous populations that make up the majority of Bolivians, Morales
has shown consistent respect for the democratic process. Morales is the
first indigenous president in Bolivia's 180-year independent history. With
54 percent of the popular vote, he's also the first president ever to win
an election with a clear majority in the first voting round, starting his
term with a strong mandate and high expectations.
Backlash Against World Bank and IMF
Morales
also got a huge boost from U.S. support for the policies of the World Bank
and International Monetary Fund (IMF). Following on the heels of the
Reagan-era's "trickle-down" economics, which posited that benefits for the
rich will "trickle down" to the rest, Washington has used its power of the
purse and its leading position within international lending institutions
to guide Latin American governments toward economic policies that restrict
public spending, increase the role for the private sector, and dismantle
the system of import taxes and other tariffs in order to facilitate
international trade.
Lending
agreements from the IMF and the World Bank during the '80s and '90s came
riddled with conditions for countries to manage fiscal deficits by
lowering government spending on social programs, including health and
education. "Cutting public expenditures by any large degree cannot be done
without affecting the poor who rely on public services, or provoking huge
rebellions," says Jim Shultz, director of the Democracy Center in
Cochabamba, Bolivia.
Yet in
2003, the IMF demanded Bolivia cut more than $250 million, or 8 percent,
of the national budget. In Deadly Consequences: How the IMF Provoked
Bolivia into Bloody Crisis, Shultz details how the Bolivian government
tried to warn the IMF that this would incite popular unrest. Bolivians
deposed two presidents in as many years through protests against these
types of policies and then elected Morales.
Argentine President Néstor Kirchner also owes much of his success and
popularity to his resistance to the IMF. Since assuming office in 2003,
Kirchner has been a tough negotiator with the IMF. He has resisted demands
to slash spending, lift controls on public utility prices and implement
banking and tax reforms, and instead he has pushed for investment in the
public sector and protection of Argentina's poor.
Argentina, once the poster child of the IMF, has made a remarkable
comeback since its economy collapsed in 2001 after a decade of closely
following IMF and World Bank prescriptions. While in 2000 growth was a
negative 0.8 percent, growth from 2003 to 2005 under Kirchner's watch
exceeded 8 percent, with low inflation and falling unemployment and
poverty. Consequently, Kirchner now commands a stunning 80 percent
approval rating in opinion polls.
Brazil,
too, has reaped considerable benefits from its government's determination
to balance external pressures to adopt a cautious macroeconomic strategy
with internal demands for higher standards of living for all Brazilians.
Economic growth in 2004 was the highest since 1986, with gross domestic
product (GDP) increasing 5.2 percent.
The U.S.
government's aggressive push to expand free trade in Latin America also
helped catapult other new leaders into the presidential palaces. Luiz
Inácio "Lula" da Silva in Brazil made his opposition to a proposed
hemispheric trade deal, the Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA) a
centerpiece of his 2002 election campaign, calling it an "annexation
agreement" rather than an integration agreement. He then helped lead
resistance to the FTAA among other wary developing countries, resulting in
a deadlock for the past several years. Likewise, in Costa Rica, opposition
candidate Ottón Solís nearly pulled off a stunning upset in that country's
February election, thanks to his popular position against the Central
American Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA). CAFTA passed the U.S. House of
Representatives last summer by only two votes.
Lula and
Solís were riding a wave of widespread outrage against the failure of
trade and investment liberalization policies (often called the "Washington
Consensus") imposed on the region since the '80s. No region of the world
had gone further to adopt these reforms, and yet, while promoters argued
this would lead to prosperity,
Latin America
has experienced rising poverty and inequality. The World Bank estimates
that the number of Latin Americans living on less then $2 per day
increased from 99 million in 1981 to 128 million in 2001. According to the
United Nations, the gap between rich and poor has continued to grow and
Latin America has the
most unequal wealth distribution of any region in the world.
The
democratic opening that occurred after the infamous era of military
dictatorships allowed social movements to express their discontent. The
traditional conservative elites who were aligned with the United Sates
were voted out, and replaced by socially minded, left-leaning leaders.
Right
Versus Left?
It is
somewhat simplistic to characterize the changes taking place in Latin
America as purely right versus left, but it is undeniable that there is a
general shift toward the left. However, in Latin America the political
spectrum is relatively wide and what are considered left governments vary
greatly from country to country. Their common thread is that they all
support state involvement in pursuing economic and social policies focused
on improving the lives of the poor.
For
example, Bolivia's Morales has pledged to regain national control of
partially privatized state enterprises, like the energy industry. Chile's
new president, Michelle Bachelet, campaigned on a platform of continuing
her predecessor's free market policies, but promising to increase social
benefits in order to reduce the country's gap between rich and poor.
During her inaugural speech on March 12, Bachelet vowed to "reach the year
2010 with an extensive social welfare system."
Both
Venezuela's Chávez and Uruguay's Tabaré Vázquez are self-proclaimed
socialists, but Chávez is a far more aggressive opponent of U.S. trade and
investment policies, once calling the proposed FTAA "the cauldron of hell
itself." He has also plowed massive amounts of government money into
health and education programs, part of what he calls "socialism for the
21st century." On the other hand, Vásquez has thus far kept fairly intact
the Washington-friendly economic policies he inherited, and recently
signed a bilateral investment deal with the Bush administration. Unlike
oil-rich Venezuela, Uruguay is constrained by a massive debt burden,
equivalent to roughly 90 percent of its gross domestic product. Likewise,
Bolivia is the second poorest country in South America, and part of the
World Bank's highly indebted poor countries (HIPC) initiative to reduce
external debt. Morales will likely face similar restraints in his choices
for revenue allocation-whether to increase teachers' salaries or make debt
payments is not an uncommon choice for Latin American presidents.
The
Wave of the Future
Nearly a
dozen national elections are slated to take place this year in Latin
America, and candidates of the left are leading contenders in many of
them. Two elections in particular have important implications for the
United States: Mexico and Brazil. Together, they are home to 60 percent of
Latin America's population and represent more than two-thirds of economic
power in the region.
Mexico
shares a 2,000-mile border with the United States and is the country's
largest trading partner in Latin America. This year's presidential
election, scheduled for July, is only the second since 2000, when the
Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) was voted out after 71 years of
undefeated rule. The candidate of the left, Mexico City Mayor Andrés
Manuel López Obrador, has been the front-runner since the start of the
official campaign season in January of this year and continues to lead in
the polls.
According to David Brooks, U.S. bureau chief of the Mexican daily La
Jornada, the election is particularly key for the United States since so
many pressing issues on the U.S. domestic agenda, such as "agricultural
trade, narco-trafficking, and energy policy, are really international
issues, and have to do with Washington's relationship with its southern
neighbors, like Mexico."
López
Obrador has pledged to block attempts to open the oil and gas
industry-which is state-owned-to private investment. This is a
controversial issue for President Bush, whose pledge to shift the U.S. oil
reliance away from the Middle East depends on Latin American exporters
like Mexico remaining loyal to their number one client. Ensuring that
American oil companies have access to Mexico's huge reserves would make
that job much easier.
It is
also the first time in Mexican electoral history that citizens living
outside the country will be able to vote from abroad. This adds a
potential four million outside voters just this year, 85 percent of whom
are living in the United States and have tremendous influence back home.
Last year, Mexicans sent over $20 billion to their friends and families in
Mexico.
"Depending on how you measure it, remittances are the second or third
revenue stream for Mexico, after oil exports and tourism," says Brooks.
"Mexicans in the United States care about what happens at home." This
point has not been lost on Mexican political hopefuls, who have routinely
campaigned in Chicago
and other U.S. cities even before the large communities of Mexican
immigrants there were allowed to vote.
When
current Mexican President Vicente Fox came into office in 2001, he managed
to get Bush to promise to overhaul the current immigration legislation,
and to strike a deal with Mexico on special work programs and possible
amnesty for undocumented immigrants. The Bush administration has failed to
do either, which will likely have a high political cost for Fox's party,
the National Action Party (PAN), to the benefit of López Obrador.
In
Brazil, Lula is seeking another term. Although he has been critically
weakened by a series of corruption scandals in his Workers' Party (PT),
the latest opinion polls show him in the lead. This year, the PT's main
contender is the more conservative Social Democratic Party of Brazil (PSDB),
which governed from 1994 to 2002.
Although
Lula has not been personally implicated in the scandals, many feel he
should have done more to fight corruption. There is also considerable
disappointment that he has not gone further to follow the example of his
neighbor in Argentina to challenge the IMF. Nevertheless, the former union
leader's victory in 2002 is still widely viewed as a decisive step in the
direction of stronger democratic rule in Brazil.
"Whether
or not Lula wins again is not what's important," says Atila Roque, a
Brazilian citizen and executive director of ActionAid USA, an
international development agency based in Washington D.C. "The point is
that people are deciding now who best represents their interests, so if
the left doesn't perform they'll be removed too. That's incredible
democratic progress."
Neighborhood Problem
Latin
America's rejection of
Washington's
favored model of economic management has caused strained relations with
the White House. Public opinion polls in the region consistently show
people's preference for a break with Washington. Many Latin Americans
think that the United States is largely to blame for their countries'
increasing poverty and inequality.
Anti-American sentiment has also risen since the U.S. invasion of Iraq and
the scandals of prisoner abuse at Abu Ghraib and Guantánamo. Public
sentiment holds that the United States is not following international
norms and is not playing by the rules, as other countries are expected to.
According to the Pew Global Attitudes Project, a series of world-wide
public opinion surveys, "rising anti-Americanism is not confined to
Western Europe and predominantly Muslim countries." A recent Pew survey
shows that while 52 percent of Brazilians expressed a favorable opinion of
the United States in 2002, by 2003 that number had dropped to 34 percent.
In the minds of many, the Iraq war has only confirmed the worst
stereotypes about U.S. militarism, unilateralism and imperialism. A sense
of mistrust toward American corporations doing business in Latin America
is also prevalent.
"The
U.S. government's decision to attack Iraq has been a critical factor in
the growing disdain for the U.S. in Latin America," says Fabian Pacheco,
an advisor to Abel Pacheco, the outgoing president of Costa Rica. "We're
seeing increasing popular pressure on the few governments who still
support this war to distance themselves from the U.S."
The Bush
administration should be paying close attention to what is happening in
Latin America, without repeating the mistakes of the past. It should
define a clear policy for the region that is based on supporting
democratic processes and institutions, and should seek to ensure that
democratic governments like that of Evo Morales in Bolivia succeed. The
United States should be more tolerant of those leaders who do not
necessarily toe Washington's line, and show that it is committed to
democracy, regardless of what candidate the people choose. After all,
economically successful neighbors make reliable trading partners, and
politically stable governments make good global allies.
Still,
it remains to be seen if the New Left in Latin American will be able to
overcome the endemic problem of poverty by fashioning bold solutions in
Bolivia and beyond.
Efforts
such as Argentina's attempts to work more closely with Brazil, Venezuela
and others are hopeful signs. Last year, Kirchner paid off the last of its
debt to the IMF, with the help of Venezuela. Other countries, such as
Ecuador and Bolivia are also trying to break free from the shackles of the
IMF, with help from their neighbors. It's just a start, but this may give
governments a little breathing room to deal with urgent issues of poverty
and misery in their countries.
Roque of
ActionAid explains that if the United States doesn't allow the space for
governments to experiment with alternatives, such as increasing social
protections or promoting national industry, it will be preparing the
ground for all kinds of dangerous repercussions. Any attempt by Washington
to tie the hands of these new leaders when they make economic decisions
they believe are in the best interests of their people will only increase
public frustration, and that can lead to extreme populism, from the right
or the left. Although not a bad thing per se, populism can be used to
promote radical ideologies that claim to represent the majority of the
population.
To Roque,
expanding and consolidating a strong democracy is more critical than
whoever resides in Latin America's presidential palaces. "Democracy must
go beyond elections of the president and the parliament," he says.
"Democracy is the freedom to make innovative economic decisions that will
improve people's lives."
05 April
2006
Nadia
Martinez was born and raised in Panama. She is co-director of the
Sustainable Energy and Economy Network, a project of the Institute for
Policy Studies in Washington.
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