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Editor
Carlos Henrique Cardim
Correspondence address:
Revista DEP
P.O. Box 2431
Brasilia, DF – Brasil
CEP 70842-970
revistadep@yahoo.com.br
www.funag.gov.br/dep
The DEP Diplomacy, Strategy & Politics Review is a three–monthly periodical on South
American affairs published in Portuguese, Spanish and English. It comprises the Raul
Prebisch Project and is sponsored by the Brazilian Ministry of Foreign Relations
(MRE/Funag Alexandre de Gusmão Foundation), the National Economic & Social
Development Bank (Bndes), Eletrobrás, Petrobrás, Construtora Norberto
Odebrecht S. A. and Andrade Gutierrez S. A.
International Cataloguing in Publication Data
DEP: Diplomacy, Strategy & Politics / Raúl Prebisch Project
no. 4 (april/june 2006). Brasília : Raúl Prebisch Project, 2006.
Three–monthly
Published in portuguese, spanish and english.
ISSN 1808-0499
1. South America. 2. Argentine, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador,
Guyana, Paraguay, Peru, Suriname, Uruguay, Venezuela. I. Raúl Prebisch
Project.
CDU 327(05)
ESTRATÉGIA POLÍTICA
D E P
DIPLOMACIA
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Number 4 April / June 2006
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Summary
Objectives and challenges of Argentina’s foreign policy
Jorge Taiana
Bolivia, a force for integration
Evo Morales
The brazilian economy’s challenges and prospects
Paulo Skaf
Program of government (2006-2010)
Michelle Bachelet
The trap of bilateralism
Germán Umaña Mendoza
The Amazonian Cooperation Treaty Organisation
(Acto): a constant challenge
Rosalía Arteaga Serrano
Guyana – linking Brazil with the Caribbean:
potential meets opportunity
Peter R. Ramsaroop
Eric M. Phillips
Objectives and challenges of Argentina’s foreign policy
4 DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
4
118
131
151
164
200
226
Paraguay’s political crossroads
Pedro Fadul
The great transformation
Ollanta Humala
Suriname: macro-economic overview, challenges
and prospects
André E. Telting
Uruguay’s insertion into the world economy:
a political and strategic view
Sergio Abreu
There is another world and it is in this one”
José Vicente Rangel
Pedro Lira
Milan Ivelic
DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
Jorge Taiana
5
ver since his inauguration on 25 May 2003, President Kirchner has
promoted the restoration and reaffirmation of the principles on which Argentina’s
foreign policy is historically based, though they may have been at times ignored
by some constitutionally elected administrations and violated during military
dictatorships.
These fundamental principles include respect for and advancement of
human rights and democracy, upholding international law and multilateralism,
building consensus in the organizations established by the international
community, non-intervention in the domestic affairs of other sovereign states,
and the peaceful resolution of conflicts.
Based on those principles, the Argentine Republic actively participates in
international affairs, with the objective of contributing to building a safer, more
stable and equitable world by way of seeking consensus that strengthen
international law, democratic government rule, and the promotion of values
associated to international peace and to the respect for human rights.
E
Objectives and
challenges of Argentina’s
foreign policy
Jorge Taiana
*
* Minister of Foreign Relations, International Trade, and Worship of the Argentine Republic.
webmaster@mrecic.gov.ar
Objectives and challenges of Argentina’s foreign policy
6 DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
6
Under the aegis of this conceptual framework, Argentina promotes its
international insertion as a country that is open to the world – though in a realistic
fashion that includes regional preferential policies, especially through the
Mercosur platform –, and which that sets for itself flexible policies that are
adequate to the circumstances of the international context.
As we move along this road, strengthening our regional alliance also makes
us stronger. It allows us to improve the insertion of our country in the world and
to amplify our voice in the various multilateral fora.
Multilateralism is considered by the Argentine government to be the most
efficient tool to achieve international peace and security and to face challenges
such as poverty, terrorism, corruption, the illicit drug trade, and transnational
organized crime.
It is against this background that Argentina’s permanent participation in
the various international organizations and fora should be understood. This is,
among many others, the case with our traditional participation as a non-
permanent member in the UN Security Council – a status Argentina will hold
this time until December 2006 –, the goal of which is to contribute to regional
and global consensus building.
In this context, it should be pointed out that during the March 2006
Argentine Presidency of the Security Council, we promoted an open debate on
Haiti that engaged numerous actors that are involved in promoting the
improvement of the social and political situation in that country. This Unsc
meeting highlighted once again Argentina’s active participation in the pacification
and institution-building process undertaken within the framework of the UN
Mission for Haiti (Minustah), one of the Caribbean countries that is more seriously
affected by poverty.
The Unsc’s Minustah mandate includes humanitarian and social stabilization
goals with a view to achieving the conditions for Haiti’s return to democratic
rule. Argentina, Brazil, Chile, and Uruguay have played major roles in that mission
and have served as witnesses of the free and transparent electoral voice of the
Haitian people. It is worth mentioning that President-elect Préval has asked
Argentina, Brazil, and Chile for cooperation beyond Minustah. This would
involve policies aiming at strengthening democratic governability and at opening
up the road to development. We have been pleased to see the high degree of
solidarity there is among the regions countries at times of political instability –
DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
Jorge Taiana
7
either through cooperation initiatives or through good offices that respect the
non-intervention principle.
With respect to international security, Argentina maintains its permanent
commitment to promote disarmament and non-proliferation in the relevant
specialized international fora and organizations. Furthermore, as concerns the
peaceful uses of nuclear energy, we are increasingly promoting and supporting
exports by the Argentine nuclear sector, which is growing apace.
Figthing terrorism is another major priority of Argentina’s foreign policy.
At the UN, our country reiterated its firm attitude in the face of this scourge,
classifying terrorism acts as criminal and unjustifiable. There is no racial, religious,
ideological or any other reason that may justify the murder of innocent civilians.
In order to face terrorism, it is of the essence to count on the commitment and
the support of all nations, under the aegis of the observance of international law
and human rights.
For Argentina, promoting and protecting human rights has become both
state policy at the domestic level and a permanent element of its foreign policy.
Our country is an active participant in the international debate and in every
substantive progress concerning these issues achieved at the various international
fora. The government of President Kirchner is convinced that unqualified respect
for human rights ensures the full implementation of democratic institutions and
the rule of law, thus contributing to guaranteeing both international peace and
security.
Our government also attributes the utmost importance to fighting drug
running and to preventing drug abuse, encouraging every regional and
international initiative that contributes to prosecuting, controlling, and eliminating
the illicit drug trade and preventing drug abuse. The principle of shared
responsibility among producer, consumer, and transit countries is fully applied
in this regard.
It is a permanent and unwavering objective of our foreign policy to work
towards recovering the exercise of full sovereignty over the Malvinas, South
Georgia, and South Sandwich Islands, as well as over their surrounding maritime
spaces, through a peaceful solution under international law that respects the way
of life and the interests of the islands’ inhabitants. This permanent objective is a
policy of the Argentine state and it reflects the collective yearning of the people
of the Argentine nation.
Objectives and challenges of Argentina’s foreign policy
8 DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
8
Considering the premise that foreign policy is indissolubly united to the
national project we intend to build, the Argentine government is fully committed
to working with other nations in the fight against poverty and hunger as well as
in the struggle to reform international financial organizations, to eliminate tariff
and non-tariff barriers to the products of lesser-developed countries, to pardon
the external debt of the poorest countries or swap it for education, in the fight
against terrorism and the struggle to stop the illicit trafficking of goods and
persons.
Therefore, Argentine intends to maintain serious, wide-ranging, and
responsible relations with all countries in the international concert of Nations,
which are based on the identification of our common interests and the respect
for our differences.
In every international forum, we reassert our determination not to relinquish
our foreign-policy decision-making autonomy, and to actively and constructively
engage our efforts towards a more democratic, equitable world order.
In particular, we attribute priority to building and strengthening an
integrated Latin America that is solidly based on the foundation of democracy
and of unqualified respect for and defense of human rights.
This position is expressed through active Argentine participation in every
forum where common action is considered to face our countries’ common issues.
Among such fora, one may count the Rio Group, the Iberoamerican Summit,
and ALC-EU (Latin America & the Caribbean-European Union) negotiations.
Furthermore, Argentina promotes the trend toward a univocal Latin
American expression in those multilateral fora under the aegis of which the
relative situation of our countries may be favorably changed, such as the Americas
Summit, the G-20 or the UN Security Council, just to mention a few recent
examples.
Concerning the Americas Summit, it is auspicious to see how the complex
situation of Latin American countries, where the scourge of the social divide is
unbearably permanent, has established beyond a doubt that economic growth is
not enough to eliminate poverty, and that other, active policies are needed to
achieve the longed-for development.
Indeed, in the 1990’s, and though country-specific differences should be
acknowledged, the region went through a period of sustained economic growth
DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
Jorge Taiana
9
and opening of trade that not only was unable to correct the serious and deep
social divide then prevalent, but – as was the case in our country – worsened it
to an unprecedented degree. Therefore, though on one hand there were advances
linked to areas such as pacification, human rights, and democratic rule, on the
other hand poverty, disease, and illiteracy prevailing throughout wide swaths of
our populations, as well as recurring governability crises continued to be
characteristic Latin American traits.
At the beginning of the century, a regional consensus was explicitly reached
at various multilateral fora to the effect that though indispensable, economic
growth would not suffice in and of itself to solve those issues. At the same time,
it was acknowledged that progress concerning civil liberties and the rule of law
would be at risk in the absence of similarly satisfactory advances in economic
and social rights.
Accordingly, at the most recent Americas Summit, which was held in the
Argentine city of Mar del Plata, the hemisphere adopted as its objective to “create
decent work... to fight poverty and strengthen democratic governance”. This
statement is a testament to the awareness concerning the respect for human dignity
and a reminder that social justice is the most effective pillar of democracy.
Also in connection with the demand for the right to development, a group
of countries from all around the world have engaged themselves in the G-20,
which features a prominent group of Latin American states. Under the aegis of
this group, Argentina, along with Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Cuba, Mexico, Paraguay,
and Venezuela, as well as Asian and African countries sharing the same demands,
press the World Trade Organization to obtain better access to developed country
markets for their products.
In the context of deepening regional integration, Mercosur, a block of
which Argentina is a founding member, has gone beyond merely trade-related
aspects. The so-called “Political Mercosur” has seen a continuing, markedly
positive evolution, which in turn has strengthened the multidimensional character
of the integration project.
The Ushuaia Protocol of 1998 established the rule of law as a requirement
for Mercosur membership. More recently, new ground was broken in the form
of a supplementary clause: the Mercosur’s “Asuncion Protocol on the
Commitment to Promote and Protect Human Rights.”
Objectives and challenges of Argentina’s foreign policy
10 DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
10
The multidimensional quality of Mercosur was further demonstrated by
the commitments reached under the aegis of the Political Concertation and
Consultation Forum (Fccp) as a result of meetings of Ministers of Culture,
Social Development, Education, and Justice or Interior, as well as Specialized
Mercosur Meetings on Women Issues, Municipalities and Intendencies, and the
enforcement authorities for Drug Issues and Drug Abuse Rehabilitation.
To those meetings, one should add the various Working Groups covering
issues that are strategically relevant for the region, which demonstrate the
increasing relevance for the everyday life of its inhabitants of the Political
Mercosur – the citizens’ Mercosur. Currently, those Working Groups deal with
Consular and Legal Issues, the Common Motor Vehicle and Driver Registry,
Small and Light Arms, Human Rights, Public Defenders, and Internal Auditing
Organisms.
In addition to such initiatives, the Fccp is also in charge of the Extra-
Mercosur Political Dialogue, which represents our block in negotiations with
the European Union and with the Russian Federation, in the on-going context
of developing new relationship platforms with third countries or blocks.
One should further recall that besides the qualitative importance associated
to the Political Mercosur, it not only involves the founding members of the
block – Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, and Uruguay – but also its Associate
Members, such as Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, and Venezuela, which
is seeking Full-Member status.
The Argentine calling for regional integration was inscribed into its
Constitution in the wake of the 1994 constitutional reform. The institutional
and legal adaptation of our country to the commitments undertaken within
Mercosur has made it quite expedient for us to incorporate the block’s norms
into our domestic legal structure.
One example is the Patria Grande (“Larger Homeland”) Program that
seeks to legalize the migratory status of foreigners born in Mercosur member
and associate member countries. The Argentine government took this initiative
unilaterally, with a view to facilitating the legal steps required to obtain legal
alien resident status in our country. The Program is based on certifying the
nationality of origin as being that of one of the regions countries, and it adopts
good faith as its major guiding principle.
DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
Jorge Taiana
11
Argentina thus carries over into the present – placing an emphasis on its
home region – its proverbial generosity towards foreigners, which was already
inscribed into the Preamble of its 1853 National Constitution.
It should therefore become apparent that Argentina is tirelessly promoting
institutional strengthening and updating as a way to foster Mercosur’s potential
far beyond its commercial aspects. The vigor Fccp has shown, and the impact
that commitments adopted under its aegis have had on the daily lives of the
regions inhabitants motivates us to remediate and to balance the mercantilist
bias that the Mercosur’s 1990’s institutional makeup instilled into the constitutive
structure of the block.
Today, the large regional spaces that completely cover the territory of
South America – the Andean Community of Nations and Mercosur – are
undergoing a process of convergence that may lead to unification into a South
American Community of Nations. Nevertheless, Argentina is cautious about
the potential for functional and meeting redundancies vis-à-vis the preexisting
blocks, as well as for differing commitments by South American states that hold
free-trade agreements with third countries.
In the context of our country’s unyielding calling for a fuller, deeper regional
integration, the government of President Kirchner is also promoting stronger
bilateral relations with countries such as Brazil, Chile, Bolivia, Mexico, and
Venezuela.
The recent commemoration of the signing of the Iguazu Declaration by
Presidents Alfonsín and Sarney, on 30 November 1985, was an adequate
backdrop for putting in place mechanisms aiming at revitalizing the bilateral
relationship between Argentina and Brazil.
On that anniversary, Presidents Kirchner and Lula signed the “Iguazu
Commitment: development, justice, and integration”, a strongly political
conceptual document. Under its aegis, 23 protocols and declarations open a
new cycle in the bilateral relationship. These documents give concrete meaning
to the political will to further develop bilateral integration, cooperation, and
coordination, and they commit both administrations to carry out a significant
number of initiatives and projects with a view to updating, deepening, and
expediting the ties between the two countries.
Objectives and challenges of Argentina’s foreign policy
12 DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
12
There can be no doubt that Argentina and Brazil shoulder a significant
share of the responsibility to move along the road to regional integration. The
decisions and initiatives that led to the second Iguazu Summit, as well as the joint
commitments and actions that resulted of it, expand the realm of integration
and cooperation already in place and press on towards developing new ones.
The objective is thus not only to integrate our societies, but also to open new
paths to be traveled together with the other countries of the region.
Similarly, our awareness of history leads us to acknowledge that the
responsibility of the two largest states of the Southern Cone goes beyond their
bilateral relationship. Indeed, integration between Argentina and Brazil is the
foundation and the engine for the regional Mercosur integration process, which,
in turn, sustains and energizes South American integration.
Concerning relations with the Republic of Chile, we can state that ever
since democratic rule was reestablished in both countries, we have made progress
along many avenues of interest. Over the last few years, our bilateral ties have
been deepened to a hitherto unprecedented degree in our common history.
Argentina and Chile acknowledge each other to be strategic allies, and they share
a clear calling for peace, friendship and for promoting democratic rule and human
rights. Argentine-Chilean relations are going through one of the best periods in
history, which heralds an increasingly rich and beneficial agenda for the peoples
of both nations.
With respect to Bolivia, we congratulate ourselves with them for having
overcome the institutional floundering which so concerned the region and that
had overshadowed our traditional bilateral relationship. Argentina and Brazil,
in particular, have given ample proof of their solidarity with the Bolivian people,
as well as their support of and respect for its constitutional process. Argentina is
working on issues of high importance for Bolivia, such as, for instance, improving
the living conditions of the significant Bolivian community in our country.
Furthermore, Argentina and all other Mercosur members are convinced that
the admission of Bolivia as a full member would be auspicious for the group.
In this context, Venezuela is already one step ahead on the road to fully
joining Mercosur. This contributes to furthering the common interests that
Argentina and Venezuela share concerning the growth of trade and joint
investments. Venezuela was one of the first countries to trust in our economic
recovery.
DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
Jorge Taiana
13
As concerns Mexico, geographic distance cannot overshadow the close
cultural identity that unites it to Argentina. To highlight it, we do not have to
delve as far back into the past as the Mexican Revolution’s influence on our
country’s politics: suffice it to recall the generosity of the Mexican state and of
its people towards our political exiles and asylum seekers during the more recent
dictatorship years. Mexico was not only a land of peace, study, and work for
many fellow Argentines: it represented for them the hope to live on during those
dark years. This brotherly relationship is furthered today by the Argentina-Mexico
Forum, the goal of which is to bring our communities closer together under the
aegis of mutually beneficial projects for both countries.
The major objective of Argentine foreign policy in the economic and trade
realm is to achieve an intelligent insertion into the international economy. We
hope to achieve this by carrying out the project of building a country of fairness,
an equitable and inclusive society that is both modern and productive.
Today’s Argentina can boast a remarkable economic recovery that is based
on four pillars: fiscal, trade-balance, and current-account surpluses; a flexible
though stable currency exchange rate; a predictable monetary policy; and trade
diversification, both in terms of traded products and of markets. Our 2005
trade balance surplus rose to about US$ 12 billion, despite continuously
expanding imports motivated by our economic recovery.
Opening up and effectively harnessing new markets is one of our central
goals. In order to achieve it, we are pushing ahead on two inter-related fronts:
economic and trade negotiations, and market intelligence development. Together,
these initiatives shall effectively consolidate new trade opportunities we have
negotiated.
But an intelligent integration must necessarily start in our own region. This
is why strengthening Mercosur is a priority objective of our foreign policy. One
of the current challenges in this regard is to further consolidate it as a single
market endowed with a functional institutional structure that ensures legal security
and enhances Mercosur’s growth, with a view to reaching an effective productive
integration of regional value-added chains.
In seeking balanced and beneficial growth for its members, we have turned
our attention towards the issue of asymmetries, with a view to finding consensus
solutions that balance competition, encourage fixed investments, and allow for a
more equitable distribution of the benefits of integration, enhancing the
Objectives and challenges of Argentina’s foreign policy
14 DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
14
development of the smaller countries and of the most backward regions and
sectors.
Mercosur is tackling a wide-ranging agenda of negotiations, among which
one may highlight those conducted with the European Union, Israel, South Africa,
India, the Gulf Coooperation Council, Cuba, Pakistan, South Korea, and Japan.
At the same time, as a country that has multiple and non-excluding interests,
we are committed to the goal of strengthening and consolidating our relations
with the other American countries, especially enhancing our ties with South
America by means of common economic, trade, and physical integration projects.
As concerns trade relations with other countries and regions, Argentina
assigns priority to initiatives that help promote a balanced, equitable trading
system.
The integration into the world that Argentina seeks is a pragmatic one,
and is a result of applying negotiating criteria that are both firm and in tune with
the country’s interests and with the circumstances of the international context,
with a view to contributing to the on-going process of restoring the credibility
and predictability of the Argentine government.
With this goal in mind, over the last few years we have intensified our
efforts at approaching countries with which trade relations could be markedly
improved. Therefore, we have strengthened and improved understandings with
regions such as Asia, Africa, and the Mideast, which ten years before played a
minor role for our exports. We have also grown closer to some non-EU European
countries.
This policy has led our foreign sales to rise to US$ 40 billion at the end of
2005 (60 percent above 2002 results), and to grow at a 15 percent yearly clip.
Concerning World Trade Organization (WTO) negotiations, concluding
the Doha Round has become an extraordinary challenge, which will require a
large dose of political will and of joint work to correct the main distortions to
international trade, especially in agriculture.
Argentina is fully involved in the Doha Round negotiations, with the
purpose of securing enhanced access to international markets in the near future
by means of reducing tariffs, non-tariff barriers, and agricultural subsidies. In
the framework of such process of negotiations, Argentina is a member of various
groupings (G-15, G-77, G-Rio, financial G-20). We start out by seeking regional
DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
Jorge Taiana
15
consensus within Mercosur, which is later applied at the multilateral level. We
pay special attention to avoiding traumatic changes that may negatively impact
the reindustrialization process that our most sensitive industrial sectors require.
With the adoption of the Millennium Declaration (2000) and of the
Monterrey Consensus (2002), development funding was energized as a necessary
element for more effectively waging war on poverty. In the various international
fora, Argentina supports initiatives to fight hunger and malnourishment by means
of generating self-sustaining economic growth in developing countries.
Argentina also seeks to influence international financial organizations so
that their activities take into account funding projects to promote developing-
country advancement. Argentina thus supports introducing new, more effective
international financial tools to fight poverty. It is along those lines that significant
changes have been proposed, which involve both globalization and the creation
of international taxes or levies that do not imply direct disbursements on the
part of national states. The idea is to support such initiatives and to promote
changes in the international financial system that favor developing countries.
In every instance, we are aware that our ability to face our tasks will be
strengthened by contributions from civil society and of the business sector, which
are charged with implementing those initiatives that are implicitly involved in
any economic integration process. A joint effort by the public and the private
sector is needed in every one of our countries so that integration translates into
effective, measurable benefits for all.
Our country will continue to uphold the need for dialogue and cooperation
among nations, in order to achieve an increasingly safe, stable, and equitable
international society – an international society that is able to effectively promote
peace, liberty, prosperity, and the common good of our peoples.
Version: Manuel Carlos Montenegro
DEP
Bolivia, a force for integration
16 DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
16
olivia, a relatively small country set in the heart of South America, has
been an integration hub since our remote past, including the early years of
European occupation. It also served as a Spanish buffer province against
Portuguese encroachment, being hotly disputed among the colonial viceroyalties.
One way or another, this land, descending from the highest peaks of the Andes
to the outer reaches of the mighty Amazon, is crucial to any political strategy
implemented in the region.
That may explain why past or current events here convey an image of
persistent conflict. While the Tiwanacota culture extended its influence over the
entire Tawantinsuyu of the Incas and the Qollasuyu encompassed the richest
lands of Huayna Kapac’s empire, one should not ignore the vast expanse of the
colonial Audiencia de Charcas, often deemd the matrix for the entire region. This
penchant for integration, though, has always been fraught with internal disputes
exposing rivalries between ayllus
1
and markas
2
, between neglected or displaced
Bolivia, a force for
integration
Evo Morales
*
B
* President of the Republic of Bolivia.
1
A self-governing, land-owning peasant community in the Andean highlands. The term may refer to a village,
a kinship group, or a class-like organization, usually based on collective agriculture. Although a pre-Columbian
reference, ayllu has been used as a synonym for contemporary highland Peasant Communities.
2
A marka is formed by four ayllus.
Evo Morales
DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
17
corregimientos
3
and those enjoying colonial attention, whose demands were granted
by the vast Spanish Audiencia. These wrangles and petty rivalries attended the
foundation of the elitist republics imposed by Creole power groups – oligarchies
incapable of seeing beyond their own immediate gratification, thereby
condemning our lands to vegetative poverty and backwardness.
Recovering Bolivia’s manifest vocation for integration by overcoming
provincial quarrels and misunderstandings between social groups is the lofty
desideratum informing our political action. It is one that should be embraced by
all men and women determined to recoup the high values of human coexistence
not only in our region but also in the wider world.
Our early history
Owing to their gravitational force, the ancient cultures that flourished
around Lake Titicaca had a decisive influence over huge tracts of land that
extended to the Amazon rainforest in the east and to the Pacific coast in the
west. It was the Tiahuanaco civilization, however, that clearly embodied our
country’s calling as a force for integration. The Tiahuanaco ruins are located
near Lake Titicaca, which straddles the border between Peru and Bolivia. In its
heyday, this religious and political center was located on the banks of the lake.
Its monuments attest to the high degree of civilization it attained and to the
influence it cast over a wide region. Tools and utensils typical of this culture
have been found as far away as Santiago, Chile.
According to legend, it was from Lake Titicaca that Manco Kapac and
Mama Ocllo hailed. They were the architects of the Inca Empire, South America’s
most advanced civilization, which resisted European invasion and, despite military
defeat, maintained the spirit of unity among the original peoples across this
sprawling region throughout the three centuries of colonial rule. Though formally
subordinate to the Lima Viceroyalty, the Audiencia de Charcas enjoyed autonomy
as regards the Charcas University, one of the continent’s cultural centers, and
exerted its legal authority over a huge territory abutting the possessions of the
Portuguese Crown.
3
Colonial administrative districts that later became intendencias (intendancies or provinces) and Catholic
dioceses or parishes.
Bolivia, a force for integration
18 DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
18
Such preeminence stemmed from acknowledgment of its influence by the
Spanish conquistadors, wherever they started out from. That was the case of the
expedition that founded Buenos Aires and then sailed up the River Plate to the
point where it established Asuncion, Paraguay’s current capital. One
expeditionary, Ñuflo de Chávez, searching for the riches everyone dreamed of
hauling back to Spain, pushed on until he came to the first foothills of the
cordillera. There he founded Santa Cruz de la Sierra. At that juncture, realizing
he could no longer depend on Asuncion – much less Buenos Aires – he chose to
apply to the Lima Viceroy, requesting the incorporation of these lands into the
Audiencia de Charcas.
The Audiencia de Charcas proved to be the seedbed of the great
independence propagandists. Belgrano, Pasos, and the Potosí-born Cornelio
Saavedra, who headed Buenos Aires’s first Protective Board, had all three come
from Charcas, where the Audiencia’s President had been deposed in 1809. They
chose to proclaim Buenos Aires’s independence in 1810 to commemorate the
first anniversary of the Charcas uprising.
Even later, when the struggle for independence was under way, that
integrating force, active since the first civilizations, undeniably influenced the
thinking of the liberators, who dreamed of forming a great nation comprised
by our peoples. It was not a question of cultural influence alone, but a heroic
struggle of men and women of the original peoples, who throughout European
rule, had repeatedly rebelled against the colonial power. Around 1870, Tupac
Amaru in Lower Peru and Tupac Katari in Upper Peru led the most important
uprisings by original peoples. Amaru, with Micaela Bastidas, and Katari, with
Bartolina Sisa, epitomize the force of a culture whose basic nucleus is the couple.
The truth is that men and women fought side by side in this great country for the
continent’s freedom.
The independence war was a medley of uprisings, which some historians
have referred to as republiquetas but which were in fact guerrilla movements
supported by Indians and half-breeds and an occasional Creole embracing the
cause of freedom. In the steep Yungas valley of La Paz, Father Muñecas and the
Lanza brothers; in Oruro, Sebastián Pagador before anyone else; in Chuquisaca,
the Padilla couple; Ibáñez and the Vicuñas, in imperial Potosí; in Santa Cruz,
Coronel Warnes and the bowlegged Cañoto; in Tarija, “Moto” Méndez; and in
Cochabamba, Esteban Arze and the heroic women who defended themselves
Evo Morales
DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
19
against abuse from Spanish authorities. The role played by Juan Maraza, the
Canichana Chief, is also noteworthy.
From this mosaic issued a Fatherland that, born in the boundless Amazon
plains, traversed the highest Cordillera peaks to bathe in the waters of the Pacific
Ocean.
Bolivar’s Fatherland
On becoming a republic, this land was named after El Libertador, who
treated it as a “favorite child.” Chroniclers say that this was the way to please
him who could then create countries or prevent them from being formed. But
above and beyond these circumstantial facts, the founders clung to the one
name that could then have any meaning for Latin American integration and
renamed the Audiencia de Charcas after Sucre, Bolivar’s most loyal follower.
Symbolically, Bolivia’s founding was a call to the unity of the peoples of our
continent; it encapsulated the meaning manifest in the Amphictyonic Panama
Congress.
The country encompassed a vast territory of over three million square
kilometers. Its boundaries resulted from an arrangement accepted by the Creole,
based on recognition of the Colony’s administrative divisions. Even during the
colonial era, though it was part of the Lima Viceroyalty, the Audiencia de Charcas
had its own portion of the Pacific seaboard and advanced all the way to the
extensive Brazilian border – one feature depended closely on the other.
In the Republic’s early years, the will to integrate dictated the main course
of action that led to the establishment of the Peruvian-Bolivian Confederation.
It should be noted that the foremost player in this enterprise was Andrés de
Santa Cruz Calahumana, a half-caste born in La Paz, who became President of
Peru (1826) and then of Bolivia (1829-1839). His ideal was shared by politicians
and military figures from both young republics but was undermined by other
Bolivian and Peruvian political leaders and members of the military. Their
opposition sprang from suspicions stoked up the government of a neighboring
country, namely, Chile. Its main artificer, Diego Portales, mustered all the forces
at his disposal to scupper the integration process. Again and again, Portales sent
troops to dismember the Confederation. He eventually achieved his purpose in
1839 when several of the Protector’s collaborators turned against him.
Bolivia, a force for integration
20 DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
20
Bolivia was severely wounded. The titanic effort required to establish the
Confederation, South America’s strongest, most solid State for a short period,
had sapped its future prospects. In the following years, its access to the Pacific
coast was barred by fierce competition between the ports of Valparaíso and El
Callao, as they vied for dominion over this extensive coastline, Antofagasta then
being an intermediate port bereft of development prospects.
The five sisters
Deprived of an outlet to the sea, Bolivia is surrounded by five countries,
two of which are regional powers.
Bolivia shares with Peru not only a long border spanning three degrees
latitude but also dominion over Lake Titicaca, the regions main freshwater asset.
Our history and culture bind us together in a single unit, while modern relations
dilute geographical frontiers owing to the free movement of men and women
with similar mindsets and strong family ties. It is only natural, then, that Peru and
Bolivia should have stood shoulder to shoulder in the Pacific War, as a result of
which both countries lost part of their territories. Nonetheless, Peru’s unresolved
disputes with other neighbors have often driven a wedge between the Lima and
La Paz governments.
With Brazil we share an extensive border, which, as mentioned, was initially
the line of defense against Portuguese encroachment. Today, on the contrary, it
is an open invitation to dialogue and integration. Along this border traced by
mighty rivers, not a single locality has been able to develop solely through its
own efforts. Far removed from major urban hubs, the riverine populations
vegetate on opposite banks. Yet this region is rich in natural resources that could
well support sizeable centers of economic activity. Concerted action by the entire
region would permit this sort of development.
In the early years of the Republic, the Marshal of Ayacucho sent out a
mission to make contact with Paraguay. José Gaspar Rodríguez de Francia,
Paraguay’s Supreme Commander, wary of foreign intervention, rebuffed that
initial contact. In a way, he was right: the Triple Alliance, instigated by world
powers, put a painful end to the endogenous development experiment begun by
Francia and carried on by Solano López. It took a fratricide war between Collas
and Guaranis to bring about the necessary sharing of interests in this scarcely
Evo Morales
DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
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populated, arid zone known as the Chaco, whose subsoil on both sides of the
border harbors immense reserves for generating the energy we all need.
To the south, Bolivia seems to extend into the northern Argentine
provinces. Jujuy, Salta, Formosa, and Chaco differ in nothing from Potosí in the
west and from Tarija in the center, as far as geography and population are
concerned. Coca is chewed in those provinces the same as here. The inhabitants
of northern Argentina dress, speak, and eat just like their counterparts in the
Tarija Chaco, too. Even more importantly, the economy in this zone is fueled by
cross-border trade. The regions vitality relies on unruffled relations between
the two countries.
Our fifth neighbor is Chile, with which we have – and have always had – a
thorny relationship marked by rash, hurtful incidents.
The governments of both countries should earnestly ask themselves what
the reasons for this long-standing confrontation are. We could easily claim that
Chile’s foreign policy has been one of confrontation with its three neighbors –
Peru, Argentina and Bolivia. True enough, it has somehow managed to settle its
differences with the first two but not with our country. It is well known that
Bolivia’s foreign trade depends entirely on the ports of northern Chile
(Antofagasta, Iquique, and Arica) and that business in these port towns depends
in large measure on that trade. Their development is unbridled and requires
better services, which apparently can only be provided through good relations
with Bolivia. It is clear that this coastal zone has a growing demand for water and
energy, the cause of the latest misunderstandings between the two countries.
Deviation without consultation of the Lauca River in the 1960s, refusal to
recognize Bolivia’s right over the Silala waters
4
, and Chile’s current energy demand
– these are the factors that set the strident tone of relations between the two
countries. The Chilean State has maintained an unchanging policy toward Bolivia
for nearly two centuries: identification of its own requirements, identification of
sources to meet them, and assumption of control over such sources. The policy
has yielded high dividends all along. As stated above, nearly all Bolivia’s foreign
trade flows through Chilean ports, and there is a vigorous exchange of products
and financial resources, all of which is highly favorable to Chile and detrimental
to Bolivia. However, this model has now become a serious hindrance to Chile’s
4
A channel built by a railway company to supply its steam locomotives with water from the bofedales wetlands
located in Bolivian territory.
Bolivia, a force for integration
22 DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
22
relations not only with Bolivia but also with its other neighbors and the world at
large. Of course, changing a course of action upheld for so long is complicated.
But Chile must do just that or risk becoming isolated from the international
community. Bolivia realizes that regional integration will be incomplete without
Chile, and that it will go forward when the Mapocho rulers prove willing to join
the South American community.
The international concert
The Bolivian State has never exercised a consistent international policy.
With great effort, one Administration manages to maintain a given line of action
that proceeds through ups and downs. Then, the next Administration starts its
foreign relations from scratch, ignoring, if not jettisoning, what has gone before.
The only plausible explanation for Bolivia’s relations with Europe is the
fact that local power groups continue to view that continent as the dominant
power. The independence proclaimed 180 years ago has not succeeded in shaking
off the mental subjection that has marked our relations with the Old Continent.
It is hardly surprising, then, that we maintain a bevy of ambassadors in Europe
(two in Italy!) but only one, or none, in Africa. These diplomats have no function
other than maintaining a formal, condescending friendship toward our country
from which Bolivia may derive some sort of assistance. Whether this assistance
be for production, services, infrastructure, health, education, or culture seems
indifferent to our rulers.
Japan, of course, fits the same mould. Despite being located on the
easternmost fringe of Asia and having an utterly different culture, social makeup,
and system of government, the Bolivian government’s expectations vis-à-vis Japan
are identical. Our relatively recent relations with China display no clear objectives,
either. Indeed, our relations with Asia defy explanation. We fail to grasp how
more than half the world’s population could be of interest to a country such as
ours, which has a pressing need for proper relations with nations that can pull
their weight in the international arena.
The same applies to Africa. Sporadically, we maintain an embassy on that
continent. This may be because the Bolivian government has yet to appreciate
the reasons why we should maintain relations with African countries. Their
existence is simply ignored, just as we are ignored there and in most of the world.
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23
It would seem that the focus of our foreign relations should be trained on
the American continent. And yet there are inexplicable gaps in what should be
the main focus of our diplomatic activity. Central American diversity is disregarded:
a single diplomatic representation cannot attend to those five republics plus
Belize. The picture gets worse when we turn to the Caribbean whose Spanish- or
English-speaking countries and Haiti do not figure in our relations, a blind spot
that also encompasses the Guyanas. Cuba is an exception only because Havana
makes an effort to maintain relations with the entire continent.
Ample diplomatic representation in the United States of America can be
justified on the basis of the type of relations Bolivia maintains with that country.
However, given our country’s limited diplomatic apparatus, the fact that we
maintain three full representations there is absurd. That may provide us with a
complete picture of the factors determining our foreign relations, whose unilateral
orientation is the result of the subordination that has been the hallmark of Bolivia’s
domestic and foreign policies.
Breaking the vicious circle
This continent’s original peoples made their voices heard in 1992, 500
years after Christopher Columbus landed on the continent and the occupation
of our lands began. Their voices sounded the theme of unity and integration.
From the Arctic to Tierra del Fuego, the peoples saw themselves as one people.
We are united in our sense of belonging to this land and of being a part of it.
United by the customs that have remained the same despite the great distances
and the long period during which brethren were kept apart from brethren. United
in awareness that our land has been taken from us, just as our ways of working,
governing ourselves, and living have been expropriated. This is why the voices
that have sounded since then declare integration to be both desirable and necessary.
Latin America has managed to maintain common ties even after its conquest
and colonization. We have appropriated the invaders’ language. It is ours now
since we have paid for it in blood, exploitation and humiliation. We have made
it ours so that it might yield the splendid fruits of a literature that expresses
original warmth, flavor, and texture clothed in Castilian form and color.
The same goes for the peoples north of the Bravo River, who, like ourselves,
clamor for the land that has been taken from them, their customs that have been
changed, and their kinsfolk that have been slaughtered.
Bolivia, a force for integration
24 DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
24
Integration, proclaimed Simón Bolívar. His enemies, who did not
want integration because it countered their petty interests, attempted as often
as they could to murder Bolivar. Ignoring the great service he had rendered
this continent, they condemned him to exile, but he preferred to die rather than
quit his native land.
Whenever a circumstantial speech is in order, Bolivar’s ideal is invoked as
an aspiration of our peoples. To date, however, no effort has been made to
instate the great Latin America fatherland. Yet there is every indication that the
time has come to bring this aspiration to fruition, thereby overcoming the petty
interests that have ruled our countries for centuries.
On what basis did Bolivar forge the ideal of one country extending from
Mexico to Patagonia?
It was no mere fantasizing. He had seen the European tragedy of his time
– countries confronting each other, defenseless before the power of richer
kingdoms. The French Revolution, spreading across Europe, seemed to be
leading to the unification Napoleon Bonaparte attempted to impose by the might
of his armies. But the idea was defeated by retrograde powers, and Europe
lapsed once again into a patchwork of kingdoms and principalities. Bolivar
realized that under such conditions, conflicts would never cease. Thereafter,
Europe was engulfed by a succession of wars that lasted one hundred and fifty
years and only ended in 1945. Bolivar’s aspiration was based on this predicament.
He did not wish a similar fate for Latin America and, moreover, to the north of
this continent he saw an ambitious country emerging.
Groups with claims on power still resist the trend toward integration, but
a political imperative prevails born of economic expedience.
Bolivia, centrally located in this region of America, ought to render a
decisive contribution to this process aimed at fostering the unity of South
American countries.
An integration factor
Our country has been a hub at every stage of this regions history. That was
the case in Tiahuanaco and in Tawantinsuyu. Not even the European colony
could escape this force, whose consolidation was championed by the patriots
fighting for independence. But then the interests of certain groups prevailed,
Evo Morales
DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
25
leading to circumstantial riches for each party and to maintenance of the colonial
era’s methods of spoliation.
Many opportunities have thus been missed, not only in our country but in
other countries as well. Bolivia saw its silver and tin deposits depleted, its rubber
plantations abandoned, and its oil squandered. The same fate is now being
insistently imposed on natural gas. Owing to a simplistic view of free trade, gas
has been transformed into just another commodity and is in danger of becoming
a dwindling resource that leaves only poverty behind. Eduardo Galeno, America’s
great chronicler, wrote about “the importance of not being important,” as he
stressed how countries in possession of significant natural resources become the
target of savage exploitation that yields no benefit but greater poverty and
backwardness instead.
The foregoing should suffice to convey the message that Bolivia as a country
and South America as a region should have a different notion of ways to exploit
their riches. In the case of gas, we are convinced that it can be a factor contributing
to integration.
It is worth pondering this idea. The region’s development, albeit at the low
rates imposed on us by the globalized world, has produced an energy crisis. This
situation requires hydrocarbons, especially gas, to fill the gap. But it is not a
question of engaging in a competition based on prices or privilege. The
community of the regions nations should set a fair price that would foster the
development of the country in which this resource is exploited, permitting its
industrialization and thus ensuring better living standards for the entire region.
Once these minimum conditions are met, sales outside the region could then be
considered. Insisting on this issue, it is clear that integration will place us in a
better position to negotiate with the industrialized countries. Particularly with
respect to energy resources, there is a proposal to form a broad association of
hydrocarbon-producing countries in Latin America. It is essential that this
initiative should begin to take shape at a more immediate level.
Something similar should occur in relation to trade in general. The Ftaa
negotiations, which have failed due to attendant impositions, have been partially
replaced by the negotiation of Free Trade Treaties. Although they have had
initial success in Central America, the FTTs stir up suspicions in our midst. Thus,
the so-called Andean Free Trade Treaty has fallen prey to the selfsame
postponements besetting the Ftaa. The alternative the countries of our region
should contemplate is a mechanism of their own that favors internal economic
Bolivia, a force for integration
26 DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
26
development, safeguarding our growth from the cupidity of world powers that
demand raw materials and semi-finished products and seek, in exchange, to
generalize the unimpeded sale of their products – transgenic seeds, virtual products,
and management systems that will, in the medium run, engender greater dependence.
As a result, regional integration has become an inescapable issue, an
unquestionable condition, and an undeniable demand. Integration, however, is
based on proper understanding, which in turn involves a matter crucial to Bolivia’s
development: its claim to an outlet to the sea.
Reparation of an injustice, restoration of integrity
Bolivia is a unit born of the vast plains that extend from the country’s
southeast to its northeastern reaches, climbs the highest Andean peaks, and
descends to the shores of the Pacific Ocean. The amputation of its integrity 125
years ago has been a key factor in the backwardness blighting the country and
consequently the regions adjoining its extensive borders.
Suffice it to note that economic activity in northern Chile has survived
solely on account of Bolivia’s needs. The prospect of modifying that connection
understandably raises deep concern in the region.
Needless to say, restoring this zone to Bolivia’s sovereignty would
automatically boost trade in the region. But the narrower interests of the groups
wielding power in Santiago de Chile have ruled out any such reparation.
Finding a mechanism capable of reestablishing a status harking back to
prehistoric times is a challenge the integration process must address. We maintain
that an agreement must be reached by the three countries directly involved in the
issue, with the participation of the other nations in the region. They surely have
a stake in a solution that would herald the dawn of a new paradigm for relations
among the peoples of South America.
The integration process ought already to be under way. This is required not
only by the political reality of the world today but also by our countries’ pressing
needs. We should thus move forward at a brisk pace. We propose that gas be seen
as the prime factor for integration at our disposal whilst maintaining that the
restoration of Bolivia’s integrity is a sine qua non condition for integration.
Version: João Coelho.
DEP
Paulo Skaf
DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
27
The brazilian
economy’s challenges
and prospects
Paulo Skaf
*
razil’s average annual demographic growth over the last few years has
held at 1.5 percent. We may thus expect about 2.8 million new Brazilians to be
born in 2006. It will be up to the Nation to decide what kind of a future awaits
not only its newborn sons and daughters, but also its children and teen-agers
enrolled in schools, as well as its youth and adult population now seeking
employment. It is also up to the Nation to decide what kind of a future it will
give to citizens anxious to be brought into the ranks of its consumer society. It is
up to the Nation to decide what kind of a future it will give to the resilient
workers and businesspeople who have kept the Brazilian economy alive by
surmounting difficulties through decades of adverse circumstances worthy of a
saga. Taking into account official IBGE
1
projections that place our population
at 207 million by 2020, stagnation is not an option for Brazil. Therefore, every
notch on our GDP scale becomes extremely important.
B
* President of Fiesp (Industrial Federation of the State of São Paulo).
1
Brazilian Institute for Statistics and Geography.
The brazilian economy’s challenges and prospects
28 DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
28
It goes without saying that to consistently achieve public account surpluses,
to control inflation, to honor both domestic and external debt payment schedules,
and to keep commitments made to multilateral credit organizations are all of
the essence. Of course they are! However, a country that boasts the fifth largest
population on the planet cannot afford to assess economic performance only on
the basis of tables and numbers that relate to some index oscillation or the other.
We need to reach for more, much more. We need to correct past mistakes as
well as economic policy concepts that both the past and the current Brazilian
administrations have stubbornly held. Promoting a sustained growth cycle is
not enough: the benefits of such expansion should be felt more effectively by the
Brazilian people. It does us no good if the economy is doing well according to
some cold indicators while the quality of life of Brazilians does not enjoy any
measurable improvement.
In other words, it is of the essence that the country adopt, and keep to, a
minimum agenda in order to take the path to development. Such an agenda
should include four structural adjustments that may not be postponed any longer:
(a) fiscal and tax reforms that lower public debt and reduce the tax burden the
productive sector currently bears; (b) implementing a credit policy that includes
lowering interest rates; (c) infrastructure improvement; and (d) adopting a trade
policy that may increase exports in a sustained fashion.
The first task ahead of us is to adopt a tax policy that encourages, not
hinders, economic growth and productive activities. The true and effective
solution to the taxation problem is a wide-ranging reform of the tax system, one
that includes key fiscal issues. Governmental expenditures are growing faster
than governmental revenue. We must define what we expect the state to do, how
large it will be, how much it will cost, and how it will be financed.
In our view, this is the crucial issue. The public debt is the result of many
years of neglecting to keep balanced accounts. This has been a major obstacle
hindering the adoption of a growth-oriented economic policy that is less obsessed
with monetarist, restrictive measures to control inflation and to keep the federal
budget, the strategic dollar-denominated reserves, and the Nation’s credibility
in a fragile balance. We have given priority to what we presume to be security to
the detriment of creating jobs to address unemployment and demographic
growth, of fostering social inclusion by means of salary and income distribution,
of promoting business growth and of effectively starting a virtuous growth cycle.
Paulo Skaf
DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
29
The long-standing stagnation that has led our economic growth rate to be
lower than even those of our Mercosul neighbors may not be allowed to go on.
The effects of this relative sluggishness are serious indeed. Brazil’s competitiveness
has gradually declined. In 1980, Brazil, China, and India each had a share of
about 3 percent of the world’s GDP. While our country has sled back to a 2.6
percent share – a 25 percent loss –, China and India have surged ahead by 325
percent and 81 percent, respectively. We need to offer new, wider horizons to
the 190 million Brazilian citizens through efficient public policies that uphold a
commitment to the fate of both the present and future generations.
A Study by Fiesp shows the way to operational surplus and
sustained GDP growth
Our deep concern about the public debt, fiscal and tax issues has led Fiesp
to conduct a detailed study to establish how serious those problems are and to
identify feasible solutions. The adoption of such suggestions would put an end
to the decades-long routine of spending more than tax revenues allow for.
Incidentally, this must be termed quite a “feat”, for our Nations government
collects almost 40 percent of everything Brazilian society is able to produce!
Every administration justifies itself in an awkward drone: “We’re preserving the
primary surplus”. Alas, the extraordinary deficits and their negative impacts,
which the Fiesp study reveals, are never adequately addressed. The study highlights
the parallel growth of the tax burden and of governmental expenses between
1995 and 2004, and especially from 1998 onwards. Over that period, the public
debt jumped from 30.5 percent to over 51.8 percent of GDP. Tax revenue growth
reached 63.5 percent (or 5.6 percent a year, on average); the GDP’s growth
itself hovered at 2.2. percent, that is, less than half the tax collection growth rate.
More serious still, expenses expanded 61.5 percent over the same period, that is,
at a 5.5 percent yearly clip.
The urgency of achieving an operational surplus (one that includes servicing
the debt) is made even more clear by the study’s projections: should the Federal
government’s expenses continue to grow at their present yearly rate, by 2015 the
primary surplus (which excludes debt interest payments) would fall from the
current R$ 52.3 billion to R$ 40.7 billion, the tax burden would still be high and
expenses would increase from 17.3 percent to 19.3% of GDP.
The brazilian economy’s challenges and prospects
30 DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
30
In order to reverse this picture, the study suggests three measures: cutting
expenses by 2 percent a year for six consecutive fiscal years (2006 to 2011);
limiting fiscal revenue growth to 50 percent of GDP growth, with a cap of 2.75
percent a year; and, once operational surplus is achieved, using 90 percent of
such proceeds for investment over the following fiscal year, while using 10 percent
for debt amortization over the current fiscal year.
The administration would secure an operational surplus by 2011. The main
impact of this would be a strong rise in GDP growth, which would go from 3.5
percent in 2005 to 6.8 percent in 2015 (a yearly average of 5.7 percent). Private
and state investment would account for such an increase: in 2015, the latter would
reach 5 percent and the former would be 19.2 percent of GDP. We would thus
overcome the current, cruel equation posited by public outlays, which paralyzes
the country and forces it to control inflation by means of high taxes and interest
rates, an overvalued exchange rate, credit limitations, and other monetarist
measures that thwart prosperity.
Proposals to cut expenses are met by the usual responses involving alleged
difficulties such as the Constitutionally-mandated linkage of fiscal revenue among
the federal, state, and municipal levels. Well, various items for which the
government must pay are already above the compulsory percentage levels. In
such cases, productivity and quality growth should be sought, so as make excess
fat cuts feasible. As to the deficit-ridden social insurance system, fighting petty
corruption and seriously updating benefitiaries’ personal records in a way that
does not place the brunt of the effort on retired people and pensioners themselves
would bring about the desired, necessary expense cuts.
The second structural task to be tackled on the development agenda is
establishing an efficient credit policy to finance both businesses and the consumer.
This is the economy’s major source of fuel. Nevertheless, Brazil’s Credit/GDP
ratio is appalling – just about 27 percent, compared to Chile’s 70 percent.
We also have one of the world’s highest interest rates and the world’s largest
spread, which tops almost 40 percent in the case of pre-fixed repurchase
operations. In 2004, credit grew for as long as the Central Bank hinted the Selic
prime interest rate would fall. However, since last September, as the Selic rate
was set on a month-by-month growth cycle, this trend reversed itself.
Another Fiesp-sponsored study shows that Brazilians – both as individual
and as corporate citizens – spend R$ 118 billion a year to cover interest payments,
Paulo Skaf
DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
31
out of which R$ 73 billion are due to spread rates. Were our spread rate equivalent
to the Latin American average (Chile, Argentina, Mexico, Colombia, and
Venezuela), this expense would be just R$ 16 billion.
It is widely known that infrastructure is one of our countrys bottlenecks.
It suffices to look at a few numbers to realize the importance of increasing
efficiency in that area. The logistics sector as a whole – taking the chain of suppliers,
warehousing, domestic transportation and distribution into account – generates
revenues of about R$ 100 billion a year. In 2004 alone, more than 1.2 billion
tons of freight were transported. A balanced transportation matrix, along with
efficient logistical planning, would go a long way toward reducing the final cost
of products, and it would also boost Brazilian competitiveness.
However, the freight transportation system, such as it stands today, generates
significant economic and competitiveness losses. It therefore increases the so
called “Brazil Cost”. This state of things, furthermore, generates other losses,
such as excessive delays in transportation of goods, lost investments by
companies that would want either to launch new ventures or to expand current
business, agricultural harvest losses, and a shortage of warehousing capacity in
the countryside. All of this is a result of the inefficiency of the transportation
logistics chain.
It is therefore imperative that we invest in ports, railroads and terminals.
These investments would reduce operating costs and boost efficiency, so Brazilian
products would become increasingly competitive abroad and cheaper for the
domestic consumer. It is also indispensable to improve Brazilian roads. A study
by Fundação Getúlio Vargas, which was sponsored by the Heavy Construction
Syndicate of the State of São Paulo, reveals that the Brazilian road network, at
1.7 million kilometers, is much too small for the size of our territory. It also
points out there are vast stretches of unpaved roads. Our road network’s density
stands at 202 kilometers per thousand square kilometers. Numerous countries –
including some in Latin America – boast significantly higher ratios. On the other
hand, published research results of the National Transportation Confederation
(CNT) show that 74.7 percent of the 74,681 kilometers of paved roads in Brazil
are in poor condition and/or are otherwise defective. Furthermore, signposts
are inadequate in 65.4 percent of Brazilian roads.
Investing in electricity generation should also be a priority. The economic
growth that all of us hope for – that is, at least 5 percent a year – may increase
The brazilian economy’s challenges and prospects
32 DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
32
the risk of a repeat “blackout” in the absence of adequate investment for electricity
generation, transmission, and distribution. According to Fiesp estimates, Brazil
needs to add between 6 percent and 7 percent to its energy matrix every year in
order to be able to adequately promote growth.
Taking the transportation and energy sectors as examples, the significance
of Public-Private Partnerships (PPP’s) clearly comes to the fore. Such
partnerships not only would bridge the resource gap for infrastructure
investment: they would correct an old distortion. Indeed, until very recently, the
only two legal instruments that were available to regulate infrastructure investment
in Brazil were the Public Bidding Law, which applies to procurement that is 100
percent financed with state funds, and the Law on Concessions, which covers
investments that are 100 percent private. PPP’s bring common sense to the table,
making it possible for both public and private sources of funding to be tapped.
Therefore, it is all-important to urgently implement PPP legislation, which
will have been in force for almost a year come December. It is inadmissible that
we continue to delay the practical implementation of this model of partnering,
which has already been shown to be feasible in other countries. Besides bringing
solutions to the field of infrastructure by preventing infrastructure bottlenecks
from blocking economic growth, PPP’s should also stimulate industry, opening
up business opportunities in many fields, from capital goods and heavy-duty
engineering or metallurgy to both high-tech and labor-intensive fields.
Beyond reducing its public debt, establishing an adequate taxation system,
lowering interest rates and improving infrastructure, Brazil also needs to establish
an efficient trade policy. Brazil’s share of the world market in 1999 was about
.86 percent, and it grew to 1.11 percent in 2004. This is a significant achievement,
but we need – and are able – to grow even more. In order to have a strong
economy, we need large exports. Fiesp supports increasing trade with developing
countries. However, Brazil cannot forget who its major trade partners are: the
United States, Europe, and Japan. We should try and seek special trade
arrangements with them, as these would involve a sizable trade volume.
The implementation of trade policy runs along two major axis, the first of
which, as stated above, is solving the logistic and infrastructure bottlenecks. We
cannot afford to go on losing R$ 1.2 billion a year on account of loading delays
at Brazilian docks. The second major axis of policy implementation concerns
the exchange rate. The relative value of the U.S. dollar and the volatility of the
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DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
33
Brazilian real discourage exports. Some companies are losing money in order to
honor foreign sales commitments they made when the exchange rate was over
three reais to the dollar. This is unacceptable.
As concerns volatility, a Fiesp study clearly shows that the real is the currency
that oscillates more than any other fluctuating currency vis-à-vis the U.S. dollar.
The largest gap between the highest and the lowest value of those currencies in
2004 was 11 percent. In the case of the real, it reached 22 percent. These
circumstances are dire for exporters, importers, and business in general, as
importing some machines and supplies is just as unavoidable as having to face
foreign competitors.
Another key point for trade policy is to correctly gauge economic
diplomacy decisions. In this connection, mistakes such as the recent recognition
of China as a market economy should be avoided. It should be noted that Beijing
did not reciprocate, and indeed opposed the Brazilian goal of becoming a
permanent member of the United Nations Security Council, while at the same
time condemned the presence of Brazilian peacekeepers in Haiti. Brazil’s posture
vis-à-vis the economy of that Asian nation has been nondescript. It would be
impossible to convince business people or government officials in any domestic
or international forum that Chinese prices are ruled by the market. Not even the
most extreme critic of liberalism would accept the concept of “social dumping”
as a justification for quasi-symbolic salaries…
Brazil must win the fight against piracy, which negatively
affects both the domestic and export markets
The importance of an increasingly efficient trade policy was clearly shown
by the Brazilian economic performance in 2004, a year in which about 56 percent
of GDP growth was due to exports. Foreign sales reveal an enormous effort on
the part of business, especially industry, to overcome obstacles. Industry has
been able to reach world-class standards in both quality and FOB prices, in spite
of obstacles to access to technology and to financing brought about by all the
problems described above.
Businesspeople are already doing the impossible to maintain the present
record levels of Brazilian exports. Nevertheless, they face the imminent challenge
of entering the metaphysical realm of miracle-making. There would be no other
The brazilian economy’s challenges and prospects
34 DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
34
choice had the United States acted on their threat to exclude Brazil from the
tariff benefits of the Generalized System of Preferences and to adopt other
restrictive measures, as retaliation to spiraling piracy and fake products. Despite
market diversification, Americans still are the largest buyers of Brazilian products.
Increased barriers to bilateral trade would be a major blow.
The U.S. administrations decision to postpone the exclusion of Brazil from
its Generalized System of Preferences was a confidence vote for the Brazilian
commitment to engage in a fierce fight against piracy, to which the private sector
has contributed decisively. Unfortunately, Brazilian piracy numbers are
portentous. Therefore, this fight can admit no omissions. Everyone must engage
in it. This is what Fiesp is doing. It chose to give priority to the defense of the
right to industrial, intellectual, and trademark property, and to the fight against
piracy. This crime greatly affects industry and the economy. It impacts the level
of employment, consumer security, tax evasion, and the investment climate.
Fortunately, Fiesp’s initiatives were internationally welcomed and contributed
to keeping Brazil’s GSP status.
Fiesp representatives called on several U.S. government organs, including
the Department of Commerce and the Ustr Office. Last March, I had a meeting
in Washington with the acting Ustr, Ambassador Peter Allgeier, and with Assistant
Commerce Secretary William Lash. We also signed a Memorandum of
Understanding between Fiesp and the U.S. National Association of
Manufacturers. Furthermore, we are increasing our cooperation with the U.S.
Chamber of Commerce.
On March 29, we held a seminar entitled “Brazil Against Piracy” at Fiesp
headquarters. Among the many officials who attended were Senator Norm
Coleman, Chairman of the Western Hemisphere Subcommittee of the Senate’s
Foreign Relations Committee, and the U.S. Ambassador to Brazil, John
Danilovich. On June 16, we held another seminar, entitled “Brazil Against Piracy:
The Fight Goes On”.
Fiesp was the first organization to be brought on board its Panel of
Collaborators by the National Council for Fighting Piracy. It also undertook a
number of other initiatives to face the problem. It opened an interactive
installation on the theme “Brazil Against Piracy” on Paulista Avenue in São Paulo,
at the SP Fashion Week event in Praia Grande, and at the Ministry of Justice and
the Chamber of Deputies, in Brasilia. It published the “Brazil: A Pirate Country?”
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report on intellectual property issues, as well as a study on “Brazil and the U.S.
Generalized System of Preferences”. Fiesp also actively interacts with other
business sector organizations and with Derex’s International Negotiations and
Trade Defense section.
Furthermore, last September, Fiesp organized a Summit on Intellectual
Property Rights, joined the Ministry of Justice in sponsoring a Training Program
for Public Agents, and defined the minimum parameters Brazilian legislation
must adopt, and Brazilian agencies must follow, concerning pirate merchandise
apprehension and disposal. We are also creating a digital portal on product
identification and customs valuation.
All of the above actions, strategies and the associated mobilization show
Fiesp’s commitment to face the problem. The industry of São Paulo will fight
untiringly, arm in arm with all other sectors, until this evil is rooted out. The
Brazilian economy must prosper in a production environment that recognizes
industrial and intellectual property, and that pays due respect to quality, ethics,
and transparency. It also must acknowledge and respect intellectual and industrial
property, as well as rules of origin.
Beyond finding solutions for basic structural problems (the public debt,
the tax and fiscal systems, credit and interest rates, infrastructure bottlenecks
and trade policy), there are several other measures we must take in order to
surmount the challenges we face. These are, inter alia: strengthening small and
very small business, fostering innovation and research, and improving the quality
of education. All of this should be done with the full participation of society
and the productive sector, in a collective exercise of social responsibility. All of
the above items are championed by Fiesp.
It is interesting to note that in the field of small and very small businesses,
Brazil can boast having one entrepeneur for every eight inhabitants, as compared
to the U.S., where that ratio is 1:10. In Brazil, the number of people who opened
their own businesses grew from 18 million to 23 million over the 1999 to 2003
period. Meanwhile, the numbers of the salaried held at 18 million. Another
important piece of data: the participation of women in business reaches 40 percent
in Brazil, a figure that compares favorably with the 30-percent world average.
The downside: World Bank research has revealed the pitfalls entrepreneurs
must face in Brazil, starting with the bureaucracy involved. To open a company
in Brazil requires 152 days. It takes only two days in Australia, and four days
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36 DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
36
in the United States. Brazil’s ranking for that requirement is 73
rd
in a field of
78 countries.
As concerns closing down a business firm, it takes 10 years in Brazil to
clear all hurdles, as compared to six months in Japan and 18 months in Russia.
Labor laws are another facet of the problem (reform of labor relations laws
should also be a priority). Brazil’s ranking for that item is 78
th
in a field of 133
countries. For comparison purposes, Singapore holds the title for the most
adequate, flexible system, scoring 20 marks. It is followed by the United States
(22) and Canada (34). There can be no doubt one of our the priority goals
should be to get Congress to vote the bill entitled “General Law on Small and
Very Small Business”. This bill – it should be recalled – was handed to President
Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva last July 8 at the end of a historical civic march on
Brasilia.
It is no overstatement to say that the process of drafting the bill was a
landmark for participative democracy. The work started in October, 2003 as a
result of wide-ranging negotiations, which involved meetings and seminars in
every region of the country. These involved six thousand representatives of all
sectors of activities. The process was coordinated by Sebrae
2
and later adopted
by the Business Front for the General Law on Small and Very Small Business,
which was officially launched on April 12 at Fiesp headquarters in São Paulo.
We must overcome the paradigm of abusive taxes and
interest rates and of an unresponsive bureaucracy
The movement meets the expectations of every Brazilian worker and
entrepeneur. It advances the goal of breaking with the paradigm of abusive
taxes, of sky-high interest rates and of an unresponsive bureaucracy.
São Paulo state alone boasts 4.5 million entrepeneurs. Small and very small
businesses (PME’s) account for 99 percent of Brazilian companies and for 67
percent of jobs. It is thus necessary to support them, encourage them, and to
ensure their longevity. Therefore among other measures, such as cutting red tape
and raising the revenue ceiling that is used to legally define a PME, the bill also
includes three items that aim at improving and expanding PME financing: tax-
free loans by Micro-entrepeneur Credit Societies (SCM’s) and Civil Society Public-
2
An organization that supports small, very small, and medium-sized businesses.
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DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
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Interest Organizations (Oscip’s); sector-specific credit lines; and expanding the
loan-security system.
As concerns research and innovation, it is important to recall that over the
last five years, Brazilian scientific production grew five-fold as compared to the
1980’s. Brazil now trains over six thousand PhD’s a year. All of this is highly
positive! Nevertheless, such indicators still do not mean that we have reached
our goals. We still have work to do, especially enhancing academic-industrial
interaction. Private initiative should increasingly turn to knowledge workers. In
the United States, about 800 thousand scientists are on company payrolls
conducting research. In the Republic of Korea, that figure is already 75 thousand.
Brazil compares poorly at less than 10 thousand. The Republic of Korea files
3,500 patents a year in the United States, compared with Brazil’s one hundred.
Fiesp has just signed a cooperation protocol with the world-renowned
Brazilian Corporation for Agriculture and Livestock Research (Embrapa) with
a view to facilitating and expanding business access to knowledge, research, and
innovation.
The agreement meets the goals of Fiesp’s Committe on the Agribusiness/
Agroindustry Supply Chain, which was established as a response to Brazil’s
growing profile as a supplier of food and agriculture equipment. It is useful to
recall that under our administration several such committees were established,
with a view to enabling Fiesp to generate information and to contribute to solving
problems and advancing solutions for the various industrial segments it serves.
Throughout negotiations with Embrapa, we made clear our goal of
participating in efforts to fulfill our Nations promise: to become the earth’s
food-basket, and to produce renewable energy for industrial and automotive
uses. In order to achieve such goals, agribusiness must seek quality enhancement
and competitive costs – and it must be helped along the way by science and
knowledge. The agreement was signed with a view to conquering such goals. It
will align agricultural and livestock technology with the needs and requirements
of industry.
This protocol is thus a response to the old Brazilian challenge of joining
closer together the sources of science – academics and research institutes – and
the productive sector. What is at stake is to turn knowledge into a factor of
production, so that the latter can add to the former the enormous value of
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38 DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
38
economic growth. Bringing closer together a world-class technology center and
the productive sector is of the utmost importance. Only thus will we able to
reach all of the pieces of the supply chain, to further expand Brazilian exports,
to create jobs, and to generate and distribute wealth. Only thus will we be able to
offer more options, quality, and security to the Brazilian consumer.
Brazil’s induction into the so-called Knowledge Society, however, is not
limited to the realm of advanced research, science or academia. It actually starts
with opening up opportunities, not only in primary, middle, and secondary
schooling, but as a wider process of social inclusion. The Brazil of tomorrow –
a fully developed or perhaps still an emerging country – will be the Nation that
we are able to build. Therefore, it is of the essence that one understands that the
road to social and economic prosperity necessarily involves a number of
coordinated public policies. We must settle our social liabilities, and use jobs,
entrepeneurship, and fair salaries as the major means of extending citizenship
rights and economic benefits to millions of Brazilians. This means we must ensure
that basic rights to health, education, housing, culture, and leisure are observed.
The size of the challenge should not dishearten us. It should be understood
as a historical opportunity for Brazil to improve its quality of life. To successfully
face the problem requires a wide-ranging involvement by society, the productive
sector, and volunteers. The optimism about our ability to conduct a positive
historical transformation is amply reinvigorated by the rising commitment by
civil society to foster the common good. Fiesp can boast its initiatives involving
the “Third Sector” as successful examples of this trend.
Fiesp is noted for its work in the field of education. The Senai-SP
3
system’s
150 units enroll 700 thousand students a year. These students get free training in
45 technical-level careers and 31 Industrial Apprenticeship courses. The system
also maintains four college-level courses, as well as continuing-studies courses
(in the fields of graphics, mechatronics, fashion, and the environment). Fiesp
trains up-do-date, qualified personnel for today’s industry – and these are also
citizens who are ready to contribute to the improvement of society.
3
The São Paulo state chapter of the National Industrial Apprenticeship Service, an industry-sponsored
organization.
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The Sesi-SP
4
system includes 215 schools that boast an enrollment of 190
thousand students in its Children Education, Basic Education, and Youth & Adult
training and education programs. It is also active in the fields of health, culture,
sports and entertainment, serving industrial workers and their families, as well as
the community at large. It also promotes the so-called “Global Action” initiative
in partnership with Globo TV Network and the Roberto Marinho Foundation.
Among the examples of its work in the field of culture are the Sesi Theatre,
which is renowned for its high-quality productions, the Sesi Gallery of Art, and
the Maria Braz Library on-wheels. Another important initiative is the Fiesp/
Sesi-SP São Paulo Cinema Prize, which was started under our administration. It
is a joint venture with the São Paulo State Movie Industry Syndicate (Sicesp) that
intends to encourage movie production and attendance, to promote the Brazilian
cinema, and to educate new movie audiences. This prize is one of the activities
of the Cultural Action Committee of Fiesp, which was also established under
our administration.
Sesi-SP health services include dental clinics, medical cabinets, infirmaries,
laboratories, and mobile units. Sesi manages programs on “School Health” and
“Company Health”. It also promotes workers safety, health, and rehabilitation
activities, as well as dental and preventive medicine assistance (at the Itaquera
“Time Saver” services office).
As concerns nutrition, the “Eat Well” nutrition guidance program has
already benefited about 150 thousand people. It includes free courses and public
lectures at Sesi-SP’s facilities. Nine experimental kitchens, which turn out one
million meals a year, are also under the purview of Sesi-SP’s nutrition staff.
Furthermore, 49 Activity Centers (CAT’s) offer sports, social, and recreational
activities with a view to improving their patrons’ quality of life.
In the field of the environment – another relevant area in the context of
social responsibility -, we insisted that Fiesp headquarters be the venue for the
Brazilian Technical Norms Association (Abnt) to launch the new version of
NBR ISO 14001:2004 norm on Environmental Systems Management. The goal
was to help in disseminating the importance of that norm to a wider public.
Fiesp collaborates in that work and is in charge of the subcommittee that guided
the preparation of the Brazilian version of the ISO technical report on Ecodesign.
4
The São Paulo state chapter of the National Industrial Social Service, an industry-sponsored organization.
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40 DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
40
Fiesp’s Environmental Department is upgrading its activities. Its experts
monitor and develop various initiatives involving environmental management
and licensing, pollution control and prevention, water resources and industrial
waste. Every effort is being made so that industry continuously improves its
environmental performance by responding to the requirements of citizens and
of both the domestic and international market, and by promoting the awareness
that humankind is a part of Nature and not its master.
Therefore, by exercising social responsibility, the industry of the state of
São Paulo gives a firm, positive answer, through Fiesp, to the call of the Nation.
This mobilization tacitly shows that it is not utopian to build the developed and
socially fair country of our dreams. Its beginnings are to be found in the spirit of
solidarity and in the civic awareness of Brazilians. A growing concern with social
issues can be witnessed in every sector, both on a small and on a large scale. It
will be of the essence to multiply positive examples and solutions.
Brazil is on the brink of becoming a developed country. It
is only a matter of doing our homework right
Once the gap that separates the country we now have and the country we
want to have is competently bridged, our prospects for achieving prosperity
and a durable growth cycle will be most promising. More important, such
prospects are fully feasible. Ours is the most developed industry in Latin America.
This gives us a headstart in added-value goods markets and agribusiness. We
have a well-structured financial system, and our level of services is continuously
improving.
Brazil is a pluralist country. All ethnic, religious, and ideological groups in
Brazil live side by side in harmony and peace, contrary to what happens in many
nations and regions. Twenty-one years after the election of civilian president
Tancredo Neves, Brazilian democracy is firmly rooted, its institutions are strong,
and they resist political crises with hardly a dent. Our country is flush with natural
resources, the world’s largest biodiversity and its largest fresh water reserves
(a strategic factor in this century). We are close to self-sufficiency in oil and have
outstanding renewable energy sources, specially sugar cane. The Brazilian economy
is the world’s 12
th
largest and our population has time and again given proof of
its ability to overcome its problems.
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DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
41
Brazil is on the brink of becoming a fully-developed country. In order to
run the last mile, it needs to overcome the challenges that have so far been
described. Furthermore, it also needs to bring out an all-out effort to settle its
social liabilities – the recently published UN Human Development Index (HDI)
shows that although Brazil has evolved somewhat in that regard, much remains
to be done. To be ranked 63
rd
on the HDI is uncomfortable for one of the
world’s largest economies
Therefore, it is of the essence that we go about doing our homework as
competently – and as in-depth – as possible so that we may achieve first-world
status. In order to accomplish this mission, which is decisive for the future of the
country, the National Congress and the Executive Branch should be reminded
of their accountability to the 190 million Brazilians. It would be intolerable to
allow priority legislative proposals to languish, and the project of national
development to be once again postponed, on account of the electoral calendar
or of allegations of corruption now under scrutiny by Congressional Inquiry
Boards – albeit such investigations should be pursued to their ultimate
consequences.
Fiesp has adopted a determined stance in this regard. Its significance is
supported by the fact that it represents the industrial base of São Paulo, which
generates 43 percent of the state’s GDP, which in turn corresponds to about 35
percent of the Nations wealth. The GDP of São Paulo state industries itself
accounts for about 45 percent of Brazilian industrial GDP. According to Ibge
data, industrial production in the state rose by about 11.7 percent in 2004, as
compared to 2003. This strong expansion occurred after years of lackluster
performances. Another auspicious sign is that the industrial sector of the state
of São Paulo accounted for approximately .313 percent of world experts, as
compared to .287 percent in 2003 and .297 percent in 2002.
Our organization has adopted a critical stance on current events, it has
presented its demands, and has involved itself resolutely in every mobilization
of the productive sector. However, as befits responsibility, it has always presented
sound analysis and solutions, with a view to contributing to identify which are
the Nations options in order to follow the path to prosperity and development.
We have thus conducted numerous sound studies and surveys, many of which
have been productive.
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42 DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
42
A Fiesp proposal will generate a R$ 500 million tax rebate
for civil construction
The final draft of the so-called “MP do Bem”
5
included, inter alia, five
Fiesp proposals – capital gains tax breaks for home sales under R$ 180 thousand;
incentives for home buyers by means of progressive rebates; enhancing real
state financing guarantees by effecting changes to Law 10,131/2004 lowering to
seven percent – from a previous 30 percent – taxes due on the piece of real state
effectively involved in the transaction; correcting cumulative distortions of PIS/
Cofins mandatory contributions on real state contracts (which would reduce the
present 9.5 percent rate to just 3.65 percent); and permitting financial income to
be placed on the books on the basis of presumptive profit. More importantly,
those measures will generate tax breaks for the civil construction sector of
R$ 250 million in 2005 and R$ 500 million in 2006. It should be noted that the
real state sector was not even included in the original draft of that Provisional
Measure.
Another important initiative was the six-month extension, to December
31, 2005, of the National Bank for Social and Economic Development’s (Bndes)
Job- and Income-Creation Program (Progerem). This enables small, very small
and medium-sized companies to qualify for short-term operating capital financing
under special conditions. The recent Bndes announcement about interest rate
cuts for financing-related loans essentially reflects the conclusions of a Fiesp
study that pointed out that a one-percent drop in the Long-Term Interest Rate
(Tjlp) would increase credit demand by R$ 1.1 billion, equivalent to about 3,754
Bndes loan operations.
Exempting wheat flour, bread rolls, spaghetti and cookies from the
Merchandise Circulation Tax (Icms) was another Fiesp proposal that was acted
upon by the São Paulo state administration. Other suggestions concern
bureaucratic and administrative issues that impact businesses in ways seldom
realized by the relevant governmental authorities. Here are two such examples,
both involving the Federal Taxation Secretariat (FTS): extending from January
31 to February 10 the deadline to comply with so-called accessory obligations;
5
Literally “Do-Good Provisional Measure”. Such measures, known as MP’s, are legislative proposals of the
Executive Branch, which, under the terms of the Constitution, may enter into force immediatly but must be
confirmed by Congress within 45 days, lest they become null and void.
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DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
43
and authorizing those firms that had not obtained digital certification by last
March to submit directly to any FTS office their monthly Federal Tax Assets &
Liabilities Declaration. In other words, changes were made on two routine
administrative issues that did not in any way negatively affect the government,
but would have otherwise greatly inconvenienced thousands of companies, and
would also have meant heavy fines.
These achievements show how important it is to exercise what I have called
“productive authoritativeness”, that is, to get businesspeople and workers
effectively involved in decisions concerning the future of the country. It is in this
spirit that we at Fiesp champion an expansion of the National Monetary Council
(CMN) so as to include representatives of society. It is unacceptable that we
should continue to wade in the quagmire of simplistic visions and in the destructive
belief that we are unable to build a strong economy.
As we have seen, Brazil is in need of a sound national Project. This will
involve planned, articulated, and efficient action. The model of financing the
public debt by issuing bonds at sky-high interest rates is over. These turn quality
of life, social justice and full employment into a sort of usury. It is necessary to
eliminate obstacles to the conquest of prosperity. In order to play their role in
this process, businesspeople do not want fiscal privilege, subsidies of market
reserves. They only want better conditions to work, produce, create jobs, and
invest. Their demands can be summarized thus: adopting and following an agenda
that is guided by common sense and by a realistic appraisal of the country’s
problems and potential.
Version: Manuel Carlos Montenegro
DEP
Program of government (2006-2010)
44 DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
44
etter to the Chileans
Before the reader begins to acquaint himself or herself with this Program
of Government, I would like to share with him or her a few things that I learned
over the last few months, which I have spent close to my fellow Chileans, listening
to them, and creating new sources of hope together.
I was not raised to wield power, and have never sought power. I am not a
member of the traditional Chilean elite. My family name is not among those that
created the nation. I attended public schools and the University of Chile. I studied
Medicine, because I was thrilled at the prospect of being able to cure, to take
away pain, to brush away suffering, and to bring happiness back to the home of
a sick child.
As is the case with most Chileans, I was never given anything just for the
asking. I have learned almost everything I know through hard work, whether it
involved the love of my children, or of my trade, or of my country.
Program of government
(2006-2010)
Michelle Bachelet
*
L
* President of the Republic of Chile.
Michelle Bachelet
DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
45
Politics entered my life by destroying everything I loved the most. I was a
victim of hate, and have thus devoted all of my life to transform its poison into
understanding, tolerance and – why not say it – love.
I have lived too close to Chilean history not to recognize a historic
opportunity when I see one. And this is, beyond the shadow of a doubt, a historic
opportunity, a most unique moment for Chile.
Today, thanks to the three Concertación administrations, we Chileans can
reach for the sky while keeping our feet firmly on the ground. We know that
fostering development with justice and freedom are not empty words, but actual
goals that we can achieve. To reach them, we only have to learn how to work
together.
Like never before, we now feel that disunity, hate, and fear have been left
in the past. A past which lives on for those who would like Chile to change, but
only as long as they themselves do not have to change – those who will not part
with their egos and their bickering for the good of the country, those who have
made arrogance and fear their only platform.
Seventeen years after our return to democratic rule, we Chileans have come
of age. We are free and autonomous; we are able to look after ourselves. We no
longer need protective parents to tell us what we should think, dream, or do. We
are prepared to maturely seek to achieve justice and prosperity for everyone in
Chile.
My candidacy was the result of a spontaneous outpouring of citizen
support. It was not the result of closed-door negotiations, or of party meetings.
This Program reflects the popular origins of my candidacy. Hundreds of people
contributed to its making, by participating either in working groups or in the
public debates that were held with the citizenry.
It is a Program that speaks to the needs of Chileans who are not usually
featured in newspaper of television commentary, nor can hire influential law
firms. It speaks to the needs of those Chileans who have no relatives or in-laws
in the state apparatus, or in Congress, or in labor unions, or in the corridors of
power.
I have been often criticized for trying so hard to consult with the people,
to get them involved. For the elite, to listen to the people is to show weakness. I,
on the contrary, am convinced that this is the source of our strength to do what
Program of government (2006-2010)
46 DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
46
we are doing: for the most important Chilean resource is not copper, fruit or
forestry, but its people.
I want to leverage the wealth that is to be found in Chileans’ ingenuity, in
their dreams, in their determination. More ideas, more work, more strength,
more wealth.
This Program of Government intends to be worthy of such potential.
This is why it is at once ambitious and realistic. We all know the problems we will
have to face are not easy, and that they will not be solved overnight. My only
promise as head of Government is to help with all my strength and of my ability
to create a society where no one may say that he or she “was not able” or –
worse still – “was not allowed” to achieve something.
In order to achieve this central goal, we need to increase our investment in
education, from preschools to universities. At the same time, we must apply for
ourselves the clearest, most stringent standards of education excellence. We must
eliminate authoritarian enclaves in schools, and apply programs and plans that
strengthen students’ research and creative abilities.
We need to take a giant leap in the field of social security: better pensions,
more generous unemployment insurance, and minimum health standards for all
Chileans. For it is immoral that many Chileans do not have the right to grow old
or ill without falling into dire poverty.
It is immoral that so many middle-class families should live in fear that
some unexpected event may cost them everything they have achieved through
long years of toil.
We need to continue on a secure path to economic development, one that
is based on earnestness and in balanced budget – but one that does not prevent
us from helping those left behind who need our assistance.
We have to break the invisible borders that crime has drawn all over our
city, we have to train more and better police officers, both Carabineros and
Investigative bodies. We need to continue to deepen judicial and prison reform.
We need to make our state more productive, and to improve its treatment
of people. No longer should Chileans feel alone and helpless in towns where
although there are institutions such as a mayorship, a hospital, a health care center,
a primary or secondary school, these institutions give them the runaround, neglect
them, or patently put them down.
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We need women not only to have the same rights as men, but also to be
able – through effective policy support measures – to actually enjoy exercising
those rights. That a woman may become President should not be regarded as
something strange, but as a good omen.
We need to create new freedom spaces to give a voice to a plural and
diverse Chile where all of us feel at ease and recriminations and arrogance are no
more.
How should we achieve all of this? This program is full of real numbers,
of concrete measures we should take. This program is at once a compass and a
navigation chart to show us the way.
As I read this Program of Government once more, I recall the faces and
voices of so many Chileans I have come to meet over the last few months. These
are Chileans whose lives are a daily struggle against many difficulties. They work
more than twelve hours a day and they sometimes don’t know how they will
make ends meet at the end of the month. But these are the people who always
tell me “doctor, we believe in you”.
The trust so many people placed in me humbles me and makes me keenly
aware of my responsibilities. Like them, I believe more in people than in speeches,
polls, or figures. Trusting people has always been central to me and to the work
I do. This will also be the driving thrust pushing the new Chile we shall build
together.
My quest is none other than to open up opportunities for all Chileans so
that Chile belongs to everyone and everyone can belong in Chile. The keys to
the future are not in anyone’s hands in particular. They belong to everyone. By
working together we will be able to change things, and to see a better country
eye to eye. It is for me a privilege to be able to serve Chileans in this new,
fertile spring.
Introduction
The Program of Government is the outcome of a significant amount of
thought, which involved the direct and indirect contributions of several thousand
people.
It all started with the “Citizen Dialogue” public debates that the candidate
held throughout the country over the last twelve months. It then continued
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48
through the effort of the one hundred or so Working Groups that submitted
proposals to the two candidates that were then competing to obtain the
Concertacións presidential race nomination. The Concertación parties’ technical
committees offered more contributions. These parties also formulated a unified
Programmatic Manifesto, the principles of which have been adopted by this
Program of Government. In the months leading to the elections, Concertación
parties and hundreds of independents contributed their professional and technical
work to fifty committees, whose preliminary conclusions were also taken into
account in the following document.
This Program aims at fulfilling the citizenry’s demand to move on to new
stage of development.
After fifteen years of successfully consolidating a democracy devoid of
qualifying adjectives, of achieving annual economic growth rates twice as high as
those of the Pinochet government, and of significantly reducing poverty levels,
we need to go to the next level.
At this stage in our national development, we have to make sure our
economy continues to grow. If we continue to grow over the next decade at the
same rates that Concertación has brought since 1990, we will reach the income
levels of countries such as Spain or Portugal. This prosperity will open the way
for us to leave poverty behind, and to greatly improve Chileans’ living standards.
However, this is only one of the challenges we face.
While opportunities multiply in Chile and in all countries undergoing
globalization, risks are also on the rise. Therefore, there are now growing
pressures for a more nurturing country, which is able to reduce economic risk
and insecurity for large sections of the population. These include not only the
poor, but also parts of the middle class.
Inequality is Chile is still unacceptably high. And inequality is actually made
up of many types of inequalities. There is inequality between men and women,
between the various ethnic groups, between rich and poor, between large and
small companies, between the educated and the uneducated, between dynamic
and backward regions.
Reducing inequality has been at the heart of every Concertación
administration. We have tried to reform Chile’s development model, to make it
more humane, and to reduce its attendant uncertainties. We have tried to reach a
better balance between economic expansion and social equity.
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Our successful track record notwithstanding, the task is still unfulfilled. As
we continue to seek to fully integrate Chile into the world economy, it becomes
ever more urgent to reduce inequality and to protect our people – by means of
a social safety net – and our economy from the shocks that affect the international
economy.
Globalization endows the largest firms with more advantages and
opportunities, to the detriment of small- and medium-sized businesses. Market
concentration may thus become the dark side of this process, threatening free
competition and the interests of citizens and consumers. A modern economy
fights and punishes anticompetitive practices.
International integration is not the same as losing one’s own identity. We
Chileans, as well as the citizens of many other countries, want to strengthen our
local and regional identity, want power to be decentralized, want authorities to
enhance their interface with us, and to and to increase our level of participation.
None of this will take place by itself in a globalized market economy. This model
must be corrected.
Democracy and economic growth bring opportunities. These opportunities
should not be denied through prejudice and discrimination. Chile is all of us.
That is why we want progress for everyone, not only for a few.
The Chilean democratic project is an internationally recognized success
story. We can improve it even more. We must build a more democratic, more
participatory, less unequal society. We must enhance Chilean freedoms, and
discard recriminations or fear.
Chile is our home. That is why we want Chile to be friendly and nurturing,
a country that creates links among its people.
Chileans want a new, different kind of leadership. We want a more
transparent state, one that makes information available to everyone – not only
to those who have friends in high places. We want a Government that places a
premium on diversity and equality, one that all of us may feel represented by.
This Program identifies five major issue areas, which correspond to the
new administration’s priorities: a new social protection network; preparing for a
development leap; improving the quality of life of Chileans; fighting
discrimination and exclusion; and adopting a new attitude toward the citizenry
at every level of public activity. The Program closes by advancing a proposal
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concerning the role Chile should play in the world in this new phase of
development.
A new development policy
Chile’s return to the path that leads to solid growth is based on strong
institutional, political, and economic foundations – and on the high prices of
copper. Today we have the opportunity to transform a potentially transient thrust
into a sustained development factor. We should consider the example of resource-
rich countries such as Finland, Sweden, New Zealand, and Australia.
Chile must innovate on the basis of its comparative advantages, investing
in science, applied technology, and human resources.
It goes without saying that we should continue to export copper, wine,
and salmon. But we should also vie to export – as is already the case in some
areas – software for the mining industry, grape-growing improvement techniques,
and treatments for diseases that affect salmon.
The Concertación administrations have consistently promoted scientific
research, technological development, and productive innovation. The administration
of President Lagos launched the National Policy for the Development of
Biotechnology, as well as the Digital Agenda. Over the last few years, public
funds to support innovation and technology have seen a strong growth.
Nevertheless, the Chilean national innovation system still faces various
funding problems, which require new, creative solutions. Aggregate spending on
Research and Development (R&D) is low, and the private sector’s share of that
effort is small. Furthermore, our technology dissemination and transfer
mechanisms are unsatisfactory.
Chile’s scientific and technological capabilities are not enough, and even
those we have are dispersed across multiple small-scale initiatives. R&D results
are not adequately valued or protected by means of patents or other mechanisms.
This negatively impacts the business potential of new products and technological
processes.
There is no formal public organ endowed with the authority to coordinate
and establish general guidelines for the National Innovation System, or to assess
it or monitor its consistency. There is a clear need for public policy in this field,
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in light of externalities, of potential coordination problems, and various types
of market failure experts have known for a long time.
In August 2005, the National Congress received a bill that creates an
Innovation for Competitiveness Fund (ICF). This bill creates a Council for
Competitive Innovation and endows it with the responsibility of formulating
and proposing a long-term strategy to the President of the Republic, as well as
with suggesting ICF spending on an annual basis.
Our administration has set for itself the challenge of implementing this
new institutional design, and to formulate a science, technology, and innovation
policy that creates a clear, coherent, and stable economic-incentive and
institutional regime which articulates itself with first-rate human capital, and with
a strong innovation ability, with a view to creating productive chains on the basis
of the comparative advantages Chile enjoys. We do not intend to make small,
marginal changes. We will create a New Development Policy.
Innovation for competitiveness council
We will establish the Innovation for Competitiveness Council, and endow
it with a mixed, public-private membership. Members will advise the President
of the Republic on science policy, advanced human-resource training policy,
and technology development, dissemination, and transfer policy. The Council
shall become a locus for institutional and policy systematic assessment and
coordination in the area of innovation for competitiveness.
We will implement the National Innovation for Competitiveness Strategy,
which the Council will propose. Such strategy will set itself a long-term horizon.
Its formulation will be open to wide-ranging participation.
We shall improve the institutional aspects of the National Innovation System
in the first six months of the incoming administration. We will clearly define
responsibilities for the design and coordination of pro-active policies devoted
to the knowledge economy. The implementation of specific programs will be
clearly differentiated from such policy responsibilities as the fostering of a
knowledge economy.
We will start up the Innovation for Competitiveness Fund, which will fund
initiatives in the fields of science, advanced human-resources training, and
technology development, transfer, and dissemination, with a view to increasing
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the competitiveness of Chile and of its regions. We shall supplement this Fund
with additional resources, thus increasing by 50 percent government spending
on Research and Development. Our goal is to increase the country’s investments
in R&D to over one percent of GDP by Chile’s Bicentennial.
We shall strengthen the clearly successful initiatives of Fundación Chile
regarding the innovation process and the introduction of new products into our
export roster.
We shall transfer all innovation-oriented public program funds to the
institutions in charge of implementing them by way of contracts that will clearly
state the expected results.
Such contracts will stipulate rigorous assessment practices, as well as specific
performance-related consequences for the implementing institutions. Non-
performing programs will be closed down or reorganized; successful programs
will qualify for additional funding.
We will require private-sector contributions for all applied-research funding
programs, so as to ensure the relevance of those efforts. This is of the essence to
close the R&D spending deficit, which is not so much due to a lack of public
funding as it is to limited private-sector research spending.
We shall achieve enhanced results out of public funding for university
research. With this goal in mind, we shall establish patenting goals for basic
research undertaken at universities that receive direct funding to support applied
research. These goals shall be assessed, and future state funding for such research
will be allocated on the basis of performance.
Business innovation
We will expand financial support mechanisms for specific innovation
projects – and will increase the flexibility of such mechanisms. Our aim is to
make those mechanisms available to more firms and to extend their coverage to
every stage in the innovation process. We shall allocate priority to the new activities,
products, and businesses that show the greatest growth potential.
We shall continue to operate business technology consortia for innovation,
and will expand them.
We will thereby encourage long-term alliances between research institutions
and the business sector with a view to implementing research, development, and
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innovation initiatives. These alliances will enable us to tackle productive problems
and opportunities by using the most advanced technological tools.
Science, technology, and innovation
We shall implement initiatives that allow Chile to harness the human,
technical, and institutional capabilities that are required in order to tackle
ambitious initiatives in the field of innovation.
We shall launch major investments in human-resource training, especially
with a view to expanding graduate study opportunities for scientists and engineers,
both in Chile and abroad. Our goal over the next four years is to increase by 100
percent the ranks of Chilean scientists and engineers obtaining graduate degrees
abroad. We shall also strengthen programs that encourage hiring graduates at
the Masters and Doctoral levels by private companies.
We shall also launch initiatives with a view to strengthening science and
math teaching at school.
We shall increase the quality and the relevance of domestic research. We
shall strengthen and expand the high–level research centers that are undertaking
high-quality research that is of strategic importance for Chilean development.
We shall attribute a high degree of priority to establishing and improving
international cooperative research networks that enable Chilean researchers to
gain access to the frontiers of knowledge in those areas.
We shall allocate a significant portion of public funding in this area with a
view to establishing, expanding, or strengthening regional innovation capabilities
in strategic areas for regional growth.
Technology and the small – and medium–sized enterprise
We shall bring small – and medium–sized firms to contribute to our efforts
at innovation, by means of a technology outreach network to support them. We
shall go back to this point when we discuss the Enhancing Entrepeneurship in
Chile Program (Programa Más Emprendimiento para Chile).
We shall establish a national policy to foster quality improvements, and to
support the adoption of quality management and certification models applying
international standards for small- and medium-sized companies.
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We shall strengthen the regulatory and technological framework supporting
quality management. We shall improve and expand the availability of technical
standards and strengthen the national metrology network.
Fostering innovative entrepeneurship
The creative process does not stop at a scientific discovery, or at the
development of a new product, or at the establishment of a new production
technique.
The culmination of technology innovation is bringing value to results by
introducing them into the market. Public-sector support at the startup stage is
of the essence, especially when startups create new markets.
We shall strengthen public mechanisms to financially support the early
stages of innovative startup firms, improving and expanding technology business
incubator programs, as well as seed- and venture-capital programs.
We shall support the establishment and early implementation stages of
technology-management and -transfer institutions that will perform interface
functions between research institutions and the business sector. These institutions
will support technology-based firms by transferring R&D results to market.
They shall also instill more relevance into the research enterprise, guiding it
according to the requirements of market demand.
We shall strongly push technology business dealings involving intellectual
property rights by enhancing regulation and by partially subsidizing patent
applications, especially abroad.
High-technology investment attraction
Chile must harness the opportunity afforded by the trend on the part of
transnational firms to locate their production, services, or product development
units in low-income countries. Chile may thus jumpstart the acquisition of skills
and competencies typical of highly innovation-intensive companies and
productive systems.
We shall bring new sectors on board our effort to foster high-technology
investment, and we will create a promotion network abroad. We will make support
mechanisms more flexible, so as to increase our market’s attractiveness to
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innovation-intensive international companies. We shall also train the skilled human
resources such investors require by partnering with university consortia.
Chile in the world
Ever since achieving democracy in 1990, we Chileans began a successful
process to reposition ourselves on the international scene. We have made
significant strides to re-establish Chile’s good name as a democratic, republican
nation that promotes free trade, abides by international law, and which defends
its principles and interests in a dignified manner within the framework of the
international order. The Concertación administrations have enhanced Chile’s
international standing and have made it a fully participant member of the
international system.
In our times, globalization has become an undeniable paradigm that has
guided the evolution of the international order for the last several years. The
traditional logic of confrontation between geographical blocks or nation-states
has been supplanted by segmentation on the basis of value beliefs. This change
creates opportunities to nations such as ours. Chile is a small country, far removed
from the centers of power, but it is committed to international integration that
is based on the principles of liberty and democracy.
International relations
Chile must establish its foreign policy priorities in the light of emerging
realities, of its permanent geographic insertion, of its historical and cultural
environment and of its new international status.
We must incorporate the phenomenon of globalization into our foreign
policy by means of regional and international integration, of multilateralism,
and of international cooperation.
Governing globalization
We acknowledge globalization, the growing interdependence of nations
and the forces that push for regional integration as major trends of our time.
But for as long as globalization does not promote universal public goods, it will
still lack governability and predictability. And there’s no possible legitimation
for globalization in the absence of governance.
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We shall strongly support policies that promote the governance of
globalization. International society currently faces its most important challenge:
to build common institutions and principles that facilitate the task of governing
globalization. In order to achieve this goal, we will foster the creation of an
inclusive, transparent international order, which affords every nation clear rules
that are equally valid for all.
Neighborly relations
Our foreign policy will adopt the promotion of regional identity throughout
Latin America as its center of gravity and its mark. Chile shares a common
history and a common culture with the countries of this region, as well as common
obstacles, interests, and goals.
The neighborly dimension of our foreign policy will be endowed with a
prime strategic significance. We shall promote cooperation, especially in strategic
areas such as fostering democracy, trade integration, transparency and honesty,
and fighting the drug trade.
South America is Chile’s fastest-growing export market for high-aggregate-
value products. It also absorbs most of Chile’s private investment abroad.
It is also the region with the highest potential for fostering cultural,
economic, and tourist links. South America is where we will find our potential
partners to develop energy, mining, or infrastructure projects.
We thus reaffirm Chile’s commitment to the South American Community
of Nations and to the South American Integration Initiative, with the purpose
of furthering the development of regional infrastructure.
We resolutely support the development of the Energy Ring along with
Peru, Argentina, Brazil, and Uruguay.
We intend to accentuate an atmosphere that is conducive to understanding
with Bolivia. We will always be available to explore a wide-ranging dialogue,
with no taboo areas, and to promote asymmetric economic agreements, including
free-transit facilities. However, all of this is to be done on the basis of respect
for existing border agreements.
We shall strengthen our cooperation alliance with Peru.
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We shall continue to foster trade, widening and deepening the dimensions
of our trade agreement, to facilitate the movement of persons, and to promote
confidence-building measures between our armed forces.
We shall consolidate the auspicious political association we have established
with Argentina. We shall continue to deepen the bilateral relationship, which
encompasses a great number of major issues. Among these, we shall attribute
priority to energy, infrastructure, transportation, armed-forces confidence-
building measures, as well as trade and economic issues.
Promoting multilateralism
Chile’s relative size is a conditioning factor for its foreign policy. We shall
thus promote multilateralism, the observance of international law, the peaceful
resolution of controversies, the sanctity of treaties, and the promotion of
international humanitarian law.
Multilateralism is a strategic commitment of Chilean foreign policy at the
subregional (Mercosur), regional (Rio Group, OAS), and also and most especially,
at the global level (UN, WTO). We shall strengthen the active role that Chile
plays in the main organs of the United Nations system, and we will contribute to
strengthening the UN. We shall seek to associate ourselves with countries with
which we share “common criteria” that allow us to maximize results on behalf
of our foreign policy key objectives: peace, human rights, fighting poverty, and
abolishing discriminatory barriers to international trade.
More markets, better trade rules
International trade is of the essence for Chile’s development. Our country’s
economic integration advances over the last 15 years are unprecedented. Starting
in the 1990’s, Concertación administrations took great strides in negotiating trade-
opening agreements with Latin American countries. Since the beginning of the
current decade, Chile has focused itself on negotiating free-trade agreements
with the United States, the European Union, EFTA, the Republic of Korea, and
Oceania. At the same time, we have played and active role in every WTO, Apec,
and Lafta trade initiative.
At the multilateral level, our priority shall be the conclusion of the Doha
Round of negotiations under the aegis of the World Trade Organization. These
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negotiations should enable us to reach a multilateral trade system that is fair, that
has clear rules, and, in particular, that reduces and eliminates agricultural subsidies.
A solid network of trade agreements has opened new horizons for the
growth of our country and of our businesses. To fully harness this potential, we
still need more effort on the part of the state and of the private sector. Thus, the
adequate management and guidance of existing agreements will be a key task for
our administration. We shall fulfill it in close consultation with our domestic
international trade operators.
Priority Objectives
At the same time we devote ourselves to the major objective of
strengthening our links with Latin America, we shall attribute priority status to
our relations with the emerging countries in Asia – which share our interests and
are at a similar stage of development –, and with the United States.
Looking to the east
An ascendant Asia is a fact. China is already Brazil’s second largest trade
partner, and it is Chile’s second largest export market. We shall thus invest more
time, attention, and diplomatic resources to strengthen our economic, political,
and cultural ties with this natural partner, both bilaterally and under the aegis
of Apec.
We shall realize Chile’s potential as an investment platform for Asia and
the Pacific. Once trade agreements now being negotiated with China and India
are in place, the virtuous link with Asia will grow. This may also apply to Japan.
Such a virtuous link could incorporate political, diplomatic, and cultural dimensions.
Shared interests
Certain countries, such as New Zealand, Ireland, Canada, and Australia, as
well as some Efta members, such as Switzerland and Norway, are far away from
Chile geographically, but they do share our trade and investment interests.
Moreover, they also share our democratic political orientation, and our
humanitarian values. We shall accord these countries special relevance, both
bilaterally and multilaterally.
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A key case in point is the European Union. Our political association
agreement has already bore fruit. The EU is keen on defending and promoting
democracy and human rights, rejecting the death penalty, abiding by international
law, multilateralism, and on implementing cooperation policies with a view to
fostering development. These priorities are fundamental elements shared by Chile
and EU countries. Therefore, we shall widen our political dialogue with the EU,
as is currently the case, for instance, in the context of peace operations.
Our relationship with the United States
We share fundamental foreign policy values and goals with the United Status,
such as democracy, the protection of human rights, and a more liberalized
international trade. This does not mean we will not hold diverging political views
on specific topical issues. We shall continue to consolidate our relationship with
the United States. We shall do this in the context of the Summit for the Americas
– on the basis of shared democratic values – and of the creation of a Latin
America Free Trade Area.
Promoting a human-rights based foreign policy
No foreign policy limits itself to pragmatism and power considerations.
For Chile, promoting and protecting democracy and human rights is a national-
security issue. It is an ethical commitment because of our history, but it is also a
symbolic commitment that has afforded Chile international prestige and respect
over the last few years.
On the issue of human rights, we shall strongly support the implementation
of the UN Human Rights Council, which was established at the recent UN
Summit. Our goal is to have a more credible, less politicized organ in the service
of human rights than the present Geneva Committee.
We shall continue to promote the right to democracy at the regional and
global levels. We shall therefore play an active role in the community of
democracies.
International justice is a requirement of globalized society. We shall support
the concept of “protective responsibility” on the part of the international
community in relation to crimes of war and against humanity, genocide, and
ethnic cleansing.
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We shall promote the ratification of the Rome Statute that established the
International Penal Court.
Cooperation as a foreign policy instrument
Cooperation policy must be considered to be an essential component of
our foreign policy and as an effective instrument to fulfill its goals. We shall
strengthen our aid to those countries in our region that require technical and
assistance cooperation. To the extent that globalization creates opportunities
for Chile, our country shall also take on increased responsibilities in the face of
the challenges that globalization creates.
Chile’s more permanent interests
Administrations must look far into the future, and they must focus on the
immediate international scene. But it is important not to leave aside the continuity
of key areas: for Chile, these are the issues concerning the Law of the Sea and its
resources, our interests in Antarctica, our commitment to sustainable
development, and the reaffirmation of our sovereignty over Easter Island, which
is a vital link toward the Asia-Pacific region.
As an essentially maritime country, Chile must continue to safeguard its
permanent interests concerning the sea and sea resources. We must protect our
maritime borders under the aegis of international law. We shall continue to
safeguard high-seas fisheries adjacent to our exclusive economic zone. We must
continue to fight illicit, undeclared, and unregulated fishing through adequate
measures. Chile will continue its policy of consolidating and strengthening its
presence in the region that projects itself towards the South Pole, as well as the
promotion of the purposes and the principles of the Antarctic Treaty and its
complementary instruments.
The Chilean commitment to sustainable development will require our
continuing observance of the Rio Principles, the full implementation of Agenda
21, the Johannesburg Declaration on Sustainable Development, and the
Johannesburg Plan of Implementation.
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A new institutional framework for foreign relations
Foreign policy has come to be an increasingly influential determinant of
domestic policy. It has ceased to be a merely representative or diplomatic issue
to become a fundamental tool for our development strategy. In order to achieve
the goals we are setting for ourselves, we shall modernize the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs and International Trade.
The internationalization of the economy and the design of public policy
in a globalized world have ended the monopoly on international contacts that
was previously wielded by foreign-affairs ministries. In the face of this new fact,
we shall strengthen our own Ministry of Foreign Affairs so that it can institutionally
provide cross-section insights relevant to other state departments, as well as to
civil society and of the private sector.
Taking into account the plethora of issues and their simultaneous tackling
at multilateral fora and other negotiation spaces, we need an institution that is
able to endow its representatives to various negotiating environments with
adequate formal ranks. This need is apparent in trade negotiations as well as in
political negotiations. Therefore, we will create the office of Undersecretary for
Foreign Trade at-large.
We shall also adapt the Ministry’s Directorates to the wide-ranging issues
of today’s international agenda. The newly internationalized dimension of issues
such as the environment, the fight against organized crime and the drug trade, as
well as science and technology issues, shows the need to adopt adequate, flexible
institutional solutions.
At the same time such institutional change is implemented, we shall
strengthen the professionalism of our Foreign Service, and we will strongly support
it from Santiago. We will modernize management and bring on board non-diplomatic
professional workers. We will enhance the standing of qualified ambassadors,
and will ensure that Foreign Service members play a relevant role. We shall also
promote a substantial increase in the number of female diplomats.
The First 100 Days Plan
Employment
1. We will raise the age for on-the-job training benefits eligibility to 25; we
will increase those benefits to 50 percent of the minimum wage.
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2. We will propose legislation mandating the government to shoulder a
portion of social security payments by low-income youths who hold formal
work contracts.
3. We will allow employers to hire youths on the basis of hourly work contracts,
to afford every student who also wishes to work an opportunity to do so.
Social Security
4. We will raise the lowest retirement benefits using the current budget’s
$300 million discretionary spending funds – this will benefit one million pensioners.
5. We will establish automatic eligibility for Supplementary Pensions
(Pensión Asistencial) at age 65; this type of pension will become a right, and it
will no longer be subject to waiting lists.
6. We will propose legislation that ensures family benefits are paid to
mothers; we will also create subsidies for persons providing care for the disabled
or for bedridden seniors.
Education
7. We will subsidize day-care for all children under four from the neediest
40 percent of Chilean households.
8. We will create 20,000 new openings at the pre-kindergarten level and will set
up 800 new infant care centers throughout Chile, benefiting 20 thousand girls and boys.
9. We will push for urgent approval of pending legislation on differentiated
subsidies, with a view to doubling subsidies that directly benefit more than 400,000
children from pre-kindergarten to fourth grade.
10. We will expand from 110 thousand to 160 thousand the number of
students receiving loans and grants for higher education. We will thus ensure
that the tuition fees of the neediest 60 percent of students are fully covered.
11. The various university scholarship programs will be consolidated into
a national scholarship system that will cover both tuition fees and living expenses.
12. Student loan recipients will be given the option of fully or partially
repaying their loans by doing community work in the various Chilean regions.
Women Issues
13. We will enact a Code concerning Non-Discrimination and Best Labor
Practices in the Public Sector, which the private sector may adopt on a voluntary
Michelle Bachelet
DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
63
basis. We want to put an end to discrimination against women – and against any
Chilean citizen – in the workplace.
14. I will propose legislation that will make childcare services in the
workplace a right for all working women.
Health
15. We will create sixty new Community Healthcare Centers throughout Chile,
with an emphasis on those localities where health-care needs are growing faster.
16. We will increase the number of illnesses covered by the Explicitly
Guaranteed Universal Health Access Plan (AUGE) to 40.
17. We will guarantee free medical care in public hospitals to all those aged
60 and over.
Public Safety
18. We will create a Ministry of Public Safety, which will be entrusted with
coordinating all state law enforcement agencies, as well as crime fighting and
prevention policies.
19. We will expand the Carabineros police force by 1,500 new officers a year;
these officers will be assigned to districts with the greatest need for police work.
20. We will encourage employers to hire at-risk youths by subsidizing their
salaries by up to 50 percent of the minimum wage for one year.
Entrepreneurship and Competitiveness
21. We will launch a new entrepreneur support program providing one-stop
support services, which will range from computer literacy training and accounting
help to assistance in obtaining startup funding, bureaucratic paperwork facilitation,
and personalized management consultancy for the startup’s ramping-up.
22. We will propose legislation establishing the simplified taxation plan for Small
and Medium-size Enterprises, as was laid out in Michelle Bachelet’s electoral platform.
23. We shall ensure that the government settle its accounts with contractors
within 30 days at the latest.
24. We will propose legislation increasing penalties for white-collar crimes
and doubling enforcement funding.
Program of government (2006-2010)
64 DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
64
25. We will establish a fund to allow individuals over 40 who lose their
jobs a chance to reposition themselves in the labor market, either by acquiring
new job skills or by starting their own small businesses.
Chile Prepares for Globalization
26. We will require everyone studying to be an English teacher to study for
one semester in an English-speaking country, at government expense.
27. We will create a new exchange program that encourages more English-
speaking teachers to come and teach in Chile.
28. We will implement a funding program that will allow the top 1,000 Chilean
university graduates to pursue doctoral degrees in the world’s best universities.
Urban Areas and the Environment
29. We will launch a wide-ranging urban renovation program, which will be
deployed in the 200 Chilean neighborhoods most in need of improvement. This
will benefit such needy areas as El Volcan (Puente Alto), Santa Adriana (La Florida)
and Villa Portales (Quinta Normal) in Santiago; Boca Sur and Pedro de Valdivia
Bajo in Greater Concepción: and Valparaíso’s Placilla or Rodelillo neighborhoods.
30. For the first time in Chilean history, we will appoint a cabinet-ranking
Minister of the Environment.
Chilean Regions
31. We will implement the “More Jobs” Program in Valparaíso. Similar
programs will be implemented in Talcahuano and San Antonio, to support these
cities in facing the structural changes their economies are going through.
32. We shall establish new Regional Development Agencies throughout
the country, which will be endowed with provincial bureaus.
The Military Service
33. We will begin a transition towards an all-volunteer, professional military
corps by increasing the number of professional soldiers to two thousand and
recruiting one thousand female volunteers.
34. We will create a new Citizen Service Program as an alternative to current
compulsory military service. This program will afford youths from different
social backgrounds an opportunity to interact and to contribute with high-impact
social services to the various communities.
Michelle Bachelet
DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
65
Improving Democracy
35. We will replace the current binomial electoral system with an electoral
system that will ensure improved competition, governance, and representation.
36. We will establish automatic voter registration beginning at age 18.
DEP
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I
ntroduction
This paper offers a brief reflection on the role and influence of the academe
in respect of trade policy decisions. It focuses specifically on what we have called
the trap of bilateralism, which is often confused with free trade, particularly in
Colombia, a country that has chosen this path, thereby distancing itself more and
more, in the author’s view, from a balanced, equitable, and symmetrical participation
in the international environment and in the economic globalization context.
1. The shortcomings of theory for decision-making in a
trade-globalization setting
A major concern of college professors is to teach their students the theory,
behavior, and practice of international trade. Unfortunately, theoretical tools
can explain only partially the political economy that governs relations between
regions and countries.
The trap of bilateralism
Germán Umaña Mendoza
*
* Associate Professor National University of Colombia.
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DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
67
Although this statement seems to meet with general agreement, dogmas
about the virtues of free trade are often put forward and disseminated, with the
backing of academic circles, to justify economic policy decisions allegedly backed
by theory.
Let us take a brief look into the views of camps on the opposite ends of
the spectrum. The predominant view is that everybody gains from free trade as,
although no one enjoys absolute advantage, there is the possibility of comparative
advantages whereby the countries can specialize in what they can do best and
most competitively. As a result, world trade will grow and the benefits of welfare
will be maximized in every country and region.
The theoretical extremes speak of convergence or divergence trends in
the distribution of world income. Those who see convergence start from the
assumption of constant yields of scale, and decreasing capital gains, which means
that when certain rich countries and regions conclude their accumulation processes
and reach a limit in the growth of profits, given that production functions remain
the same, a shifting of investments toward countries and regions where profit
margins are more attractive and salaries are lower will automatic occur.
Poorer countries and regions will thus receive new investments and grow at
a more rapid pace than richer countries and regions, leading to a narrowing of the
gap and reinforcement of the trend toward convergence in income distribution.
Others claim that profits owing to economies of scale are constant and rising,
production functions are different, and thus there are no limits to the accumulation
of capital in the regions, countries, and sectors. Consequently, there is no need to
redirect investments toward poorer countries, as in the rich countries production
increases and human capital development is faster than elsewhere. As a further
consequence, the development gap widens, causing greater divergence instead of
convergence of income distribution. This is in essence the position of Gunnar
Myrdal, the Swedish Nobel prize laureate in economics, who back in the fifties
expounded his theory on virtuous circles, to which the richest belong, and vicious
circles, which encompass the poorer countries and regions.
1
There have been many propositions in the areas of theory, mathematics,
and empirical analysis but the basic arguments follow the tendencies described
1
See Myrdal, Gunnar. Economic Theory and Underdeveloped Regions, London: Duckworth, 1957.
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above and none manages to interpret reality with certainty. As always, assumptions
serve to explain part of the phenomenon and to make one aware of its complexity.
For some academicians, the solution is to shut themselves up in their glass boxes
and to deepen their investigation, without bothering about real events, hoping
some day to find the philosophers’ stone someday. Others embrace one of the
two interpretations and become fierce advocates of one or the other as well as
political servants. Most, fortunately, are struck by the complexity of the matter
and realize that the world moves between extremes and that the decisions by the
countries or regions depend on the individuals who, faced with the markets’
imperfections, must choose to apply one of the interpretations, whether pertinent
or not, to the economy and politics. Indeed, this is political economy.
Essential is the fact that in today’s world it is difficult to find an academician
who is openly against trade globalization. Nevertheless, political economy in
this globalized setting is marked by the actual limitation of the liberalization of
factors and by the limits of imperfect competitiveness.
However, the complexity of the situation—as pointed out by Samuelson
when he refers to Heckscher Ohlins basic theorem: a capital-abundant country will
export the capital-intensive good—consists in the fact that “in reality, factor prices
equalizing does not happen because of the huge differences in resources, trade
barriers, and international differences in technology.” This is the crux of the matter.
Committed policy formulators—backed by certain power groups that are
in turn strengthened by the dogmas disseminated by “supposed” academe
representatives—care little if some countries face absolute disadvantage in nearly
all or in all aspects, as in one or other aspect the disadvantage may be on a lesser
scale and the latter will automatically become a comparative advantage. In
justification of the country’s tendency to specialization, relative prices will equalize
and production with all the resources available will be maximized, owing to
better allocation. As a result, the countries or regions as a whole will improve
their welfare and income.
There is thus no other way than accepting free trade, as it will under any
circumstances maximize world and national income and the countries’ welfare.
Not only free trade is the best, so is also inequality.
Different types of mathematical models have been developed, favoring
one theory or the other, based on empirical evidence. But so far they have only
shown their limitations, whether they are known by the concept of general or
Germán Umaña Mendoza
DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
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partial equilibrium with rising or declining income, or as gravitational models
that take into account distance and other factors.
The truth is that despite the advances in economic theories and modeling, there
persists a deep dearth of knowledge to fully explain the behavior of world trade.
I am aware that this is of little interest to the economic theorists, who
consisently show the layman that their models attempt to approach reality but
do not explain it in its entirety and that one has to start from a series of
assumptions to arrive at a better interpretation. The fact is that the political
economy of international trade displays a greater complexity pertaining to analysis
and economic policy decisions and to their impact on wide segments of the
population, thereby giving rise to new categories of world citizens divided
between the excluded and the included, of rich and poor countries and regions
as well as regional blocs. In this context, some fare better than others but for the
majority the situation in which they have to live is increasingly worse. These are
the wretched of the earth of whom Fanon speaks.
2
This is a source of concern for some students of economic sciences with
respect to the political economy of international trade and its consequences for
the economic and social players.
To the internal factors that explain society’s economic behavior—such as
its political system and institutions, culture, income distribution, allocation of
resources, and sustainable development, among many others—are added factors
related to internationalization and globalization. It is not true that we are
necessarily global players, that we have no history, or that everything in life is
economy. Thus, decisions will be different in different social groups and the
same applies to blocs, countries, and subnational regions.
The complexity of social relations pertaining to international production
elicits the following reflection: if free trade means the free movement of factors
in conditions of perfect competitiveness leading ultimately to equilibrium, when
this does not exist, why is it consistently suggested to us that any trade agreement
is the right way for participation in the international environment?
For some ideology-driven economists, multilateralism is the same as
plurilateralism or bilateralism. They believe that integration objectives such as
2
See Fanon, Frantz. The Wretched of the Earth, New York: Grove Weidenfeld, 1991.
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political and monetary unions and common markets are the same as agreements
on a mere liberalization of factors, that what is essential is to open up to the
world willy-nilly, and that after this economic decision, rivers of milk and honey
will flow. What is disturbing about this is that only some politicians in the
developing world think this way, whereas the others think about the asymmetrical
trade game and make their decisions accordingly.
Free trade raises many questions: Are we really moving toward the free
movement of goods, services, capital, and natural persons? What is the influence
of public policies? Are the legal security mechanisms appropriate for settling
disputes? How are anticompetitive practices and abuse of market dominating
positions controlled? Why are intellectual property, patents, trademarks, and
author’s rights privatized? What is actually the so-called free trade? The answer
is obvious—there is no answer. Multilateralism so far is nothing but a fallacy.
Hence, the degree of freedom to make decisions about how to participate in
globalization varies and is determined by the economy and politics. Of course,
interpretation will be complex and I do not pretend to know the truth. Allow
me, though, to offer some thoughts on the issue.
2. What is trade globalization in the real world?
On the multilateral plane, trade logic has been marked by the progress—
retrocession?—achieved in the Uruguay Round of the General Agreement on
Tariffs and Trade –GATT, concluded in 1994, that led to the establishment of
the World Trade Organization, which became operational in January 1995.
This logic provided a framework for multilateral relations in respect of factors
liberalization, disciplines, and “legal security.It also widened the gap and
asymmetries between countries and regions that possess knowledge and those that
do not. This encompasses all that refers to the movement of goods and services,
intellectual property, public policies related to the State, and dispute settlement.
The main achievement has been the imposition of multilateral higher limits
(standstill) on the countries’ freedom to restrict trade but there is no doubt that
much remains to be done. The major barrier to the free movement of factors
has been legalized, making scientific and technological development into private
property and dealing with it in every known aspect as private property. Obviously,
liberalization of the labor factor is practically nonexistent.
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These limits were set in accordance with the principles involved in the
application of the most-favored-nation clause and national treatment, and in the
definition of binding dispute settlement mechanisms applicable to all that has
been negotiated. In sensu stricto, it might be said that any additional concession
made in negotiation would automatically apply to all countries and regions.
However, this does not happen. Exceptions are promptly made to these
principles and, on this basis, regionalism begins to be promoted. At one point,
this tendency seems to predominate. The success of the European Union—
which manages to combine the establishment of a free trade zone with great
freedom in the movement of goods, services, and natural persons, the formulation
of common external policies on different subjects, the undeniable advances in
macroeconomic harmonization, the definition of a common monetary policy,
and the adoption of a common currency—seemed to serve on a platter the old
continent’s longed-for political union and the achievement of a common external
policy. Today, many of these advances have been hurt by the difficulties
encountered, related to problems arising from the admission of the former
socialist countries, the possible inclusion of Turkey, the reemergence of
xenophobia, as well as the seemingly unsustainable character of the welfare model
owing to the old continent’s low growth and productivity levels.
Latin America attempted to follow in this direction with the establishment
of the Latin American Free Trade Association, intended to move forward
toward a common market. Vain attempt! It was replaced by other smaller
associations meant to accomplish the same thing—Mercosur, the Andean
Community, the Central American Common Market. All of these, poorly
consolidated, have proven failed attempts.
This weakness of the integration systems is coupled with political willfulness
exemplified by presidential summits with no decision-making power vis-à-vis
technocracies, which never, or almost never, enforce the presidents’ decisions,
as these technocracies represent mostly the interests of certain economic groups
and have no qualms in negating political mandates because there is no determining
power or influence in the countries involved. This results in a lack of credibility
before society on the domestic front, which understandably becomes manifest
in the search for new alternatives.
In turn, the developed countries have based their trade strategies toward
the developing countries on the Generalized System of Preferences-GSP, a low-
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cost scheme restricted to tariffs, or according to unilateral preferences arising
from compromises foreign to trade norms, such as the principle of counterpart
responsibility in the fight against the universal scourge of drugs. Initially, GSP
customs benefits were intensified but over time they increasingly became a way
of making demands and imposing conditionalities on the countries, which
seemingly benefited politically as well as in the economic and trade areas,
particularly with respect to intellectual property and the so-called social clauses
(labor and environment), and government procurement. This became a
subreptitious manner of compromising these countries’ independence in
multilateral forums.
The new discretionary treatment dispensed by developed countries creates
not only new asymmetries among underdeveloped countries but also a kind of
competition for being closer to meeting the conditionalities on the part of those
willing to be preference beneficiaries. A logical result is that the latter are the
ones that denounce each other to the multilateral instances. This, in turn, debilitates
the preference schemes just described.
Suffice it to recall in this regard the GSP drug preference granted by the
European Union to Pakistan as a compensation for intervention in its favor in
the Afghanistan war. India, with the support of other developing countries that
do not benefit from the same preference, promptly denounced the system. When
the GSP drug preference is submitted to the WTO dispute settlement body, the
European Union immediately seizes this opportunity to reformulate its system
to demand compliance with new conditions for benefiting from a special GSP
that will replace the GSP drug preference. The new condition could be applied
to all the countries that meet certain economic indicators showing that they are
developing countries, provided they commit themselves to submit to certain
bilateral certifications concerning different matters, particularly matters pertaining
to legislation and to actual observance of international agreements on the
environment and labor. This unilaterally introduces the social dumping issue,
which could not have been introduced under the framework of the objectives
of the first Round, which established the World Trade Organization (I still do
not know whether the name is ironic or sarcastic).
The United States apply this same concept through schemes such as the
Andean Trade Promotion and Drug Eradication Act-Atpdea, directed at the
Andean countries, or those contemplating Central American or African countries.
However, American interests related to the conditionalities are more varied and
Germán Umaña Mendoza
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imposed on a case-by-case basis. In general, they are meant to ensure support
for U.S. policy in multilateral forums and particularly to impose new, more
numerous conditions regarding government procurement, intellectual property,
and settlement of disputes about foreign investment.
It is obvious that under the circumstances just described—advances in
multilateralism, in deep integration proposals, such as those of the European
Union and of Latin America, as well as the inappropriately called unilateral
preferences—the scenario is ready for the development of bilateralism.
There seems to be a tendency to eliminate unilateral preferences, under
which the beneficiary states have already accepted the conditionalities described,
and to resort straightaway to bilateral negotiations that include issues of interest
to the developed countries with respect to legal security for their investments
and investors but do not include key aspects of further trade liberalization
regarding goods and services, under the allegation that these issues should be
dealt with in a broader, multilateral context.
3. And thus we arrive at the “bilateral trap”
For analyzing this issue it is sufficient to look further into the advances of
multilateralism in the form of free trade under the new institutional, normative
WTO framework.
3.1 Foreign direct investment in goods, services, and
portfolio capital
Let us first address the investment issue. Asked to classify investments, a
professor would rightly answer: foreign direct investment in goods and services,
in portfolio capital, and in knowledge capital. Asked about the limits within
which the free flow of investment can function, the same professor would also
rightly answer: there must be legal security, prevention of expropriation or
violation of the principles embodied in the national treatment of foreign
investors, and application of the most-favored-nation clause to the others.
Some warier masters, though, particularly older ones, would immediately
recall that there is such thing as imperfect competition, and would say: One
should not forget that a very important role must also be played by the
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government and by multilateral norms in preventing abuse of a dominating
market position when monopolies and oligopolies do exist. This means the
introduction of the regulatory theory, of independent control commissions. It
means, in sum, the setting of norms for advanced, full-fledged competition.
In a multilateral setting, capitals should move freely. However, given the
lack of consistent, strong multilateral norms, capital control practices arise,
performance requirements are imposed on countries on the receiving-end of
foreign investment, and there is no regulated, binding legislation to provide real
legal security for investors.
The Oecd attempted to solve all this with the well-known proposal of a
Multilateral Investment Agreement – MAI, to which the developing countries
were opposed. The failed proposal was followed by the Bilateral Investment
Protection Treaties-BITs and the establishment of the International Center for
the Settlement of Investment Disputes – Icsid, sponsored by the World Bank, to
solve disputes that might arise on this subject.
And… Eureka! These bilateral treaties achieve two objectives: the free
flow of investments, and the elimination of restrictions, coupled with the legal
obligation of countries through binding, mandatory dispute settlement
mechanisms. The only problem is that capital exporters are almost exclusively
developed, not developing countries.
Under these agreements, countries partially or wholly give up capital control
practices and discriminating between domestic and foreign investors; foreign
investments are protected from eventual legislation changes; rules are set for the
settling of disputes, usually in the Icisid; protection is extended to alleged attempts
to make investment based on the preestablishment principle, which grants
protection from national legislation changes to potential investors who visit the
country with a proposal for any spurious project.
Nevertheless, there are no common bilateral commitments for setting
competition norms capable of checking abuses of market position by those
who can adopt monopolistic or oligopolistic behavior with respect to prices.
Moreover, it is common to replace the political power of old domestic
investors with that of multinationals. National legislation on competition, in the
case of developing countries early on in agreement negotiations, is fragile and
insufficient and cannot be changed because not only protection norms are fixed
Germán Umaña Mendoza
DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
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but also because of norms related to what the “infamy experts” call detrimental
to profits and the so-called indirect expropriation.
3.2 Knowledge capital investment
In addition, with respect to knowledge capital, as a product of the Uruguay
Round and the World Trade Organization, many of the norms established under
the Paris and Berne Conventions on intellectual property have been raised to the
category of trade agreements, with authors’ rights being attached to data banks
and software as well as to cultural industries. Minimum protection periods have
been established for, among other things, patents (20 years) and authors’ rights
(50 years) and norms have been proposed for the settlement of disputes arising
from these conventions.
One needs not be too sharp to realize that these monopolistic terms are
contrary to the free movement of knowledge capital. The developed countries
hold 95 percent of patents, while cultural and information industries not only
are the most powerful but also show the fastest growth.
Subsequently to the Uruguay Round, progress was made in the Doha
Declaration toward clarifying that public health crises have preeminence over
intellectual property rights, and mechanisms were proposed to this effect.
Unfortunately, under bilateral treaties this is negated and not only the practice of
patentability terms is expanded but also greater protection is granted
pharmaceutical and agrochemical multinationals with respect to test data, the
patenting of plants and animals is permitted, authors’ rights in the area of cultural
and information industries are expanded, intellectual property right is granted for
the geostationary orbit, mechanisms for strengthening control of norms established
in this area multiply, the patenting of products obtained from biodiversity is
permitted, and so many other things. Of course, issues such as protection of
traditional knowledge and biodiversity are not considered for developing countries.
Two recent examples corroborate our assertions. In the case of the US-
Chile Free Trade Agreement, norms on trade-related aspects of intellectual
property rights (Trips-plus) have been subscribed to.
The Trips-plus regime applied by Chile under the US-Chile FTA covers
several areas, including the signing of international conventions, in respect of
which Chile relinquished its obligation to ratify various agreements such as the
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International Union for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants – Upov Act
(1991), the Brussels Convention Relating to the Distribution of Program-
Carrying Signals Transmitted by Satellite, and the Patent Cooperation Treaty –
PCT. Moreover, Chile agreed to the extension of patent terms and the
establishing of patents for plants and of dissuasive sanctions against piracy and
criminal falsification, and ceded on aspects related to authors’ rights.
3
It further
agreed to implement measures aimed at enforcing Internet rights, such as the
recognition of the exclusive rights of authors, writers, and composers to post
their works online; to extend the terms of protection of works and phonographs
so as to match those of the United States; and committed the government not
to use illegal software. The agreement also ensured the granting of national
treatment without exception to digital products and defined the conditions for
achieving the settlement of disputes related to domain names and preventing
trademark piracy in cyberspace.
In the matter of patents, there was the requirement to extend the protection
term to offset unwarranted administrative delays in granting patents, something
the Chilean legislation sees as a mere adjustment of terms, thereby following the
US standards and lowering TRIP parameters. The concession of obligatory licenses
was restricted and procedures limiting the introduction of generics were established.
In addition, Chile agreed to limit the use of unpublished information of
patentable pharmaceutical substances, such as the information received when
sanitary registration is granted. Protection of unpublished information in the
case of pharmaceutical and agrochemical products is quite strict.
A further example, under the Central American Free Trade Agreement-
Cafta, recently ratified by the US Congress: all has been summed up in the emotional
statement by Ambassador Zoellick, the US Trade Representative, about the
negotiations on intellectual property with Central America: protection and
nondiscriminatory treatment for US-made digital products—software, music, texts,
and videos; protection for patented products and trademarks; and reinforcement
of industrial secrets. During the negotiations, the gradual inclusion of Central
American countries in the different international agreements was agreed.
4
3
Núñez de H., V. “Cultura vs Propiedad”. El diario de hoy, elsalvador.com, 20 December 2002.
4
Zoellick, R. B. Address from the Office of the United States Trade Representative, Executive Office of the
President, 2003.
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It was further agreed to extend the validity of pharmaceutical patents to
more than twenty years and to prohibit the registration (or marketing
authorization) of generic drugs in case a registered, patented version of the
product in question is available in the country. In addition, the Central American
countries agree to grant additional marketing exclusivity rights and to prohibit
pharmaceutical authorities to use the original data of the pharmaceutical tests,
which are needed to register generic drugs (data exclusivity), and to limit the
entry and the competition of generics.
The provisions pertaining to registration or marketing authorization are
equally strict. Under the Cafta, if a medication is registered in one of the regions
countries, the registration of a corresponding generic is prohibited for five years,
even if the medication is not patented, and until the expiration of an existing
patent. Differently from what happens in relation to patents, in which case the
authorities may issue mandatory licenses, there is no mechanism to safeguard the
provisions that limit pharmaceutical registration.
5
As if the preceding were little, internal legal norms are reinforced. Likewise,
the recourse to international settlement of disputes is also intensified as a way of
controlling the bilateral agreements, and competition rules are equally reinforced
to prevent dominating position abuses. Should this occur again, it could be
considered an affront to the legitimate profit expectations of the holders of the
intellectual property, and would be subject to sanctions under international norms.
3.3 Services
Services were not an object of trade negotiations until recently, as they were
not considered as internationally marketable. Owing to the nonexistence of a
theoretical framework and to the regulatory character of barriers to the trade in
services, it was thought that services fell under the exclusive competence of nations
and did not come under Gatt’s purview.
6
This view began to change in the seventies
when it became obvious that the national regulatory frameworks increased the
multinational transaction costs and that the limits on international financial services
5
Umaña, Germán. El Juego Asimétrico del Comercio, Universidad Nacional, 2004.
6
Services were not considered marketable until they were included in the multilateral trade system at the
Uruguay Round. This is why previous agreements on services such as air or sea transport were bilateral or
governed by private law and subject to self-regulation agreements by the respective industries.
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78 DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
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and telecommunications transactions and reduced profits. This led the United States
and the European countries to propose the inclusion of services in the Uruguay
Round of negotiations”.
7
This was done, of course, although progress was relatively
limited as to liberalization and establishment of norms and standards.
Under bilateral agreements on services, as regards both government
procurement and services, the key objective of liberalization was to ensure real,
unrestricted access to markets. As a matter of fact, though, many exceptions of
a geographical and administrative nature are accepted for the United States but
not for their counterparts. With respect to government procurement, the different
bilateral agreements allow the United States to keep out of the Treaty the other
signatories and their exceptions, while these signatories negotiate jointly with the
United States as one state. This makes the Treaty clearly asymmetrical in favor
of the most powerful signatory.
Moreover, investment on services is not the object of a separate chapter
but comes under the general norms, which precludes the application of public
policies related to anything that is contemplated in the multilateral norms.
The multilateral scope is expanded in respect of financial and
telecommunication services. Access to public networks is permitted solely on
the basis of technical, not economic criteria, as in the case of private networks,
which may be free to provide services, thus putting in question the financial
viability of public telecommunications enterprises.
The provision of services via Mode 4 is not liberalized, migration policies
are not clarified, and little or nothing is negotiated with respect to the recognition
of academic degrees or the granting of visas for the rendering of professional
services. Nor is a dispute settlement mechanism established for this area.
In sum, in bilateral agreements negotiations turn around the opening up
of services as regards investment by telecommunication and financial services
multinationals. What is not included is the free movement of natural persons,
thereby putting constraints on developing countries. Discordant measures are
maintained in the American states, and, as regards public policies pertaining to
government procurement, more than 90 percent of the American states do not
even participate in the negotiations.
7
Umaña, 2006. Ibid.
Germán Umaña Mendoza
DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
79
3.4 Goods liberalization
In the meantime, with respect to goods, both multilateral and bilateral
agreements maintain, with the exception of customs duties, the elimination of
price band mechanisms as a protection of the developing countries’ farm and
livestock sectors, and other minor items, which make no difference to the
developed countries.
“Gatt 1947 and the successive negotiation rounds focused on tariffs. Their
result was essentially a marked reduction in tariffs and all the member countries
defined consolidation levels for nearly the entire tariff universe, setting a
maximum they agree not to exceed (standstill). These tariff levels provide the
basis for liberalization programs under regional or bilateral agreements. The
outcome of the negotiation of these agreements is not to be extended to the
other WTO members, as Article XXIV and the eligibility clause for developing
countries establish an exception to the most-favored-nation clause.
The Uruguay Round negotiations about the farm and livestock sector
managed to convert into tariff most nontariff barriers to imports, although in
some cases excessively high levels were set, which prevented maintenance of the
historical trade flows. To maintain them, contingent levels—lower or zero tariff—
were set.
Nevertheless, international trade in farm products remains distorted by
export subsidies, domestic support, and other measures of equal effect, which
total approximately one billion dollars a day.
Although the Uruguay Round allowed reductions on these items, they were
insufficient and thus it was agreed to continue negotiations on this sector, but
these negotiations move at a slow pace. In Cancun, a serious crisis arose, which
at least put into question the successful conclusion of the Doha Round and the
advances in the multilateral system.
As regards the farm sector, the Agreement on Sanitary and Phytosanitary
Measures-SPS is in force. In many cases it allows a scientific, consistent treatment
of plant health, but in other cases, owing to its vagueness, it may give rise to
technical obstacles and nontariff barriers that have no clear justification. Little
progress has been made with respect to the antidumping statute and the
multilateral competition norms capable of checking abuse of market dominating
positions.
The trap of bilateralism
80 DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
80
In sum, the WTO has fixed the maximum tariff levels the countries may
apply and an exception to the principles of the most-favored-nation clause for
integration agreements, which allows goods liberalization; converted into tariffs
the quantitative barriers to the world trade in farm products, reduced subsidies,
and domestic support, although these tariffs are still quite high; and has made
little progress in respect of disciplines. It has also established a mechanism for
settlement of disputes arising from agreements already signed.
8
Under bilateral
agreements all this is covered, but no protection mechanism if provided for
developing countries.
The trap of bilateralism is obvious—progress is made in all that is of
interest to developed countries while the opening up of markets for goods and
services of interest to developing countries remains at a standstill. Asymmetry
becomes more marked and with respect to intellectual property we keep moving
farther apart. Bilateral treaties are thus investment, not exactly free trade treaties.
This is where the true fallacy lies.
3.5 Colombia: a bad example for other developing countries
Colombia is a WTO member. It observes the provisions of the Uruguay
Round with respect to industrial goods and farm products, services, intellectual
property, investment, dispute settlement, etc. On the multilateral front, it
participates in the Ftaa negotiations, currently in recess; is an active member of
the Andean Community — CAN and of the Latin American Integration
Association — Aladi, and in this context it has engaged in different negotiations,
such as those between CAN and Mercosur and with Chile. It is also a member of
the Group of Three (G-3), has agreements of a partial scope with countries of
Central America and Caricom, and enjoys preferences (improperly called
unilateral), pursuant to the principle of Shared Responsibility in combating drugs,
from the United States (Atpdea) and a special SGP from the European Union,
to replace the drug SGP, which was questioned and modified by WTO mandate
as a result of India’s petition, as mentioned earlier.
Colombia is currently negotiating, jointly with Peru and Ecuador, a FTT
with the United States, expected to be signed by the respective Executive Branches
8
Umaña, 2006. Ibid.
Germán Umaña Mendoza
DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
81
in the last quarter of 2005, so that ratification procedures can be started by the
Legislative Branch of each country, and so that, in Colombia, its constitutionality
may be approved. In addition, in the context of CAN, studies and analyses are
being carried out with the European Union, with a view to start negotiations for
an Agreement of Association with the EU and a Free Trade Zone in 2006. This
strategy forms part of what is being called open integration.
Major progress has been made toward the definitive consolidation of an
Andean Community customs union, with respect not only to the establishment
of a common external tariff but also to ensuring compatibility with international
norms, in view of the recognition of the different development levels among
the signatories of the Agreement. Four members have agreed not to modify
their tariffs unilaterally; the two most developed countries of the region have
practically identical tariffs; and trade within the community is substantial,
particularly trade in manufactures and in products with aggregated value.
There has also been substantial progress in terms of harmonization of
customs and trade legislation, as well as of liberalization of trade in services and
goods. Moreover, common policies on intellectual property and investment have
been formulated and three countries (Colombia, Ecuador, and Venezuela) have
a common policy with respect to price bands stabilization mechanisms.
In addition, there has been real progress also in the liberalization of the
movement of natural persons and in adding a social dimension to integration. If
to this we add strong institutional development, exemplified by the existence of
an interstate organization (Commission, Andean Council of Foreign Ministers,
Secretariat, Andean Court of Justice, Andean Parliament, Andean Development
Corporation, Education and Health Pacts, Labor and Entrepreneurial Council,
etc.), there would be no doubt about the vigor of an integration process that, with
its avatars, seems to be consistent with a relatively simple deepening in the long
run. However, that which might seem obvious should be seen from the perspective
of the tenets of the trade policy of the members of the integration agreement, as
there are internal and external factors that may affect its consolidation.
In the first place, the CAN–Mercosur negotiations are essentially for a
trade goods liberalization agreement. Although tariff reduction varies from
country to country, it is assumed that there will be convergence at the end of the
process. It should also be said that what has been decided does not affect the
discipline harmonization and the institutional strengthening processes. Moreover,
The trap of bilateralism
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South American integration increasingly promotes political proposals that
reinforce its identity as a process, such as the establishment of the South American
Community of Nations.
A second type of agreement is characterized particularly by the negotiations
under way with the United States, in which the main variables to consider have to
do with the effects the free trade zone might have on the Andean Community
and with the preeminence or lack thereof of the negotiation results over norms
and institutions as well as over the degree of liberalization achieved.
In essence, trade policy analysis should take into consideration the fact that
this will be a new generation agreement that will include factors liberalization (goods,
services, investments, government procurement), the establishment of disciplines
and of limits to public and integration policies, and general and particular
mechanisms for settlement of disputes pertaining to investment in goods, financial
services, and telecommunications, as well as intellectual property, in cases concerning
which there are no WTO norms. Still to be defined is whether the FTA will go
beyond the TRIP signed at the WTO, in respect of both patents and authors’
rights and of compliance and relation with the progress made in the Wipo. These
aspects ought to be considered in relation to CAN decisions regarding this matter.
With respect to the Customs Union and to services, the FTAs with the United
States differ from agreements with Mercosur and with other Latin American countries
not only in coverage but also in the fact that, in principle, one of the members
(Venezuela) is not interested in signing a bilateral agreement with the United States,
and that Bolivia is an observer. Under these circumstances, if a bilateral legal
framework were established, rather than a multilateral, as proposed by the United
States, the pace of negotiations might be different and the simultaneous signing of
FTAs with Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru might be possible.
Accordingly, there would be no clearly defined deadline for convergence in
trade opening or for disciplines harmonization and dispute settlement, which might
eventually hinder a work plan designed for improving the customs union and the
common market, particularly in respect of services and government procurement.
These agreements could weaken the political decision about whether there is a
need to make progress toward a common market and reinforce the intention to
maintain only a free trade zone endowed with correction mechanisms to address
market imperfections stemming from custom duties differences, customs norms,
and a lesser degree of common policies harmonization.
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83
Furthermore, CAN is getting ready to begin negotiations of an association
agreement with the European Union. So far, the European Union’s condition
for starting negotiations has been the strengthening of a customs union and, in
general, of economic integration aimed at a common market. Apparently, the
outcome of the FTA with the United States will be known in the last quarter of
2005. This would permit the identification of the limits or advantages of moving
further toward a common market. On the other hand, the eventual outcome of
the consultation rounds for starting negotiations with the European Union might
make necessary the speeding-up of the timetable and the commitment to deepen
integration as condition for the joint negotiation of the five countries involved.
In brief, it can thus be said that the outcome of negotiations between three of
the five Andean countries with the United States will amount to a centrifugal force
whose magnitude should be evaluated, so that the necessary corrections may be
made, while negotiations with the European Union could be a balancing centripetal
force for the political ratification of the integration objectives, which up to now have
been maintained, in respect of trade, by the Andean President’s Council, and which
would be reinforced by the establishment of a South American zone this year.
As this overview has shown, in the immediate future and in accordance
with the outcome of the negotiations under way, Colombia must undertake a
thorough analysis of its participation in the various integration scenarios of which
it forms part and of the achievements under the different agreements, so as to
redefine its external trade policy. It seems complicated to pretend to deepen
trade opening in the form agreed with the United States and at the same time to
achieve the objective of a common market as contemplated by CAN.
A FTA would imply giving up our sovereignty, but this would not be the
result of self-determination and of citizens’ participation. It would lead us into
the bilateral trap, which would distance us from globalization, Latin America,
and the common positions assumed by developing countries at multilateral
forums. It would mean precisely the opposite of what is claimed: it would
condemn us to isolationism, a situation in which our only partner would see us
as a colony rather than as a sovereign nation. It would be an investment protection
treaty, not a free trade treaty. It is precisely here that the fallacy lies. Would the
FTAs approval be transparent, legitimate, legal or constitutional?
Version: João Coelho.
DEP
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T
he pressing need to protect the Amazon and exercise sovereignty but
also the ineluctable fight to eradicate poverty, to improve the standard of living
and what could, from the outset, be viewed as a kind of call to achieve sustainable
development, those were the considerations on the agenda of the foreign ministers
from the eight countries that have sovereignty over the Amazon Basin back in
the year 1978. Their attitude could be described as visionary for the time. It
expressed the concern of the governments of Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador,
Guyana, Peru, Suriname and Venezuela for what that portion of their respective
territories represented not merely in percentage terms but rather what it might
mean for many co-nationals in those countries.
* Secretary-General of Acto.
The Amazonian
Cooperation Treaty
Organisation (Acto):
a constant challenge
Rosalía Arteaga Serrano
*
Rosalía Arteaga Serrano
DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
85
The size of these countries’ Amazon regions as a percentage of their entire
territories, based on information they themselves have provided, is as follows:
1
Table 1. Continental Amazon
Countries of the Amazon River Basin
Amazon As % of As % of
Country territory national the Amazon
(km
2
) territory Basin
Bolivia 824,000 75.00 11,20
Brazil 4,982,000 58.50 67.79
Colombia 406,000 36.00 5.52
Ecuador 123,00 45.00 1.67
Guyana 5,870 2.73 0.08
Peru 956,751 74.44 13.02
Venezuela 53,000 5.78 0.72
Countries in the Amazon Domain*
Suriname 142,800 100.00
Total (Amazon) 7,493,421
* A tract of 91,000 km2 in French Guiana is located in the Amazon Basin.
After 25 years in operation, during which time the Treaty was administered
by rotating Pro Tempore Secretariats attached to the countries’ respective Foreign
Ministries, the Foreign Ministers and Governments of the Treaty’s signatory
members decided to establish the Amazonian Cooperation Treaty Organisation
(Acto). They accepted the Brazilian Government’s kind offer to make Brasilia
the headquarters for this new organization. By its very conception and considering
the initial progress it has made, Acto is destined to play a major role in the
region, in the South American continent and, indeed, in the global arena. This is
because the sheer scope of the challenges posed and the issues at stake have a
direct bearing even on the very survival of the human species on the planet.
1
Source: “Amazonía sin mitos” [The Amazon without myths], ACT.
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Dealing with the Amazon implies examining its diverse potential, including
its vast wealth, not only the riches contained in its soil, but also the quality of its
air, the verdure of the forest that seems virtually unending but that we know to
be only too fragile when put to bad use. Much is made of the number of species
in the Amazon, of its biological diversity but little attention is given to
demographic and cultural aspects, practically no mention being made of the
people who inhabit the region. We are referring here not only to the indigenous
populations but also to those who arrived at a later stage but who feel themselves
to be just as much a part of the Amazon, to be true Amazonians.
On a number of occasions we have spoken of the Amazonian Cooperation
Treaty Organisation as an “old novelty” for, although its roots reach back over
a period of twenty-five years in which the Treaty has been in force, it is certainly
new on the scene if we narrow our focus to the two and a half years that have
elapsed since the Organisations Permanent Secretariat was installed.
Acto is the only regional Amazonian organization to which all eight
governments of the countries comprising the region belong. As a result, it plays
a vital role in promoting regional integration and thus deserves the unflagging
support of its member states. Its mandate covers a broad range of interests, all
inherent in its Amazonian nature, all related to its concern for the elements
comprising the Amazon, to its status as a generative matrix.
What we do in the Amazon region affects humankind as a whole. It is no
exaggeration to speak of all humankind for the reserves of fresh water available
in the Amazon Basin, the biodiversity it nurtures, the extraordinary potential it
proffers, the cultural diversity it displays, the opportunity it affords for
communication reaching beyond the countries’ particular interests, the fight
against poverty, the success of policies on health, education, gender, culture,
sanitation, all condensed in the quest for and consolidation of sustainable and
sustained development, all this leads one to realise that a great deal of mankind’s
future is in our hands.
When I write or talk about the organisation I have been entrusted with
running, I strive passionately to place it in a position of leadership, a role it is
beginning to assume. I am convinced that through the political will of the
presidents of the eight member republics the Amazon region can become the
best and finest locus for integrating our countries, for integrating America. Such
integration is fired by the ideals and visionary dreams of South American unity
Rosalía Arteaga Serrano
DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
87
but is equally based on the endeavour to achieve more equitable living conditions.
That explains why we have striven to contribute to the building of a South
American Community of Nations. Such a Commonwealth cannot be forged if
40% of the continent’s territory – the region over which Acto has a mandate – is
ignored. Perhaps the fact that the Amazon has not previously been considered a
part of such initiatives may explain why sub-regional, regional and continental
integration processes have so far failed to deliver. This cannot, of course, be
seen as the sole cause but there is a clear connection.
From the point of view of Acto’s Permanent Secretariat, the time has
come to cease tackling challenges separately and, instead, to promote joint
negotiations on the Amazon, to work together as a team of Amazonian countries.
By doing so, we can enhance our strong points and attain our common goals. We
have already begun to do this by adopting joint stands on forests and
contamination by mercury, and, with any luck, we can now do likewise on
such relevant issues as water, biodiversity, and intellectual and industrial property
rights.
For this reason, we are interested in reviving the Amazonian Parliament to
enable Acto member states to bring their national legislation into alignment in a
number of fields associated with the main challenges facing sustainable
development in the Amazon. These include the issues mentioned above and
others relating to protection of the traditional peoples of the region and their
cultures, scientific and technological knowledge and innovative know-how.
To the present day they remain unknown to us, and yet they are crucial to the
unquestionable imperative of protecting the Amazon as a strategic source
of life.
When I took office as the Secretary-General of the Amazonian Cooperation
Treaty Organisation in May 2004, I proposed to the governments of the eight
member states a common agenda for the Amazon region, featuring important
steps forward through the establishment of a strategic eight-year plan (2004-
2012) based on biennial action plans. The governments of the member states
approved this plan in September 2004 at the VIII Meeting of Foreign Ministers
held in Manaus. We have already begun to implement it imbued with a strong
sense of courage, commitment and enthusiasm.
To this end, we have taken due stock of the mission to forge technical and
financial mechanisms, in addition to adopting common, complementary policies,
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for effective achievement of regional integration and sustainable development.
We are endeavouring to engage member countries as well as regional and local
players in preparing and implementing the necessary plans, programmes and
projects. This will boost our capacity for joint global action on matters of interest
to the region.
Acto’s potential contribution and the value it can add to the work separately
undertaken by each country resides in its capacity to view the basin as a whole, as
an exceptional single biome with a high degree of interdependence. This is all
the more evident when the Amazon is viewed as a hydrographic system fed
largely by water running off the Andean heights, where the highest volcanoes in
the world are located, and washing down into the vast plains of the Amazon
Basin itself, which owes a great deal of its biodiversity to the loam the water
carries with it. The overview of a regional organisation like Acto is indispensable
when working to protect and put to good use the resources of the world’s biggest
river basin. It covers an area of 7,500,000 square kilometres containing 20% of
the planet’s fresh water and boasting truly extraordinary biodiversity. Purely for
the sake of illustration, scientists reckon that a single average hectare of the
Amazon territory in any of our countries would probably display greater
biodiversity than the entire continent of Europe, with all the implications that
entails. In terms of the potential for health, for instance, the Amazon has reserves
that may well yield medications for treating diseases that have yet to appear on
the face of the Earth. Exaggerated as that claim may seem, it is placed in proper
perspective when one recollects scourges such as mad cow disease, bird flu and
even Aids, diseases that have apparently not been around on the planet for very
long. Moreover, these precious reserves can be combined with the traditional
knowledge of communities that have for ages made their lives in the Amazon.
The delta of the Amazon discharges more water into the ocean than the
other nine largest rivers in the world put together.
If we stop to think about the growing importance of this vital liquid given
its present scarcity in some regions of the world and the acute demand for it in
the not-so-distant future, as much on account of demographic pressure as of
general misuse of natural resources, we will once more gain a clearer picture of
the Amazon Basins true dimensions.
The Amazonian Cooperation Treaty Organisation is called upon to
intervene (as it already has done) in matters relating to political dialogue, regional
Rosalía Arteaga Serrano
DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
89
strategies and programmes, and a variety of supranational initiatives and projects,
within the framework of a strategic approach.
The Strategic Plan for 2004-2012, mentioned above, has listed four
programmatic fields and a number of transversal elements. The list is not
exhaustive and can be expanded depending on demands made by the member
countries, presented either through official channels or by citizens represented
by so-called civil society through consultation mechanisms now being developed.
The four programmatic fields are as follows:
1) Conservation and Sustainable Use of Natural Resources, a specific
concomitant mandate owing to the extremely rich, fragile area demanding
conservation;
2) Management of Knowledge and Technological Exchange designed to
promote south-south cooperation without, of course, disparaging advances
originating in other regions that may contribute to development. Based on the
principles of sustainability, the most appropriate way to save the Amazon,
generally speaking, is to employ science and the hitherto unimaginable advances
it now affords that are already transforming the world, particularly advances in
fields such as biotechnology and communications. In both cases, the Amazon
stands to gain from adequate use of these breakthroughs;
3) Integration and regional competitiveness, since the Amazon territories
in all our countries have lagged behind. They were previously held to be empty
areas suitable for settlement. Given that the Amazon region represents 40% of
the entire South American continent, no regional integration initiative can hope
to achieve success if it fails to incorporate the vast Amazon region. The evident
disparities among the countries comprising the region are offset by similarities
stemming from geographic features: we share a river basin, a biome, indigenous
peoples, and cultures capable of forging an Amazonian identity, however diverse
they may be, that could serve as the cornerstone for the edifice of integration.
Eventually, one may even envisage the prospect of the region competing together
for global markets. In the case of the Amazon, that means insisting on payment
of fair prices, considering the difficulties for production, the logistical obstacles,
etc. that inevitably raise the cost of production;
4) Strengthening of the institutional framework. In view of the
Organisations relative youth (less than three years on from its foundation), this
is an entirely plausible goal to pursue.
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In addition to the programmatic fields established in the Strategic Plan, a
number of transversal elements have been listed, but that in no way rules out the
inclusion of other priority issues.
The transversal elements are as follows:
1) Water: considering the Amazon possesses the world’s largest fresh water
reserves, that water is often considered an inexhaustible resource but may indeed
run out and is already running short in certain areas, with a consequent sharp
decline in living conditions, the Amazon region must take all due precautions to
treat this vital resource in a responsible manner;
2) Forests, soils and natural areas protected as a mechanism to help preserve
sustainability. On satellite images of the Earth, the Amazon appears as a great
green swathe. It is thus our bounden duty to preserve it as the world’s biggest
tropical rain forest;
3) Biodiversity, biotechnology and biocommerce, each with its specific
traits, subject to the concepts expressed above concerning the region’s
extraordinary wealth of biological diversity. Precisely to preserve it, alternative
mechanisms, including biotechnology and biocommerce, must be employed to
make adequate use of its resources. We must endeavour to seek possible means
of generating employment for the local population and appropriate ways of
exploring the forest’s resources (e.g. essential oils, fruit pulps, handcraft using
wood chips, seeds etc.). A variety of initiatives already exist. One such initiative
is the Amazonian Exchange initially established in Belém do Pará (Brazil) and
already extended to other countries in the region. Acto has begun to work on
this front with its customary sense of responsibility thanks to support from
Unctad, the United Nations Foundation, and the Dutch Government.
4) Territorial ordinance, human settlements and indigenous affairs. By
naming these issues, Acto seeks to acknowledge their importance as mechanisms
for securing fair treatment concerning ownership of land and so prevent the
abuses that have traditionally prevailed in relations between the rich and those
who possess nothing. Indigenous communities themselves should be responsible
for indigenous affairs. Nonetheless, agreements of the kind Acto has signed with
organisations such as Coica
2
and the contact it has established with other sectors
2
Coica – Coordinating Body for the Indigenous Organisations of the Amazon Basin.
Rosalía Arteaga Serrano
DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
91
may help them achieve their goals. Disparities in this sphere are equally apparent.
Empowering Acto to work with these different sectors may prove a valid
alternative for the signatory states of the Treaty and members of the Organisation;
5) Social infrastructure, relating to health and education. As is always the
case with regions that have not merited due attention, the most glaring figures
for inequality and poverty are those relating to health and education, and the
Amazon region is no exception to the rule. As hinted previously, the Amazon
provinces or states record the lowest indices for health and education. In both
Brazil and Bolivia, sizeable urban areas have already sprung up in the region and
are increasingly attracting migrants for a variety of (often misguided) reasons.
These towns are generally portrayed as promising places, which encourages
different social sectors to move there. Acto has already signed an agreement on
health with the Pan American Health Organisation, particularly to combat malaria
and establish epidemiological control at frontiers, which should soon become
operational. It has also made contact with Andean Community’s Hipólito Unanue
covenant and the Fiocruz foundation in Brazil;
6) Transports, energy and communications infrastructure, requiring
association with the Iirsa infrastructure initiative. The aim is to seek alternatives
for keeping negative impacts to a minimum in the construction of infrastructure
while also deriving maximum benefit for the local population and vis-à-vis
environmental policies. In this respect, an attempt is being made to revive an
initiative for navigation along the Amazon River system.
Over the past 16 months, the Amazonian Cooperation Treaty Organisation
has set about establishing a series of strategic agreements (see Table 2 below)
that will enable it to fulfil the objectives and goals it has set itself. They will also
allow Acto to establish itself in the Latin American and global arena as a
mechanism for integration capable of promoting sustainable development in
the region, becoming a standard setter thanks to its philosophy and
accomplishments.
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Table 2. Agreements drawn up between the Amazonian Cooperation Treaty
Organisations Permanent Secretariat and other organisations (2004-2005).
Acto – FAO Agreement, Integral forestry management,
sustainability criteria and indicators for the Amazon Forest,
“Tarapoto Process”.
Acto – Unctad Memorandum of Understanding for boosting
sustainable trade and investment in biodiversity products and
services in the Amazon region.
Letter of Understanding between Acto and the
Intergovernmental Coordination Committee of the Plata River
Basin Countries (CIC) on exchange of information and
cooperation on activities of joint interest.
Acto – Unamaz Cooperation Agreement for strengthening the
network of Amazonian Universities.
Acto – CAN
3
Memorandum of Understanding.
Acto – Ambi
4
Letter of Understanding for collaboration in
organising the Andes-Amazon Expedition.
Acto – Coica
5
Memorandum of Understanding.
Acto – CAF
6
Cooperation Agreement for establishing a
Solidary Development Fund.
Acto – OAS Cooperation Agreement.
Acto – Paho/WHO Landmark Agreement on endemic
diseases and epidemiological control.
Acto – OAS Cooperation Agreement for provision of funds
from the Global Environment Facility (GEF) allocated to
preparation and implementation of the project on “Integrated
Sustainable Management of Cross-Border Water Resources in
the Amazon River Basin”.
Acto – IDB Agreement for promoting conservation and
sustainable use of Amazonian biodiversity – Regional plan of
action for biodiversity.
International Cooperation: BMZ/GTZ
7
, Usaid, Cyted
8
.
3
CAN – Andean Community.
4
Ambi – Socio-Environmental & Scientific Expeditions Organisation.
5
Coica – Coordinating Body for the Indigenous Organisations of the Amazon Basin.
6
CAF – Andean Development Corporation.
7
BMZ – German Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development; GTZ - Deutsche Gesellschaft für
Technische Zusammenarbeit (German technical cooperation agency).
8
Ciencia y Tecnología para el Desarrollo (Science & Technology for Development).
Brasilia
25
th
May 2004
São Paulo
15
th
June 2004
Brasilia
30
th
August 2004
Santa Cruz de la Sierra
21
st
September 2004
Lima
29
th
September 2004
Brasilia
15
th
October 2004
Quito
25
th
October 2004
Caracas
17
th
January 2005
Washington
27
th
January 2005
Washington
3
rd
February 2005
Bahia
25
th
June 2005
Washington
25
th
July 2005
Rosalía Arteaga Serrano
DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
93
Fields of Action 2005-2006
In the previous section we mentioned that the Organisations working
mechanism, which dovetails with the 2004-2012 Strategic Plan approved in
Manaus, consists in drafting and overseeing biennial plans of action. Priority has
been ascribed to the following fields of action in the 2005-2006 plan currently
being implemented:
a) Policies on conservation and sustainable development
These are policies with a dual priority of conservation combined with
adequate exploration of the forest’s resources, exactly as envisaged in the 1978
Treaty. In this sphere, Acto’s Permanent Secretariat is seeking to enhance
regional liaison and political dialogue through participation in and leadership
of meetings held under the Organisation’s aegis as well as meetings of Foreign
Ministers or other officials to examine specific issues (e.g. those already held
on Intellectual and Industrial Property, Science & Technology, and others
currently being prepared) as well as by taking part in meetings convened by
the South American Community of Nations, the Andean Community, the
United Nations, and so forth.
Another feature demanding immediate, sustained attention is the
Amazonisation” of positions adopted in international forums. This has already
been the case at the world meeting on forests held in New York and a number of
initiatives concerning intellectual property and mercury contamination. Work
has also been undertaken to establish specific consensual instruments among the
countries of the region for validation of sustainability indicator criteria for
Amazon forests, a mechanism known as the Tarapoto Process (see Table 2 above).
In the same context, Acto is now seeking to forge liaison and consultation
mechanisms with civil society in the Amazon. This is no easy task but it must be
addressed for, although Acto represents the member state governments, it works
directly with the region’s inhabitants.
b) Strengthening of Acto’s political and institutional framework
This requires sustained work on several different levels. To this end,
the member states’ national commissions need strengthening, a task each
country will have to tackle internally but which we, as the Permanent Secretariat,
can help address.
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94 DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
94
At this point, we should stress the present importance of institutions
created almost in parallel or in close association with the Treaty itself on which
Acto will have to rely to accomplish its goals. We refer initially to the Amazonian
Parliament. A political decision by the member states is required to institutionalise
and revive the Parliament. This is of crucial importance bearing in mind the
basic tenet that any development process depends on the active contribution of
national decision-making bodies. The legislative branch represents society’s
aspirations and can thus help reflect on and find solutions for sustainable
development in the region. It can likewise assist in consolidating regional
integration and development policies.
Hence, the Amazonian Parliament, to which the regions national
parliaments will be tributary, is a key mechanism for bringing the member states’
laws into alignment, thus facilitating economic and cultural exchange as well as
cooperation for sustainable development. Liaison among the parliaments in the
region is a major step forward in promoting mutual knowledge of our specificities
and achieving effective integration among our peoples.
Another institution that needs strengthening and was created practically in
parallel with Acto is Unamaz, the Network of Amazonian Universities, whose
brief is to coordinate the work of study centres in the region.
Finally, there is Coica, a body congregating the indigenous communities
in the Amazon, another institution established in the wake of ACT.
Also in the context of strengthening Acto’s political and institutional
framework, meetings of the Organisations decision-making bodies must be
convened and held, beginning with the Coordination Committee (Ccoor)
comprised by the member states’ ambassadors accredited in Brasilia, but also
including the Amazonian Cooperation Council (CCA), Foreign Ministers’
meetings and Presidential Summits.
Another aspiration on which the Permanent Secretariat, Acto’s executive
body, is currently working is the establishment and consolidation of a local,
municipal and sub-regional political base.
c) Influence in drafting and aligning policies
This implies identifying priorities for alignment and cohesive regional
action. It is based on presidential summits and ministerial meetings like that held
Rosalía Arteaga Serrano
DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
95
in Manaus at which a resolution was passed that work was to be concentrated in
the following areas: Defence and Integral Security of the Amazon, Social
Development, Infrastructure and Physical Integration, Science and Technology,
Biodiversity and Intellectual Property.
For this purpose, a number of instruments are being developed to assist
in decision-making: production of maps with support from the German
cooperation agency GTZ, Inpe
9
and Sivam
10
; and the drafting of proposals for
reviewing different definitions of the Amazon region, support being provided
by the European Community through the Joint Research Centre.
We are taking part in strategic events together with CAN, Cyted, the Manaus
Free Trade Zone, and we hope to do the same on the basis of initial contacts
with Mercosur (through the Intergovernmental Coordination Committee of the
Plata River Basin Countries-CIC), Sipam
11
, Iirsa
12
, Caricom
13
, etc.
Enhanced liaison and joint projects in the context of the Amazon Basin
will lead to the adoption of standard criteria and greater exchange of information.
This is already the case on issues such as mercury contamination, forestry affairs,
intellectual and industrial property, among others.
d) Management of knowledge and local political liaison for
sustainable development
We have been liaising primarily with Unamaz, another institution created
at roughly the same time as the ACT. Unamaz is a network of Amazonian
universities and has played a key role in developing scientific knowledge,
technological know-how and innovation for the region. Nonetheless, it has not
yet attained its full potential nor achieved the results expected. It should be stressed
that besides the universities, there are several major research centres in the region
enjoying international prestige. These include the Emílio Goeldi Museum (Belém,
Brazil), the Peruvian Amazon National Research Institute (Iiap), the Amazon
9
Brazil’s National Space Research Institute.
10
Brazilian Amazon Surveillance System.
11
Amazon Protection System attached to the Brazilian President’s Office.
12
IIRSA – Iniciativa para la Integración de la Infraestructura Regional Suramericana [South American regional
infrastructure integration initiative].
13
Caribbean Community.
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96 DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
96
14
The Colombian Amazonian Scientific Research Institute.
15
Instituto de Investigación de Recursos Biológicos Alexander von Humboldt, Bogotá (Colombia).
16
Ciencia y Tecnología para el Desarrollo (Science & Technology for Development).
Biotechnology Centre – CBA (Manaus, Brazil), Sinchi
14
, and the Humboldt
Institute
15
.
Acto has begun to liaise with Cyted
16
, national science and technology
councils and similar establishments in each of the member countries while also
investing in joint ventures like the so-called Amazon Initiative, to which it has
been party since its foundation.
Acto has also been collaborating with multi-institutional networks operating
at regional level, including the Amazon Initiative mentioned in the previous
paragraph and the MAP (Madre de Dios, Acre, Pando) project for engaging
civil society, among others.
All these initiatives afford enhanced production and exchange of
information as part of a policy designed to highlight and promote good
governance.
e) Funding of projects and use of resources
The Organisation operates with a small core group of technicians, experts
and administrative staff funded by the quotas each member state contributes for
that purpose. It also manages other funds obtained from international
cooperation, international organisations, cooperating countries, private
enterprise, etc. Acto now aims to set up a solidary development fund for the
Amazon with the support of member country governments and cooperating
institutions. To this end, it has initiated consultations with the Andean
Development Corporation (CAF).
Details of projects currently being administered by Acto’s Permanent
Secretariat and those at the preparation stage are provided, respectively, in Tables
3 and 4 below.
Rosalía Arteaga Serrano
DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
97
Table 3 – Acto/PS Projects in Progress
Projects in Progress
1. Regional Biodiversity Management Project – IDB.
2. Integrated Sustainable Management of Water Resources – GEF/Unep
17
OAS.
3. Project on Economic Use of Biodiversity – Unctad/Dutch Govt./GTZ/UNF
18
.
4. Draft Project for Conservation of the Tropical Amazon Forest II – GTZ/BMZ.
5. Acto Prize” and “Discovering the Amazon: Acto and the Orellana Youth Paths” –
Governments/Private Sector.
6. Validation of Sustainability Indicators for the Amazon Forest – FAO.
7. Proposal for participation of civil society in Acto: Uicn/FLA
19
– IDB.
8. Prevention and control of mercury contamination – US Government.
9. Proposal for demarcating the Amazon region – IES-EU
20
.
Table 4. Acto/PS Projects at the Preparation Stage
Projects at the Preparation Stage
Prevention and control of mercury contamination – US Government – EPA
21
– MMA
22
/Brazil.
Technical, financial and political feasibility study for establishment of a Solidary
Development Fund – CAF
23
.
Draft health project – Paho.
Amazon Project – Moore Foundation.
Regional Project for Itto
24
– Governance, monitoring of forest cover.
Protected Areas Programme – WWF-Cirad
25
.
Andes Amazon Programme – GTZ/Icraf
26
.
Cross-Border Parks – KfW
27
.
Economic Aspects for Sustainable Development and Indigenous Lands Management
– Dutch Government.
17
GEF – Global Environment Facility; UNEP – United Nations Environment Programme.
18
UNF – United Nations Foundation.
19
Uicn – World Conservation Union; FLA – Fair Labour Association.
20
IES – Institute for Environmental Sustainability.
21
EPA – US Environmental Protection Agency.
22
MMA – Brazilian Environment Ministry.
23
CAF – Andean Development Corporation.
24
Itto – International Tropical Timber Organisation.
25
Cirad – Centre de Coopération Internationale en Recherche Agronomique pour le Développement.
26
Icraf – World Agroforestry Centre (originally International Council for Research in Agroforestry).
27
KfW Bankengruppe (KfW banking group).
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98 DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
98
Each of these projects merits at least a paragraph to explain what they
entail. This is not possible here in this prestigious periodical so I merely wish
to stress that no specific mention is made in the Acto Strategic Plan of certain
issues on which we are working, such as gender and cultural issues. These are
being addressed, for example, at awareness-raising seminars (e.g. the Gender
and Amazon Seminar due to be held in the Peruvian Amazon) and through
cultural and scientific projects (e.g. the “Discovering the Amazon: Acto and
the Orellana Youth Paths” expedition, which prepares discovery trips to the
Amazon with annual routes for young people nominated by the member states;
and the Acto prizes, designed to publicise and encourage relevant initiatives in
the region.
The Amazon region possesses tremendous forestry potential, is rich in
biodiversity, and has been settled over the years in cycles of exploitation of its
natural resources marked by scarce little concern for conservation. The region
has to cope with acknowledged logistical difficulties, high production overheads
if we are to subscribe to traditional market rules and a great dispersal of species
due to exceptional biodiversity.
Other features that deserve consideration are the low technological capacity,
poor availability of and access to information (despite the proliferation of studies
carried out especially by experts and scientists from outside the region) and the
remarkable social and ethnic diversity.
We should also pay special attention to certain micro-regional specificities
including poor political and economic stability, flimsy institutional capacity, low
levels of participation and decentralisation, as well as glaring disparities.
The Amazon continues to be seen as a land of opportunities, the challenges
arising from the facts mentioned above. We must lay to rest the myth that this is
a rich but empty region. Rather, we should endeavour to come to terms with its
complexity and peculiarities and so ensure its assets are transformed into
opportunities for the local population, while also acknowledging the regulatory
function of the State regarding access to natural resources and management of
the territory.
Conservation of natural resources is imperative for present and future
generations. Likewise, we must strive not to repeat the mistakes of the past and
instead to make the most of successful initiatives.
Rosalía Arteaga Serrano
DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
99
We must seek to incorporate sustainable planning into our praxis, engaging
local, municipal, state and national players so as to broaden the social base, thus
fulfilling the Amazonian Cooperation Treaty.
As should by now be apparent, the challenge we face is enormous.
Acto has such a broad outlook that it could even be viewed as a great umbrella
covering a wealth concerns, suggestions and proposals. At the same time, it should
serve as an antenna to attract international cooperation and pertinent projects.
Beyond that, the Organisation aspires to become a beacon for rallying action in
the region.
Version: Mark Ridd.
DEP
Guyana – Linking Brazil with the Caribbean: Potential Meets Opportunity
100 DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
100
I
* Chairman, RoopGroup
peter.ramsaroop@roopgroup.com
** Chairman, Essequibo Group
n view of the decision by the European Union (EU) to cut the preferential
price it pays for sugar imported from African, Caribbean and Pacific (ACP)
countries under the 1975 ACP-EU Sugar Protocol, Guyana is faced with a serious
threat to its already anaemic economy and its social stability.
Guyana and other Caribbean sugar producing nations, like Jamaica and
Belize are still hoping for a change in EU policy. However, the recent ruling by
the World Trade Organization (WTO) in favour of Australia, Brazil and Thailand
Guyana – linking
Brazil with the
Caribbean: potential
meets opportunity
Peter R. Ramsaroop, MBA
*
Eric M. Phillips, MBA
**
Peter R. Ramsaroop, MBA & Eric M. Phillips, MBA
DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
101
– stating that the EU’s preferential trade arrangements with ACP countries
violated WTO export subsidy reduction schemes – will result in significant losses
for ACP countries. This is all the more so since the EU’s appeal was turned
down in April 2005.
Sugar is the backbone of Guyana’s economy. Annual revenue for Guyana
from sugar exports was US$121 millions in 2004. The sugar industry employs
27,000 workers besides indirectly supporting another 97,000 Guyanese. The
proposed cuts could cost Guyana at least US$ 40 millions in export revenues –
more than four times the estimated US$ 8 millions from the debt relief initiative
for poor countries promised at the recent G8 Summit (Financial Times, June 24,
2005). The proposed 40-million-euro aid package from the EU ignores the fact
that sugar accounts for a major portion of the GDP of many ACP countries.
More than US$ 500 millions in aid would be more appropriate.
Given the imminent collapse of its historic sugar market, the potential job
loss for literally thousands of sugar workers, and a looming oil crisis that puts
the country at extreme economic risk, Guyana needs to implement its National
Development Strategy if it is to achieve sustainable economic growth and meet
its Millennium Development Goals by 2015.
Linking Guyana to Brazil by building the long-awaited paved highway could
initiate the first step of several dramatic developments including a deep-water
harbour, a Free Enterprise Zone and other infrastructure elements required to
transform Guyana’s economic landscape.
Global consulting firm AT Kearney recently noted that South American
economies were lagging behind more interesting emerging markets such as those
in Central Europe and Asia. In fact, our neighbour Brazil once rated the ninth
most attractive emerging economy for investment has slid to 17th place, its lowest
ranking in ten years in the highly-touted Foreign Direct Investment Confidence
index. Additionally, a “crowding out” effect caused by the expansion of the Chinese
economy may restrict FDI in other emerging markets, especially in South America.
Where, then, does Guyana stand in the hunt for global capital and the
jobs that may ensue, and how can Guyana become competitive in an increasingly
fierce battle for foreign investment? With all Guyana’s resources, what are
the necessary prerequisites to eradicate poverty in the face of so much
“potential”?
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102 DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
102
Traditionally, foreign direct investment has been based on a large number of
purely economic factors such as the availability of raw materials, low labour costs
and the capacity of physical infrastructure to get goods to market. Other factors
such as market size, local growth and regional integration play a part in determining
the appeal for foreign investors. Efficiency indicators such as the productivity of the
workforce, availability of sufficient skilled labour, the services sector’s capacity,
sophistication of local financial markets, and the market-friendliness of trade policy
also need to be factored in (FDI in Developing Countries, Nunnekamp, 2002).
From this discussion, it is clear that Guyana has a mix of opportunities and
obstacles. The availability of raw materials, labour and the possibility of regional
integration are clear opportunities. Sadly, political stability and policies that create a
climate conducive to investment are currently less clearly positive.
The Guyanese private sector must continue to work with the Government to
create an environment that fosters foreign direct investment and regional partnerships.
Practical solutions
Brazil is the number one global producer of five key products, including coffee
and orange juice. It is also the number two producer of soybeans and kidney beans,
the third largest producer of maize, and the number four producer of cocoa. It is
the second largest producer of beef with the world’s second largest cattle herd.
Brazil accounts for more than 32 percent of the global production of oranges besides
being the top exporter of concentrated juice, of which it produces 90 percent.
Paving the road from Guyana to Brazil would present both countries with an
amazing array of opportunities to generate significant economic activity and boost
domestic wealth.
Sharing wealth
Consider this excerpt from a recent New York Times article by columnist
Larry Rohter entitled “South America Seeks to Fill the World’s Table”:
Almost overnight, South America has driven a historic global shift in food
production that is turning the largely untapped frontier heartland of the
continent into the world’s new breadbasket. One of the last places on earth
where large tracts are still available for agriculture, the region, led by Brazil,
Peter R. Ramsaroop, MBA & Eric M. Phillips, MBA
DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
103
has had an explosion of farm exports over the past decade. The growth has
been fuelled by a combination of market-friendly economic policies and
advances in agronomy that have brought formerly unusable tropical lands
into production and increased productivity levels beyond those in the United
States and Europe, challenging their traditional dominance of the global
farm trade. Some time over the next decade or so, Brazil, which former
Secretary of State Colin L. Powell described as “an agricultural superpower”
during a visit in October, hopes to pass the United States as the world’s
largest agricultural producer.
If a road is built to connect Brazil and Guyana and additional infrastructure (e.g.
a deep-water harbour and Free Enterprise Zone) is constructed, Brazilian companies
could use Guyana as a trans-shipment hub to North America and Caricom.
This would also have a tremendously positive impact on Guyana’s
agricultural sector and provide the opportunity for Guyana to open its vast rural
lands, expanding its exports to markets Brazil has already begun to explore.
Encouraged by research and funding organisations such as the US Agency
for International Development (Usaid) and the UN Food & Agriculture
Organisation (FAO), various Guyanese organisations and US-based investors
have begun exploratory initiatives in the last eighteen months to determine the
capacity of both Guyanese producers and the market infrastructure to support
this transition to non-traditional agricultural production specifically for the export
market. Initially supported by GO-Invest, a body set up by Guyana’s government
to facilitate investment, these programmes have largely matured with purely direct
inward investment from foreign investors without either public or private sector
assistance.
Moreover, paving the 300-mile highway to Brazil and the bridge across
the Takutu River, a commitment President Lula reiterated during his recent visit
to Guyana, would generate a large quantity of skilled and unskilled jobs for
Guyana. This is not a new idea, initially being mooched under the Guyana 21
Plan. Furthermore, as Guyana’s economic activity grows over the years and new
villages are formed, other financial opportunities will naturally arise.
Immediate jobs created by this project would include construction jobs
needed to build the two major highways and transportation job for drivers of
large 24-wheeler trucks. They would be hauling goods for shipment out of our
ports or economic free zones, another aspect that must comprise this initiative.
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They would then return laden with Guyanese products for sale in the rest of the
continent.
Under this plan, customs and immigration jobs would also be created to
manage border traffic and to collect appropriate dues from vehicles. Border
management jobs would be generated since we must open up the country, thereby
necessitating strategic management of Guyana’s borders against drug trafficking
and smuggling.
Guyanese could set up transportation companies instead of just driving
minibuses. Computer-related jobs would serve as the backbone of a
sophisticated, well-run freight hauling and logistics management industry. There
would also be a need for hospitality management and service-related jobs
associated with increased economic activity along the roads (gas stations, hotels,
motels, restaurants, entertainment, etc.).
New villages would spring up along both highways, promoting new
community jobs to support agricultural and tourism opportunities. A sustained
market in tourism and eco-tourism would soon develop and generate further
employment since Guyana would be open and thus find it easier to attract
international tourists to appreciate it landmarks and biodiversity.
As things stand, Brazilians buy 50,000 coconuts a week from Guyana and
drive them back to Brazil over the dusty road to make sugar cakes. With a paved
road, Guyana could make the sugar cakes itself and sell the finished goods at a
competitive price.
By paving this new road to Brazil, we could be creating a whole new
economic highway for Guyana – one that could put an end to the overwhelming
state of poverty and want that has beset the nation. In the quest for sound
economic decisions, it makes sense to focus our energy and finances on this
project that promises a bright future for Guyana.
Untapped potential
Guyana’s value to South America and Caricom is enormous. Guyana is
endowed with six key assets. Correctly exploited, they would secure a successful
economy and a flourishing society through implementation of the National
Development Strategy. These factors are:
Peter R. Ramsaroop, MBA & Eric M. Phillips, MBA
DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
105
Guyana’s strategic location;
An abundance of natural resources;
Highly qualified human resources;
The potential for oil;
Exceptional biodiversity;
A large landmass.
Guyana’s strategic location
Export led development strategies are familiar to economists and
developing world experts yet Guyana’s government has been slow to embrace
the idea. The development of Tax Free export zones in current ports and the
development of the Tax Free Export Zone on Hog Island are vital components
of a growth strategy that can be an economic driver beyond anything Guyana
has known in the last fifty years.
Guyana is the only English-speaking country in South America. Bounded
by Brazil, Venezuela and Suriname, it can be viewed as a Commonwealth
Caribbean Island perched on the edge of a Latin continent. Brazil is a commercial
giant and Venezuela has abundant oil. Proximity to the equator affords a tropical
climate without making it prone to either hurricanes or earthquakes. Guyana’s
strategic location and sprawling Essequibo River delta make it the perfect gateway
for transporting goods and services into and out of the Northern land-locked
regions of Brazil and the eastern stretches of Venezuela. Heavy silting of ports
in Suriname and French Guiana provide opportunities for Guyana to serve as
an export port for them too. Ultimately, Brazil will need to use Guyana as a
trans-shipment point, with or without the FTAA, from a purely competitive
standpoint.
An abundance of natural resources
Guyana is blessed with an over-abundance of natural resources including very
fertile agricultural lands with over 200 types of fruits and vegetables, many rivers and
large bodies of water, vast areas of tropical hardwood forests with over 1200 species,
abundant shrimp and fish grounds and a wide variety of minerals in exploitable
quantities including gold, diamonds, bauxite, manganese, uranium and mica.
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106
Guyana’s wealth of fresh water, rain forests, flora and fauna will allow it to
offer other countries carbon credits under the terms of the Kyoto Protocol.
The potential for oil
Guyana is thought to have oil and gas reserves reckoned to be greater
than those of Trinidad and Tobago. This is high probable given its geography
and proximity to Venezuela and Trinidad (both oil producing countries).
Exploration has been sporadic even though the finding of oil would provide a
significant boost to Guyana’s development.
Highly qualified and diverse human resources
Fostered by the heritage of a very high quality education system that was
in its heyday in the 1960s and 1970s, the Guyanese Diaspora has produced an
exceptionally high-skilled overseas-based workforce that is keen to see the country
develop. Many Guyanese yearn to return home and are ready and willing to do
so once good housing, good education for their children, a dependable health
service network and recreational diversity can be provided to a reasonable degree.
Guyana is a multi-racial (Amerindian, African, Chinese, European, Indian
and Portuguese) and multi-religious (Christian, Hindu and Islamic) society. Guyana
also has a rare resource, its Amerindian Peoples and their culture. Inter-marriage
has also created a large number of racial mixes. This nation’s innate diversity opens
doors to prospective investors from various backgrounds and cultures.
Exceptional biodiversity
Guyana’s exceptional biodiversity and vast stretches of pristine equatorial
rainforest make it an important natural treasure within the Western Hemisphere
that could be utilised in an environmentally friendly and sustainable manner for
the benefit of both Guyanese and the global community.
A large landmass
Guyana measures 83,000 square miles (215,000 square kilometres). Its
population density is just three people per square mile while 75 percent of its
Peter R. Ramsaroop, MBA & Eric M. Phillips, MBA
DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
107
landmass is uninhabited. For small Caribbean states to survive in the future,
Caricom must operate effectively. In this context, Guyana’s landmass could well
prove vital to sustaining Caricom’s agricultural potential.
As suggested above, it would be to Guyana’s advantage actively to court
global economic players to acquire or partner with Guyanese interests. Free
markets allow ample opportunities for minerals, tourism, transportation and
agribusiness industries to integrate with broader global markets, creating local
jobs and new trading relationships. It would also be prudent of Guyana actively
to pursue investment and sale of its companies or prospecting rights. If the
resources and the businesses are ready, such relationships should not be feared,
but rather welcomed as recognition of our vitality and capabilities.
Guyana and the world
In the years ahead, Guyana will become an increasingly important country
as several key issues of global and regional import take centre stage. These include:
The Free Trade Area of the Americas or Alba;
The geo-politics of oil;
The geo-politics of water.
These factors could prove to be vital in the very near future as changing
political landscapes and the demand for dwindling natural resources brings
Western and Eastern countries to South America
With a strategic plan in place and ready to respond to the world’s call,
Guyana’s potential may finally be realised.
Investing in the future
The Guyana 21 Plan is an in-depth proposal to improve Guyana’s economic
status, enhance its infrastructure and tackle the social conundrums that have
hitherto plagued the country. Guyana 21 addresses many of the problems that
have assailed our nation for decades while proposing a feasible outline as a
potential means of alleviating these national ailments.
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The development of the Guyana 21 Plan was nurtured by philosophical,
practical and theoretical underpinnings. Those involved in drafting it prompted
much discussion, including debates by team members such as Bert Carter, whose
knowledge of Guyana is second to none.
The words “Rebirth and Renewal” were used as the theme for the official
launch of Guyana 21. They served as inspiration for the many people involved
developing the Plan.
Over the last 40 years, Guyana has made precious little political, social or
economic progress. After years of pursuing failed policies, the country has been
dogged by racial segmentation, poor governance, and a vision inconsistent with
global trends toward free market economies and participatory democracy.
Moreover, it has to cope with the setback of a depleted workforce. Guyana is at
a stage in its history in which it is an irrelevant global actor both politically and
economically and finds itself on the verge of economic marginalization.
Guyana 21 acknowledges that, in its own right, Guyana is a country of
significant commercial opportunities for any other nation. However, according
to the Plan, there are 16 key “hardware” elements that would have to be
implemented, which would require US$10 billions worth of investment to start
the ball rolling for Guyana. Since the country does not have the capacity to finance
such undertakings, it would take the interest of another country to step up to the
plate on the understanding that it would have a substantial stake in future revenues
from these investments.
The 16 hardware elements of the Guyana 21 Plan are as follows:
1. A high-span bridge across the Berbice River with the associated
development of a commercial district;
2. A four-lane highway connecting Georgetown to the Soesdyke-Linden
highway;
3. A high-span bridge across the Demerara River;
4. A highway linking Soesdyke to Wales on the West Bank of the
Demerara;
5. A highway from Parika to Monkey Jump on the East Bank of the
Essequibo;
Peter R. Ramsaroop, MBA & Eric M. Phillips, MBA
DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
109
6. A new International Airport capable of handling large aircraft;
7. A series of bridges and causeways linking the islands in the Essequibo
Delta to Morasi and Supernaam;
8. A high-span bridge across the Essequibo River at Monkey Jump;
9. A highway from the new international airport to Makouria on the East
Bank of the Essequibo;
10. A deepwater harbour and EPZ at the mouth of the Essequibo River
(Hogg Island);
11. A highway from the new international airport to Morasi on the East
Bank of the Essequibo River;
12. A highway from Timehri via St. Culbert’s Mission to Berbice;
13. A high-speed highway from Monkey Jump via Linden to Lethem
(on the Brazilian border) with the possibility of adding a parallel
railway line;
14. A highway from Monkey Jump to Bartica;
15. A highway from Supernaam to Kamaria on the Cuyuni River;
16. A highway from Charity, Pomeroon to the Venezuelan border.
Given the long-term political consequences of ownership of this
architecture, the opportunities for foreign companies are obvious.
Developing a free market Guyanese brand is an essential aspect of laying
a solid foundation for potential investment opportunities. Marketing Guyana as
“Open for Business” is crucial to our success in expanding economic opportunity.
We need global markets, businesses to buy our companies and products, and
create the jobs that will ensue.
The “hardware” elements of the Guyana 21 Plan are accompanied by a
“software” package that is synergistic and necessary for success. The latter is
defined as the ability to attract capital, the ability to persuade Guyanese human
capital to return from abroad, the ability to manage these large scale projects,
the ability to add significant value to village economies, the ability to make the
Guyanese economy grow, and the ability to establish strong commercial
partnerships with Brazil and Venezuela, countries which would significantly benefit
from the deep water harbour.
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Seven software elements are associated with this Plan:
1. Macroeconomic policies designed to transform, modernise and diversify
the economy to make it globally competitive and relevant;
2. Nation-building policies in health, education and housing;
3. Environmentally friendly frameworks to protect Guyana’s rich
biodiversity for sustainable development;
4. Knowledge management and a core of highly qualified technocrats;
5. Governance that facilitates inclusiveness at a political level and financial
integrity at a commercial level;
6. Strong international ties with key partners in South America, North
America, Europe and Asia;
7. Strategic leadership that is competent, visionary, open-minded, non-
racist and incorruptible.
Overall, implementation of the “hardware” and software elements of
Guyana 21 is expected to engender the political will to open up the economy to
international trade and investment while ensuring Guyanese ownership through
debt-for-equity swaps, dividend-equity conversions, soft loans, in-kind
contributions of land and mineral rights etc.
The over-arching goals of the Guyana 21 Plan are as follows:
Achieving a 10-12% annual economic growth rate;
Creating approximately 100,000 jobs over a 5-year period;
Attracting US$300 to US$500 millions in investment annually;
Promoting Guyanese ownership through public-private partnerships;
Converting Guyana’s natural resources into exports;
Making Guyana a trans-shipment hub for Brazil, Suriname and
Venezuela;
Creating an exports-driven economy while encouraging food sufficiency.
Guyana’s social transformation would be accelerated by implementation
of this Plan since a vibrant economy would secure a steadily improving quality
of life for all racial and economic groups. It would likewise nurture economic
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activity that is vital to Guyana’s social security, dramatically improve Guyana’s
infrastructure both physical (roads, power plants, airports, docks, bridges) and
social infrastructure (education, health, recreation), attract expatriate Guyanese
to return home (with their skills, capital, technology and business networks) and
ensure ongoing quality care for Guyanese children and seniors.
It is important to understand the role Guyana can play at regional as well
as international level. Indeed, the Guyana 21 Plan clearly demonstrates how
Guyana is ready to work toward that goal.
Investing in the future of South America
For Guyana to transform its economy it has to become a trans-shipment
point for Brazil and Eastern Venezuela. From an international relations
perspective, that means forging special relationships with Brazil, Venezuela,
Suriname and French Guiana. Cross-border development is vital for Guyana’s
growth and future economic expansion.
Guyana’s public policy and civil society climate can combine to attract
investment by being good investment partners, by international promotion
and by enhancing the people’s skills through training. Guyana has, for too long,
been a victim of a stunted economic system due largely to the very types of
behaviour displayed over the Banks issue. Protectionism will not strengthen
this country’s failing economy; it will merely further inhibit growth. An open-
arms economic policy could thrust Guyana into a position to compete in the
global arena and, in the process, pull the country out of the poverty that
currently drags it down.
Just imagine the possibilities
What does Guyana have to offer the world? A very great deal is the answer.
This vision is captured by the following words: “Just imagine…”
Imagine Guyana five years from now…
With a population of 1.5 million people
All races flourishing together in harmony
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Picture Guyana as a major transhipment hub serving Brazil, Venezuela
and the Guyanas…
Bursting with economic activity as the centre of an export Mecca
With a major all-purpose airport
A deepwater harbour that can handle even the largest ships
A network of roads and bridges traversing the country
A free enterprise zone at Hogg Island
Large tracts of land available for housing or agriculture
Imagine a new economy with 100,000 jobs being created over the next
five years…
A vibrant housing industry with thousands of jobs for carpenters
An abundance of jobs for Guyana’s electricians, brick-layers and plumbers
A flourishing eco-tourism industry
Jobs created by an aquaculture industry
Jobs from a rapidly expanding agribusiness sector
Food processing jobs
Technology-based jobs
Imagine new cities, towns and villages springing up along the highway to Brazil…
Construction jobs for hotels, housing, roads and bridges
Transportation jobs in aviation, shipping and road haulage
Service sector jobs
Import-export jobs in the Free Enterprise Zone
Financial services jobs in banking, trade and commerce
Telecommunications and IT jobs in all sectors of society
Jobs for teachers, nurses, doctors and lawyers
Professional jobs and technical jobs
Jobs for every single Guyanese, young and old, skilled and unskilled
alike
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Imagine the thousands of jobs created by the Guyana 21 infrastructure
programme…
At the Free Trade Zone on Hogg Island
At the deep water harbour
At the new airport, especially for freight and storage
Jobs in Berbice, Demerara and Essequibo
Imagine an educational system producing students with internationally
marketable skills…
With Guyanese Diaspora teachers returning to their homeland
Science and technology flourishing
Each school with a computer laboratory
The Internet becoming as common as pocket calculators
Where no child is left behind
Witness the country’s Amerindians being treated as a national treasure...
Flourishing in their own natural communities
Farming their own lands
Becoming the centre of our eco-tourism industry
With high quality educational, health and social systems
Highly educated and nurturing their traditional heritage
Living in harmony with nature
Imagine Guyana’s seniors being as well cared for as the rest of society…
Excellent healthcare
Affordable housing
An abundance of food
Living out their golden years in peace and tranquillity
With recreational pursuits to meet ongoing needs
The backbone of a new Guyana
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Visualise Guyana’s youth with incredible opportunities in a nation of promise…
With meaningful jobs
With land to build homes
Owners of their own businesses
Well educated in the latest technologies
Fully engaged in developing Guyana’s sports and culture
Building healthy families and communities
Heavily involved in promoting a strong civil society
Witness a highly successful sugar sector…
With new management techniques for better financial support
A more rationalised industry
New state-of-the-art processing plants
New lands opened up for cultivation
A variety of new value added products
With co-generation of power to improve profitability
Imagine a globally competitive rice industry with…
Increased productivity through better farming
Use of improved genetic varieties
Greater access to credit and liberal tax incentives
Better management procedures
Imagine a revitalized bauxite sector in a well-developed mineral industry…
Gold
Diamonds
Manganese
Copper
Nickel
Uranium
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Amethysts, green quartz and black pearls
Imagine finding oil and gas
Imagine a revitalised agricultural sector that makes Guyana self-sufficient in food…
The cultivation of many crops for domestic consumption and
exportation
With large, healthy livestock populations
Fruit and vegetables being exported to the Caribbean tourist market
New areas of land under development
Self-sufficiency in meat, milk, eggs and cheese
Imagine inexpensive hydroelectric power at the heart of our
development…
Jobs in the drinking water industry
Jobs in aquaculture
Many jobs in a rapidly expanding recreational industry
Jobs created by a rapidly growing energy sector
Jobs in eco-tourism and in preserving the rain forest
Imagine a choice of recreational activities…
30 miles of beaches on the Essequibo
Waterfalls and rapids
Eco-Tourism with a diversity of fauna and flora
The Regatta at Bartica
Visiting our beautiful, lush interior
Midnight cruises
Hunting, fishing and trekking
Imagine a 10,000-person retirement community on the Essequibo or
Berbice Rivers…
Guyanese, West Indians, Floridians and New Yorkers escaping winter,
earthquakes, hurricanes and volcanoes in our tranquil landscape
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Food, especially fresh fruit and vegetables, grown nearby and in
abundance
With Guyanese nurses attending them
Everyone being better off physically and psychologically
Imagine a society of entrepreneurs…
With land available for business opportunities
A credit facility to offer support for fledgling companies
Government contracts for small companies in public works
Multiple opportunities in the infrastructure programme
Imagine a flourishing democratic and civil society…
With racial, ethnic and cultural diversity
Everyone safe in their own homes, businesses and on the streets
A Constitution that is fair and equitable
A Bill of Rights protecting basic human values
Respect for the Rule of Law
And politicians running for office on issues
Just imagine the possibilities! This is the future taking shape in Guyana in
the hearts of the people. Now is the time to start moving toward this future by
redefining the way Guyana is viewed by the region, the continent and the world
at large.
Shaping the future
Guyana is not unaware of its current lack of development, especially in
contrast to the rest of the region. The people of Guyana also realise that strategic
partnerships are crucial to its sustainable development and that Brazil is one
such potential partner.
As a relatively small developing country, Guyana acknowledges that there
are practical steps to be taken to make the Nation into a productive member of
the global community.
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These practical steps can lead to sustainable development and create
desperately needed jobs. As global trading agreements become more complex
and states focus on their own economic and physical security, countries like
Guyana will have less access to traditional loans and grants.
International lending, if it has not entirely dried up, has certainly had limited
impact on ordinary Guyanese with respect to jobs. Infrastructure projects may
make a temporary difference for some, but they do not necessarily support
sustainable development. What, then, can work for Guyana?
Strong strategic economic ties between Guyana and Brazil would be
mutually beneficial to both countries and would also strengthen other Caricom
countries within the Caribbean Single Market and Economy that takes effect as
from January 1. The road to Brazil, the deep water harbour, the Free Enterprise
Zone and the significantly shortened distance to market (300 as opposed to
1000 miles) for the landlocked state of Roraima would dramatically benefit both
economies. A railway for freight would also create additional commercial
synergies, efficiencies and profits.
Global trade seems to be following the trend of competing regional trading
blocks. Brazil is clearly the leading economy in South America and the engine of
its mighty economy could be the driver for sustainable economic development
in Guyana and Caricom, as well as in other South American countries. This could
easily make the continent the go-to region for agriculture, oil and much more
for the next hundred years.
If there is to be full realisation of the abundant prospects that are just
around the corner, it is time to connect Guyana and Brazil and for them to work
together for the best possible return on the continent’s potential.
Guyana and Brazil... Potential meets Opportunity.
DEP
Revision: Mark Ridd.
Paraguay’s political crossroads
118 DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
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*
Chairman PPQ (Partido Pátria Querida).
ackground
General Stroessner’s dictatorship came to an end in 1989 precipitated by wrangling
within the Armed Forces and the Colorado party. Today members of both groups, converted
overnight into stalwart latter-day democrats, claim to have brought down the dictatorship
they so staunchly sustained in exchange for generous rewards for more than thirty years.”
Like most other Latin American countries, Paraguay was governed by
military dictatorships for much of the last half century. As of 1954, the
authoritarian regime headed by General Alfredo Stroessner consolidated its grip
on power. For more than three decades, he succeeded in establishing and sustaining
a dictatorship, disguised by scant formal trappings of democracy which in those
days sufficed to obtain an international letter of presentation.
The Armed Forces, the Colorado Party and the Government formed the
tripod of his power base. All three were under the command of the one leader
who tolerated no dissidence within this so-called “granite monolith”. Under the
Paraguay’s political
crossroads
Pedro Fadul
*
B
Pedro Fadul
DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
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long shadow of his enduring dictatorial government, Paraguay’s political system
took shape, and it survives to the present day. A new political culture was forged
requiring every citizen unequivocally to decide how to relate to absolute power.
Belonging to the Colorado Party was an unassailable requirement for appointment
to positions in the administration, ranging from the upper echelons of government
to heads of schools in backwater towns, and including entry to and promotion
within the Armed Forces and Police. It also extended to the lavish distribution of
contracts to the State’s suppliers and contractors. In less demanding cases, a good
word from a well-placed crony of the power brokers did the trick.
During this period, opposition parties with any intention of surviving were
allowed to carry out their activities as far as the system’s tolerance would extend. The
limits were set at the convenience of the official party, which would begrudge limited
participation, reaping maximum benefit from the semblance of legitimacy that their
presence secured, without the slightest need to grant them any relevant role in return.
In an atmosphere of “peace and progress” under the aegis of a political
system of “Democracy free from Communism” (as it was officially described)
Paraguays political life unfolded for three and a half decades. More than one
generation of Paraguayans were raised under its tutelage, assimilating the practices
encouraged by carrot and stick at all levels of public life throughout the country.
The local branches of the Colorado party were the true centres of power in the
most remote reaches. Official institutions and local authorities were subject to
its dictates. Besides exercising power to further its own interests, it spun a web
of fealty and loyalty which, albeit in decline, subsists to the present day, fostered
by actual rewards or the prospect of receiving them. More often than not, it is
the very need to survive and the lack of options for attaining a decent standard
of living outside of the system imposed by the government party that have
proved its mainstays. This political culture has succeeded in blurring distinctions
between the State and the ruling party, making the authorities in command of
the latter the genuine power brokers.
The demise of General Stroessner’s dictatorship was precipitated by
disputes surfacing within the Armed Forces and the Colorado party. Today
members of both groups, converted overnight into stalwart latter-day democrats,
claim to have brought down the dictatorship they so staunchly sustained in
exchange for munificent hand-outs for more than thirty years. Those opposing
the regime, through either open political opposition and or in armed groups
bent on toppling the dictator by violent means, at the time proved unable to
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achieve the objectives they had set themselves in their entirety. They have,
nevertheless, bequeathed to present generations and the victims of the regime
(yet to obtain full recognition and fair compensation from the State) a lasting
legacy of dignity.
Paraguay’s political system, born and bred under the dictatorship, subsists
to the present day, more than fifteen years after the demise of General Stroessner’s
authoritarian government. Full co-participation in dictatorship of a political party
with broad, grassroots support has been a singular feature of the countrys
political life. That co-participation had plenty of strings attached. Indeed, it
allowed a single party to hold sway while nurturing a political culture based on
cronyism, liberally supported by government funds. Today, though outright
authoritarianism is no more, its mentors and acolytes have not so much as essayed
any self-criticism. Much less have they shown an inclination to modify the political
system or even to replace the players who upheld the regime, subsequently
opposed it, and today unabashedly enjoy the illegitimate benefits the dictatorship
afforded only one political party. Meanwhile, those who without belonging to
the regime voiced opposition to it in the hope that they might garner popular
support have failed to provide level-headed criticism. Instead, they have resigned
themselves to half-hearted acceptance of the new official version that the
Colorado party was merely yet another of the dictatorship’s captive pawns –
without question a very peculiar, royally maintained captive. The process of
transforming the prevailing political culture and replacing it by another actually
grounded in the principles of democratic praxis edges forward. At times it would
appear to have ground to a halt or even to have gone into reverse. Disillusionment
and repeated setbacks have been the tonic of this brief democratic interlude.
Since democracy was reinstated in 1989, poverty has grown to alarming
levels with almost half the population living below the breadline. Citizens’ security
– gauged by people’s effective ability to come and go and to see their property
protected – has suffered unprecedented degradation. Rural unemployment has
risen considerably as non-labour-intensive production procedures gain ground
in agriculture and animal husbandry, with the attendant swelling of slums on the
outskirts of urban areas. At the same time, the meagre middle class have suffered
the side-effects of a dire economic crisis that has severely eroded their standard
of living, forcing many to emigrate. Paraguay’s primary production system has
been clearly cleft in two: on the one hand, a primitive agricultural model dogged by
low yields and very low incomes, with subsistence farmers denied access to markets
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and capital; on the other hand, a highly specialised cattle breeding and agricultural
sector capable of competing on the international market. The other two thirds of
the economy are either run by the State or take the shape of illegal, informal trade.
The year 1992 saw the enactment of Paraguay’s new Constitution, which
instated a new institutional framework. More than thirteen years on from then, it
has revealed its light and shade. One major shortcoming has surely been the
administration of Justice. Rather than acting as an impartial judge of society, the
Judiciary has become a chaotic labyrinth of negotiated sentences that cannot
inspire confidence in even the most optimistic citizen. Another clear shortcoming
has been the quality of those elected by popular suffrage. This applies particularly
to members of congress, whose track record and suitability can hardly explain
their election, still less their re-election. Some analysts point to the inadequate
institutional design the Constitution established in 1992 as the root cause of
poor performance from the new institutions and from democratic procedure,
claiming that genuine power lies not in debate among political parties, much less
among citizens. Rather, it is wielded by groups that have commandeered formal
institutional structures to advance their own interests.
The deterioration of much of the public system and also of the private
sector has reached such extremes over the past decade that it calls into question
their very continuity. The system operates through a curious combination of
legality and illegality. Indeed, this admixture not only serves as its dynamo but
also furnishes it with vital sustenance. The situation is such now that anyone
determined to combat the system needs only to be invested in public office to
become an accomplice of corruption. They are immediately faced with the choice
of “turning a blind eye” to irregularities for a time in the hope of later being
able to correct them or of adopting a stance of strict legal enforcement. The
short-term effects of the second option would be to unleash dire economic
consequences for already debilitated public finances and for both illegal and
legal sources of employment without distinction.
Without perceiving this system in its entirety or closing its eyes so as not to
see it, social criticism in such cases has been implacable. It is whipped up by a
press loath to depict anything but the most sensational aspects of events. Rigorous,
balanced appreciation of the facts is an outright exception. At the same time,
not the least collective desire to combat this system of illegal, informal activity
can be glimpsed. Far from being bitterly castigated, it is widely practised.
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Moreover, this double public standard is not confined to political spheres, the
customary den of vices, but is brazenly encroaching on such demanding
institutions as the universities, associations, the press, trades unions and even the
churches. Criticism of the status quo is not well received, and those levelling it
are obliged to soften their tone since society as a whole cannot tolerate open
attacks on its “vital lies.” Those daring to expose such lies to public scrutiny are
tarred with the brush that uncomfortably brands them as undesirables.
Accustomed to recurrent disillusionment and unable to detect the causes of
the harsh predicament afflicting it, Paraguayan society as a whole reacts with extreme
attitudes, dismissive even of initiatives designed to retrieve the country from its present
state of prostration. The accusing finger is pointed with wrath and conviction not at
those identified as being responsible for their plight but at those who might prove
capable of extricating the country and its citizens from these dire straits.
The Challenge of Development
Allegiance to democratic values in Paraguay has always been frail. That frailty is made
more acute when the political actors within the democratic system prove incapable of
providing better living conditions for all.”
The most pressing challenge is development. Paraguay’s citizens realise
that democracy has yet to prove its worth to a country that has only recently
placed its chips on it. Capacity to generate well-being will be the irrefutable
proof of the benefits to be reaped; and that proof is expected in ever shorter
terms. Allegiance to democratic values in Paraguay has always been frail. That
frailty is made more acute when the political actors within the democratic system
prove incapable of providing better living conditions for all. It does not take
much nowadays for people to renounce democratic principles. A reasonably
credible promise that living conditions can be better than those afforded today
is all it would take for the electorate to relinquish part – even a substantial part –
of the freedoms democracy vouchsafes. This is the challenge Paraguay must
squarely face: if living conditions do not improve on an increasingly tighter
timescale, endorsement of the democratic system will become increasingly flimsy.
Decades of authoritarian, dictatorial rule urged the entire nation to press
for the rights that had so long been denied them. Attention focused on democracy
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in the belief that its consolidation would suffice to produce a substantial
improvement in the standard of living for all citizens.
That has not been the case. Consolidation of democracy has not yet been
achieved; much less has democratic rule managed to deliver sufficient
development to convince and rally the diverse active sectors of society. If
progress has been deemed wanting with regard to democracy, as far as
development is concerned it can simply be considered non-existent or even in
reverse.
Despite the virtually exclusive focus on forging democracy, Paraguay is
daily faced with the fragility of its institutions and a dearth of the public welfare
they should provide. Besides compounding destitution, these failings come to
be seen as deterrents, as excuses for not rising to the challenge of development.
As a result, instead of each party shouldering its portion of blame, all continue
to await ideal institutional conditions which, paradoxically, only development
itself can deliver.
However inconclusive it may be, perhaps the time has come to declare the
much vaunted “Transition to Democracy” complete and for us to focus now on
another challenge: “Promotion of Development in Democracy”. Paraguay’s
citizens must concentrate on the task of forging their own future, devoting
themselves wholeheartedly and efficiently to the work required for that end. That
is the only way to ensure the wavering wedlock of democracy and development
can weather the years ahead, since their destinies are inextricably intertwined.
There are those who describe the democracy featured in Paraguay today
as full democracy since it is furnished with a minimal institutional structure and
conforms to the democratic rites of periodical election of its rulers. Others
classify it as merely formal, simply going through the motions of democratic
procedure but as yet far from displaying the necessary essence of democracy
per se. There are also those who impute it to be a perverse travesty of democracy
masking the identity of the true power brokers and the way they manipulate
power to advance their own sectarian interests.
Whichever view one ascribes to, the course plotted over the past fifteen
years of democratic rule has gone from exalted expectation to indignation, taking
in disillusionment born of repeated setbacks and apathy that spills over in abject,
explosive outbursts. This is the web woven around today’s citizens, institutions
and political players. They are caught between the stools of overblown
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expectations engendered by urgent needs and of a combination of human and
material resources too slight to deliver even passing consolation to a nation
disinclined to countenance delays and yet incapable of offering alternative
responses. Paraguay’s citizens realise that the residual political model of the
dictatorship is gradually waning and will eventually disappear from view but
that its successor is not yet ready. For the time being, they tolerate a system
based on patronage and cronyism for, despite its perversity, it is a familiar,
predictable paradigm. For the time being, they refrain from impinging democratic
punishment which, were it to reflect their true collective state of mind, would be
prodigious and implacable.
Notwithstanding, the reaction of the citizenry and political forces opposed
to the present system has failed to advance beyond bitter complaint and
indignation. Ensnared by sectarian interests that jostle in a primitive civic, media
and political environment, they have not managed to find efficient means of
forging an option for change capable of attracting broad sectors of society.
When attempts have been made in this direction, goodwill has succumbed to
voluntarism and turpitude, the natural response of a mediocre political class
unable to keep pace with the demands of new democratic times. Encouragement
for shouldering such a task is by no means abundant. The distant prospect of
success, the incapacity to engage in binding commitments and medium-term
ventures, and the temptation to resort to populist ploys all conspire against such
faltering initiatives.
The present political model is presided over by the Colorado Party with
the occasional backing of disenchanted dissidents from other political sectors
(apparently content with the as yet scant quest for an alternative model). It should
be said that the experience of the past fifteen years of democratic rule has shown
that it can hardly (and probably does not wish to) become the harbinger of
change. This can be put down to unwillingness on the part of those who see little
to gain and much to lose by embarking on such a venture. They probably suspect
that a new model based on different premises will in all likelihood round on
those promoting the change should they hail from the heart of the present system.
The question that remains to be answered by those intent upon taking up this
challenge from within the prevailing system is whether it is possible to keep a
group of people cohesive and motivated for action when the glue that binds
them together is precisely the obstacle that must be removed. Responding to
this conundrum with action is the real challenge for those resolving to tackle the
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system from the inside. That is an ineluctable task attending establishment of a
new model for the country that sets aside the present party-state, the abolishment
of which is the first requirement for a model seeking renewal. Otherwise, we
shall have more of the same (as has been the case to date) painted over with
novel tints that may distract and deceive the population for a while.
Beyond Indignation
“The course of democracy has brought us to this: to flailing despair that rebuffs any
initiative; to the refusal of optimism before the possible prospect of another deception.”
Whether or not this state of affairs is to our liking, we must concur that
this is Paraguay’s present predicament. That, then, must be the point of departure
from which to plot our course.
We have all come to this: to indignation at a reality deemed unjust; to
attributing blame for this sorry pass to anyone outside our home or
neighbourhood; to ascribing the cause of collective and even individual
wretchedness to the public powers that be; to disabling impatience whose only
means of expression is bitter complaint or apathetic resignation; to generalising
disqualification that nips in the bud incipient and as yet timid attempts to bring
about change; to flailing despair that rebuffs any initiative; to forfeiture of
optimism for fear of further disillusionment. This is what we have all come to,
brought here by the teetering course of democracy. This is the bend in the road
Paraguay is travelling. It is thus pertinent to surmise what lies beyond the present
collective state of mind, how to travel the path that will lead us beyond indignation.
A New Paradigm of Power
Any process of political and social convergence is complex. Concert designed to last and
achieve relevant results is never the fruit of chance or improvisation.”
Let us consider the following focus on the issue of Public Power. Today,
Paraguay has two basic requirements:
1. A reform programme which, if properly implemented, will enable the
nation to achieve the full development it so ardently desires and has to
date failed to obtain after almost two centuries of independence; and
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2. The country seriously needs a good government, a government capable
of implementing and sustaining this process of reform until it takes
root as a new national political culture.
These two elements would substantially modify the rationale of access to
power. Political parties would then cease to be obsessed with access to power as
their sole objective and an end in itself. They could then concentrate on bringing
to power governments capable of setting in motion a process for transforming
the entire nation. The objective of good governance neither proscribes nor
overrides the objective of coming to power, it encompasses it.
Access to power would then be viewed as a necessary means, but no more
than a means for achieving higher ends. If this goal alone (access to power) is
attained, the objective of good governance will still be relegated. If, on the other
hand, this is the prime objective, the necessary conditions for attaining good
governance, in terms of both platform and governance, will become the compass
bearing galvanising the action of political parties and social groups in search of
a new model for political praxis.
Some may view this as mere statement of the obvious. The way politics is
currently practised in Paraguay, though, would suggest otherwise. Among
political parties, as much as among social organisations and even individuals,
gaining access to power continues to be seen as an accomplishment and a value
in itself, and only goes deeper in terms of how it is wielded.
Thus, even opponents of the official party and independent political analysts
are full of praise when they refer to its capacity to stay in power for so long,
leaving aside the way it has acted to do so, how it has consolidated its grip on
power and maintained it. Likewise, no association is made with how it wields
that power. They neglect to mention that for thirty-five years power was
conveniently shared between a dictator and a political party. Throughout that
time, the latter lost no opportunity to enhance its power by establishing an extensive
network of loyalties, strengthened both by a genuine sense of belonging and, above
all, by a cunning combination of lucrative backhanders and threats of reprisals.
In this context, one must ask what role the forces of renewal that have not
been a part of this decadent political social system should play. The system seeks
to camouflage itself and entice into its ranks unwary politicians with a veneer of
renewal who may then lend the party a semblance of a new face to avert its
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demise. What role should those seeking to forge a real alternative power play to
avoid merely switching political colours and badges? How should they act to
ensure power is exercised according to the rationale of that alternative proposal?
The existence of different political parties and the emergence of new
political movements in the national arena is no coincidence. It reflects the distinct
inclinations and allegiances of different sectors of Paraguayan society. Denizens
of social organisations have also emerged on the scene pursuing a profusion of
sectorial agendas over the past decades. The present make-up of the party political
scene corresponds to the expectations of diverse groups of citizens, moved less
perhaps by ideological convictions but rather clustering around personal
preferences on which the traditional caudillo model thrives in our political arena.
Faced with such a scenario, the question that must be answered is: can the
diverse political and social sectors bury their differences and draft a joint
alternative political project? And if that were to be the case, what must this
combination of forces for renewal do to stand any chance of success?
Any process of political and social convergence is complex. Concert
designed to last and achieve relevant results is never the fruit of chance or
improvisation. Such endeavours must subscribe to a set of principles and rules
suited to the reality of each time and country. It is a broad, complex process that
requires perseverance and patience since a complex web of groups, individuals
and systems must be woven.
Forging unity is the delicate work of a goldsmith. It requires a generous,
open mind for politics is done with men who have their own interests and ideas
as well as their feelings. Leadership is vital in such circumstances, leadership built
upon popular support and due democratic process. It also depends upon liaison
and cooperation among leaders hailing from the different sectors promoting
renewal, leaders capable of establishing relationships based on mutual respect,
trust and even appreciation.
We envisage this process developing through at least three distinct phases.
The first phase must be one of retrospection. Each political and social
group must observe itself, assess its own performance, identify its strengths and
weaknesses, and suggest ways of addressing or correcting its shortcomings. That
will lay the foundations for a civic space that is mature, reliable and predictable
with efficient, democratic self-governance. This is all homework, and each group
must act as it sees fit in this respect. It requires a high degree of political maturity
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and courage, which must form the bedrock for the adjustments to be made
within the organisation – not always an easy task.
In the second phase, the ideological, programmatic and operational foundations
must be laid for a future renewal coalition. This crucial phase cannot commence
unless the first phase has been successfully completed. Otherwise, it will prove a
recipe for failure, be it in electoral terms (a lesser hitch) or in terms of government
(which would certainly prove an unpardonable setback for the republic).
The third and final phase, then, consists of a binding commitment. The
conjunction of political and social forces is a medium to long-term undertaking.
Its complex features and (at times diffuse, at others conflicting) interests grounded
in a dream inevitably bespeak tough times and even dire crises ahead. These can
only be overcome if the firm original decision can rise above and beyond
conjunctural interests like an unassailable beacon. The compass bearings must
be given by unwavering commitment to a shared objective to which all subscribe
with unflinching conviction. The commitment must be as strong at grassroots
level as among the leaders. To date, all such endeavours have faltered when they
have to grapple with their first internal differences, which have generally proven
irreconcilable.
The itinerary proposed demands that attention be focused initially on certain
key aspects which experience in other countries has proved to be highly relevant.
Only then can a concerted drive for renewal stand a reasonable chance of
accomplishing its objectives. These aspects include:
Functional objective: Attaining good governance. A renewal initiative should
aim to install “good governments” in the republic, constituting a reliable
alternative for the exercise of power. This functional objective should be converted
into a higher goal that will not be dragged down by the visceral “let’s become
the official party of power” or overwhelmed by ambition for power and the
positions it commands.
The new government must prove capable of setting in motion a process
of political transformation that definitively eschews the ploys sustaining the status
quo: graft, cronyism, obsequiousness, messianic, overbearing leadership,
subordination of institutional form to a populist approach pledging radical,
almost magical, short-term solutions.
Firm commitment and democratic discipline. The desire to provide an alternative
project should be grounded in an unfaltering, long-term commitment. It should
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steel lukewarm, erratic willpower with a real vocation for co-administering the
government. That demands of each group (and of all of them together) a high
level of commitment and democratic discipline, besides a capacity to reach
agreements and implement them over time, preventing parties’ internal dynamics
from jeopardising such agreements. Letting oneself be carried away by electoral
enthusiasm without the solid foundations that secure positive relations is a
guaranteed recipe for disaster.
Solid programmatic underpinnings. A project for renewal should not be confined
to achieving merely electoral objectives. It must be guided by and based upon
solid programmatic underpinnings, carefully crafted through joint endeavour,
and capable of binding leaders and supporters alike.
Medium and long-term process. Transforming a political system is not a
straightforward task, nor can it be accomplished in a short timespan. Sights should
be set on the coming decades at least to allow not only for incorporation of new
paradigms in the sphere of political relations but also for implementation of
state policies that will only bear fruit in the medium and long terms.
Capacity to settle conflicts. Experience shows that initiatives congregating distinct
power groups have survived until the first instances of dissent raise their heads.
Disagreements will always exist, despite the will of the participants and the tactful
way relations among them are handled. Mechanisms must therefore be established
for decision-making and settlement of differences and conflicts. These must even
include provision for withdrawal in the event of an irreconcilable impasse.
Above all, it is necessary to engender the start-up conditions for a political
renewal project. Success depends upon the right start-up conditions. To embark
on a complex project with fuzzy objectives and half-baked decision-making
lacking either conviction or commitment, seeking purely electoral victory and in
league with anarchical political or social forces is to court disaster.
Success is of the essence. A project endeavouring to introduce a new
political culture, a new model of political praxis cannot afford to end in failure.
Should it stumble when it comes to exercising power, the country will be left
with no viable options for a long time.
As it enters the 21
st
century, Paraguay has clearly reached a crossroads. It
must choose between continuing with the present political model or embracing
a new paradigm based on democratic values and principles reaching well beyond
the incipient formal democracy we have hitherto managed to forge. This means
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genuinely and actively subscribing not only to the concept of power being used
to the benefit of the people but also to (not merely formal) respect for the
republic’s institutional life. These two elements should form the backbone of
this new political culture which should engage the people, who have so far known
little else than caudillos who command and vassals who obey.
Conclusion
“Paraguay’s present political model is in its death throes but the new model and those
destined to lead the transition process have not yet emerged.”
The challenge of our times for those convinced the writing is on the wall for
the perverse status quo in Paraguay is to fashion a new political model for the country.
That means creating a genuine alternative “for power” and not just an alternative “to
the powers that be”. The prevailing model has been of one party absorbing the
State, subduing it to its own ends with the tools of political sinecure, corruption and
cronyism. That model is on its deathbed, but its successor is not yet to hand. Creating
an alternative to the present model is a task that remains to be accomplished, despite
the widespread urge to change the country’s degrading predicament, the sad legacy
of nefarious governments sprung from a single political tendency for half a century.
Acknowledgement of this plight, however, has still not made it possible
to lay the foundations that might secure some chance of success for an alternative
project. Being ensnared by the quest for power, making a merely electoral bid
one’s sole objective, is to run the risk either of repeating the experience of bad
governments in Paraguay and Latin America or to court electoral defeat, which
would merely dash expectations of possible achievement.
The task of building the much touted “alternative power” capable of
instating a new “political model” has yet to be completed. Neither concept has
been clearly defined, so providing a clear-cut definition is precisely where that
task should begin. A joint initiative can offer a shortcut for meeting the challenge,
provided it follows the lineaments described above. Otherwise, the building of
an Alternative Power will fall foul of the particular designs of each political
group or party. In that case, chances of success would prove slim indeed.
DEP
Version: Mark Ridd.
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resentation
Who are we?
We, men and women, are citizens, rural and urban workers, who daily
struggle to earn in decency and dignity bread for our children; dedicated
professionals, teachers, and workers in the areas of health, education, culture,
science and technology, and basic services; young and elderly people; intellectuals
and thinkers; and incipient entrepreneurs—all desirous of a great transformation
on our Peruvian soil aimed at recovering our homeland’s riches and possibilities
and at forging a grand national and Latin American integration project embodying
the highest ethical and moral virtues of our fatherland’s men and women.
What do we want?
Our nationalist proposals are geared to a program of historic scope aimed
at transforming Peruvian life and the life of our peoples with justice and freedom.
Differently from the exultant, warlike nationalism of the great imperialist
countries, characteristic of recent modern history, our nationalism is anti-
* Peruvian presidential candidate.
mandatosdelpueblo@yahoo.com
1
Selected topics of the “Government Plan 2006-2011”.
P
The great transformation
Ollanta Humala
*
1
“…always to consider Peru an inexhaustible source of inspiration...”
J. M. Arguedas
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imperialist, defensive, and redeeming, inspired on the legacy of José Carlos
Mariátegui and Víctor Raúl Haya de la Torre.
We assert the unity of our people and of our fellowmen from all Latin
America for building the South American house and strengthening the congenial
Andean community as well as defending the Amazon space and environment
and approximating ourselves to our brethren in the Southern Cone.
We want our natural riches (land, sea, and forests) and our productive
forces to be at the service of our nations and of our coastal, Andean, and Amazon
peoples.
We want a continental regionalism and nationalism integrated into the great
world currents, as we want globalization to be solidaristic, multilateral, and
equitable, so as to form part of a sharing mankind.
We want to eradicate the corruption that coveted the Fujimori–Montesinos
neoliberalism because we want a free, independent, and sovereign State respectful
of human rights.
Whom do we represent?
We represent the vast, historical nationalist movement that fights for a
Nation with justice and liberty, aspires to a solidaristic globalization, and challenges
the Washington Consensus’ policies and transnational power, which intends to
keep our Latin America and Peru under imperial control.
We represent a historic multicultural, civilizing movement toward a great
transformation in Peru and South America. We form part of a mighty worldwide
movement that wages a battle against the great economic and political powers
of imperial neoliberalism.
We are the quiet force that emerges in Peru as the harbinger of a national,
productive, emerging project aimed at reclaiming the rights of the majorities
excluded from the fundamental liberties of life, access to culture, food, quality
education, health, and justice.
We also represent our fellow citizens who suffer aggression from the racism
of a self-absorbed, excluding minority. We are the voice of the excluded coastal,
Andean, and Amazon peoples and of emerging, enterprising Peruvians.
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The unity of the entire people
We thus call upon all to help build a new political identity as revolutionary,
modern Peruvians and the unity of all the people against excluding neoliberalism.
We are going to establish a new alliance under a State reformed by our
political action to reclaim the excluded Peruvians of always, the ruined producers,
now jobless or underemployed, the impoverished farmers and peasants, the
incipient entrepreneurs, the anguished middle class, the national entrepreneurs
oppressed by the transnational capital—all the honest men and women of our
fatherland.
To make this great national project into a reality, we ask for the help of
nationalist, democratic, progressive, anti-imperialist, and socialist Peruvian men
and women. We want to listen to them and with them draft our main economic
and social proposals, reclaim our natural resources and particularly our policies
conducive to a social, democratic State, capable of meeting the scourge of
corruption and of reaffirming our ineludible commitment to human rights.
We express our commitment to the now excluded majorities so that we
can, together, build the solid moral reserve of a higher Republic.
Economic policies and productive transformation
Long-term objective
Our dream is to achieve a national economy that encompasses the excluded
citizens on the coast, the mountains, and the rain forest, integrating them into a
country we will construct together, with equal rights and duties, made up of
modern producers and consumers enjoying equal opportunities—a country free
of racism and the social inequality that separates us, with political stability based
on austerity norms for the exercise of government.
In the country we want, children and the young will be healthy, nourished,
strong, educated, and happy and will have access to employment and just income.
Women will not be harassed or discriminated on the basis of gender, our elders
will live out their years in decency and dignity, and handicapped Peruvians will
be entitled to a place and affection.
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Expanding internal markets with a view to the country’s
industrialization
The Peruvian economy today suffers from structural problems:
(a) Social inequality owing to the lack of sufficient employment and
income, which subjects the vast majority of the population to
precarious living conditions;
(b) A pattern of growth based on primary exports, whose long-term
sustainability is limited owing to the effect of raw material cycles we
have historically experienced;
(c) Weak or inexistent sectoral and intersectoral coordination of
production and geographical connectivity. In particular, there is no
connection between industry and farming on the sierra and the rain
forest;
(d) Internal markets are small and participation in foreign markets is still
less than the country’s potential would warrant; and
(e) The road and infrastructure network linking economy, geography, and
demography is still insufficient for creating new internal markets and
expanding the existing ones.
These problems have not been solved by neoliberal policies that favor
investment in the traditional primary sectors, disregarding ecology, internal
markets, and industrial, agroindustrial, and agricultural and livestock production.
This is why we must do away with excluding, worn out neoliberalism—the
old system that reverted our economy to a primary economy and dollarized it,
the system that has ripped apart the country’s social fabric and forced the young
to emigrate.
A system that took dignity away from employment and led to meager
income; that reduced the State’s authority and weakened the Nation, economically
and socially marginalizing whole populations on the coast, the sierra, and the
rain forest, depriving them of even the benefits of crumbles, which never fell
from the wealthys table.
It was this system that, impoverishing us not only economically but also
politically and culturally, injected us into international finance and economy, in
which we play a role that is dependent of and submissive to the interests of big
transnational capital.
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Our dream is to change this situation, to restore in the Peruvian Nation
and its children the self-esteem and dignity of free men.
Our objective is to change the current primary exports pattern of economic
growth; to create production clusters, starting with our natural resources and
rising to the highest degree of productive transformation so as to add value to
our production; to use modern science and technology as productive factors;
and to deconcentrate and decentralize the production apparatus by creating and
expanding internal markets beyond their regions. And it is time we should open
ourselves to the world according to or own interests, socially integrating the
country and ensuring food security for our people.
We will thus resume the leadership of activities that generate added value.
We will develop our internal markets and expand the existing ones for
sustaining growth over long periods. We must create stable jobs and improve
wealth distribution.
With activities that generate added value spearheading growth and are
anchored on coordinated internal markets, our economy’s competitiveness on
international markets will improve, while the share of nontraditional,
manufactured, and agroindustrial products in overall exports will increase.
Our development strategy is turned both inwardly and outwardly; its starts
in the interior but opens up to the world.
Globalization has shifted the emphasis of economic policies from the
domestic to the external markets. This is why neoliberals “condition” the countries’
future to the signing of the Free Trade Treaty-FTT.
We, nationalists, propose to increase our economy’s productivity and
competitiveness through the development of internal markets and of all the
country’s regions, as well as through the participation of Peruvian enterprises in
industry, agroindustry, fishing, mining, agriculture, and in the transformation of
our raw materials into factory-finished products, with a view to expanding our
markets and our share in export markets.
Accordingly, we concur with the main agrarian and rural organizations,
which deem it essential that parliamentary representation in the next legislature
should decide about the convenience and appropriateness of this FTT and other
trade treaties involving trade in agricultural and food products, similar to treaties
signed by some Asian countries as well as by some Latin American countries.
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Just as they wish to export our savings abroad, the neoliberals “condition”
the country’s future to the signing of the Free Trade Treaty with the United
States.
They claim that they view competitiveness as the lever of development
but forget that the utmost objective of competitiveness is to increase productivity
and that there is no need to link this objective to neoliberal trade policies.
Increased productivity improves the population’s living standards as it
increases per capita income, lowers the unit costs of production, and enhances
the capacity to compete on international markets.
Unless the productive apparatus is integrated with Perus geography and
society and unless there are economic corridors and interconnected production
clusters that start with our natural resources and continue up to final
industrialization, no free trade treaty will provide a long-term development
opportunity. When internal markets expand, the resulting increase in specialization
raises productivity and accelerates growth. The geographical expansion of the
internal market impels the growth of production, orienting it to both internal
and external markets.
As regards our sea, fields, and mines, natural resources should be
transformed by the creative hand of Peruvian workers and the initiative of and
impulse from Peruvian entrepreneurs, to be consumed or exported with value
added by our labor. We want a great productive development project.
Creating and expanding internal markets require interconnecting the
country’s different geographical and demographic areas. This requires investment
in infrastructure (ports, warehouses, roads, railways, sanitation, electricity,
telecommunications, and education) to foster new lines of production and
increase the demand for current production.
This is an effective, sustainable way of multiplying jobs and income,
reducing poverty, improving the populations quality of life, and increasing
competitiveness, thereby triggering growth and development conducive to social
integration.
Macroeconomic stability
One requirement of this strategy is undoubtedly a modicum of
macroeconomic stability. Macroeconomic stability preserves the purchasing
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power of people who live from their work, and fuels investment. It strengthens
the national currency and gives impetus to the nationalization of the economy
and the dedollarization of bank portfolios, a heavy burden created by
neoliberalism. We will thus keep prices low, so that people’s income will not be
eroded, hold inflation at an average 2.4 percent a year, and maintain a strong sol
with a stable and competitive exchange rate to give impetus to the transformation
industry geared to exports, under the responsibility of an independent,
autonomous Central Bank that will optimize the administration of our
international reserves.
Monetary and exchange policy
A regime of low inflation and exchange stability will prevail.
This low-inflation regime will be based on an institutional monetary
policy of explicit inflation targets that will turn around 2.5 percent,
with a deviation of more or less two points;
Inflation will remain one of the lowest in our region and one of the
lowest in the world as compared with our major trade partners;
We will keep inflation at levels without precedent in our country’s
modern history; and
The relative price structure resulting from monetary stability will
strengthen the production of nonprimary goods for the internal and
external markets.
This monetary stability institutional system encompasses the following:
An autonomous Central Reserve Bank-CRB independent in its
objectives and as an instrument, whose management is based on
professional and technical foundations (macroeconomic forecast
models), transparence, and accountability;
Definition of explicit medium- and long-term inflation targets;
Application of a monetary authority response norm; the operational
instrument will be the interbank interest rate in national currency.
A Taylor-type monetary rule that incorporates the effects of inflation
deviation from is target; the gap between actual product and potential
product and the variation in agents’ expectations; and, with respect to
dynamics, the inertial factors and the probabilistic evaluation of the
occurrence of risk factors in possible scenarios;
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A free, stable, flexible exchange regime.
A stable, flexible exchange rate regime under free international
movement of capitals, with no ceiling or threshold; and
The CRB will make use of the most varied financial instruments to
attenuate the volatility of the exchange rate (significant currency
appreciation or depreciation) through instruments such as sterilized
investment in open market operations, the purchase or sale of foreign
currency, nominal deposit certificates, and indexed certificates of
deposit, among other instruments.
Reduction in volatility ensures a stable, free, and flexible exchange regime
that adds to the competitiveness of exports. The CRB will thus regulate the
operational limit of the Pension Fund Administrators’ portfolio of investments
abroad, in accordance with portfolio yield, risk, and security and the development
of the domestic capital market.
Credit democratization
We will enhance the efficiency of financial intermediation, expediting the
gradual, voluntary dedollarization of agents and transactions, asserting the
international role of the national currency, and substantially improving the
independent supervision and regulation of the financial system, so as to protect
the agents and the public from high financial volatility.
The democratization of access to credit requires the elimination of the
barriers stemming from the segmentation between major users applying for credit
and the other clients; the application of regulatory criteria to reduce exposure
to the risk of credit supply concentration; the improvement of banking
coefficients; and the improvement of instruments to protect savers.
Intermediaries specialized in microfinance and microcredit will be
encouraged by the transfer of technological capabilities to manage their
portfolios, particularly in the Andean and Amazon rural environment.
Optimum level of international reserves
An open, partially dollarized economy can be protected from international
fluctuations by a reserves level and an exchange position that permit facing
speculative attacks against the national currency. International practices measure
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an optimum reserve level based on the relation between the liquid international
reserves level and the sort-term debt in dollars. Often only the short-term foreign
debt is included, although it is also possible to add current maturities of the
long-term debt. A “more acid option” consists in including the dollar deposits
of the banking system.
If this last indicator is applied, the ratio of liquid international reserves to
short-term debt in dollars, including the dollar deposits of the banking system,
will always be higher than one, above its critical level.
Fiscal and tax policy
Fiscal policy will be countercyclical and will have automatic stabilizing
effects. It will pursue a low-deficit course to ensure the fiscal sustainability of the
debt in the medium term and raise the rate of public investment to comparable
international levels.
We further commit ourselves to the responsible management of a State
we envisage as austere and just. It is a question of maintaining a fiscal policy that
will ensure that the deficit will not surpass one percent of GDP. We will adopt
measures conducive to savings and higher income to ensure sustainability.
To this end, we will undertake a comprehensive tax reform to broaden the
tax base and raise collections to 18 percent of GDP over the next five years.
We will ascribe greater weight to direct taxation to redress the neoliberal
taxations inequitable bias, which favors indirect taxation. Accordingly, collection
efficiency and equity criteria will be adopted as instruments for improving income
distribution.
Fiscal decentralization will be the object of an agreement between the
central government and subnational governments, establishing firm, lasting rules.
We will abolish tax exemptions and special tax benefits. We will also revise,
in consultation with the parties, the tax and legal stability contracts in force in
accordance with the law. There will be no more Tax Stability Agreements.
We will review regional and sectoral tax exemptions that do not achieve
their objectives. We will incorporate incentives in the form of tax credits for
production enterprises to reinvest profits. We will tax profits to reestablish the
distributive justice principle.
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The cyclical bias of the fiscal policy will be neutralized by amendments to
the fiscal responsibility and transparence law and the introduction of a
countercyclical fiscal rule.
Public investment will be freed from contraction pressures that occur when
tax revenue drops during the cycle’s recessive phase.
The fiscal policy will ensure the continuing growth of the country’s foreign
assets within sustainable limits. The country’s contingent assets will be journalized
in geological-mining, energy, and forestry projects and in other projects with
real potential, as a preparation for utilizing the public sector’s patrimony
accounting.
Restructuring of the external public debt
The public debt will be audited.
We will proceed with the restructuring of the public debt so as to contribute
to the sustainability of the fiscal policy and make room in the budget for public
investment. We will also modify the structure of public spending financing,
reducing the debt’s exposure to market risks and extending its duration as well
as increasing the internal debt’s share in the total debt. We will thus ensure the
sustainability of the fiscal policy and create more room for public investment.
A liabilities management program will be implemented for the following
purposes:
To deconcentrate servicing of the short-term debt (refinancing risk)
with operations to extend the debt’s average life and duration;
To reduce the debt’s exposure to variations in the exchange rate and
external interest rates (market risk);
To reduce the debt in current and present value; and
To improve the countrys credit position; this will reduce the cost of
future financing.
To reduce the service on the public debt in the coming years, the following
operations will be undertaken:
Prepayment;
Substitution of external debt with internal debt;
Bonds exchange;
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Coverage of exchange and interest rates; and
Exchanging debt for investment, with emphasis on environmental,
educational, and public infrastructure projects.
The development of the domestic sovereign debt market will be intensified;
this will permit modifying the current financing structure of financial and
nonfinancial spending.
The strengthening of the internal market for public debt in soles will permit
the maintenance of a public indebtedness profile at acceptable risk levels, by
increasing the internal debt’s share in the total public debt, so as to reduce exchange
and interest rate risks.
Budget and quality of public spending
We will modify the methodology for allocating budgetary resources that
maintain an inertial and incremental character, as it is based on the spending
structure of previous years; then, the allocation of available additional resources
will be discussed.
We will substantially improve the quality of public spending. It is necessary
to assign proper priority to actions or to allocations according to different
alternatives, and to actions that guarantee access to basic services for poorer
people. Moreover, the ex-post evaluation of budget execution will have a greater
weight on the decisions about resource allocation in the subsequent period.
To change this situation, we will adopt the following measures in the different
phases of budget preparation:
Programming and formulation
Reduction of the discretion, arbitrariness, and inertia level when
setting budgetary ceilings; and
Introduction of a pluriannual budget that will complement the
multiyear macroeconomic framework, with input from and
participation by civil society, at the central, regional, and local levels;
Approval
Strengthening of the professional technical and financial advisory
teams of Congress’s Budget Commission and ensuring their
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permanence so as to preserve the continuity of the basic criteria of
budget preparation; and
Application of the cost-benefit measuring criterion and indication
of the effects of the budgetary norm on the population.
Budget execution
Evaluation of the restrictions encountered by budget executors and
introduction of significant improvements, particularly in
administrative procedures;
Divulgation of the main elements of budget execution so that the
public may be aware of how the tax money is spent; this will enhance
tax consciousness and culture; and
Divulgation of the origin of resources by financing sources, evasion
levels, tax progression, concentration of the tax base, and the tax
structure for each government level.
Budget evaluation
Publication of the budget evaluation results and of the criteria that
will provide feedback for budget formulation and execution
procedures.
Systematization of independent, technical evaluation of the budget;
Annual Rendering of Accounts by the Executive Branch to Congress;
and
Achievement of specific political commitments for improving
allocation and execution of public spending as a result of budget
evaluation.
Quality of public spending
Universalization of the management of participative budgets, which
permits the assignment of priorities to activities and projects with
the people’s participation. These participative budgets strengthen
participative democracy and democratic governance, as well as
promoting national private investment, because of the input of the
economic players in the definition of priority projects; and
Granting the greatest representativeness to participating agents and
civil society in the monitoring of the participative budget process,
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by extending support to local roundtables and technical networks, so
as to avoid guideline decisions counter to previously agreed decisions.
Independent, Sovereign Foreign Policy
Assumptions of Policy and State in International Relations
Peruvian foreign policy’s ultimate purpose is the State’s consolidation and
survival, i.e., the strengthening and preservation of the national territory, its
population, sovereignty, and governance. Foreign policys formulation will be
based on the definition of the national interests.
Our assumption of politics as a creative, transforming practice on the
domestic front holds true on the plane of international relations also, in which it
will play a structuring, architect’s role in giving shape and content to a new
international political order based on law, equality, and social justice.
Only politics has the power to organize the international system, govern
globalization, and lead the States toward an order that takes into account all the
distortion factors in an international system, such as the problems related to
cooperation, trade, finance, the environment, technology transfer, political
violence, and poverty.
Only well-established States with their forms of negotiation can civilize
capitalism and make possible a higher degree of governability in a globalized
world. A world governability model is possible only if it is based on full respect
for the will of the nations, as expressed by their respective States.
Politics has been set in motion and been converted into the gravity center
of the historic development we are now experiencing. The configuration of a
new world political order is now measured by the governing skill of its statesmen.
We will restore to the State its architect’s role in the political construction
of the future and as subject and main source of international public law.
Friendly neighbor relations
Peru is a polyvalent territory. It is the depositary of our millenary history
and at the same time has maritime, Andean, and Amazonian characteristics that
define the immediate spheres of its foreign policy.
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Diplomatic relations with bordering countries without border infrastructure
to unite them are merely rhetorical. We will thus promote the construction of
means of communication with our neighbors, so that we can share integrated
political views of development.
We will favor our relations with Brazil, with which we share the Amazon
region, the Amazon River, and a strategic location in the South American region,
as well as many views of development and foreign policies. In particular, we will
give impetus to ties with the Acre-Rondonia-Mato Grosso-Mato Grosso do Sul
region. We will do the same in respect of Bolivia, to which we are united by a
historical, cultural, and blood community and with whose new government we
share fundamental positions on various political issues. We will also attach special
importance to the members of the Andean Community, while acknowledging
the increasing economic and political weight of Venezuela, a key country for its
strengthening.
We will also give impetus to our bilateral relations in different areas of
political understanding and of cooperation with other countries of Mercosur
and of Latin America.
With Chile we will maintain a policy of mutual respect, as well as economic
relations conducive to mutual, equitable benefit. Furthermore, we will review
the military spending homologation and arms control policy.
Democratic security
Our security policy will encompass all political methods to face the dangers
coming from outside, potential conflicts, threats to our existence, or attempts at
domination. At the same time, we will promote peace by multiplying cooperation
fronts with countries whose interests are in opposition to ours.
Strengthening the Andean Community
We will strengthen the Andean Community, and especially its political
dialogue capacity, and propose that an Andean Energy Commission be set up
for developing a major petrochemical industry in our subregion to provide goods,
services, and jobs and with capacity for international political and economic
negotiations, similarly to OPEP. By working in this essential sphere of energy
production and of establishment of a petrochemical industry, in marketing, and
in the development of the requisite knowledge, we will seek, as a result, to achieve
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a significant degree of positive, symmetrical interdependence among our
countries. We will propose the establishment of common structures and
institutions.
Building the South American House
We will resort to political logic, in light of the trends for reordering the
structure of world politics, to propose proceeding further with the design of a
political project of our own in the South American space, endowing it with
effective capacity for international negotiation, for making itself heard, and for
coordinated participation in the great issues on the international agenda. We will
propose a South American Security and Cooperation Organization, thereby
expanding the South American Community of Nations, a first step toward a
Latin American Union, into which would converge the following concerns:
interregional security; political cooperation and measures against terrorism, drug
trafficking, and organized crime; integration, cooperation, and development,
coupled with the interlinking of already existing institutions; and respect for the
democratic system, the rule of law, and citizens’ rights.
Integration, cooperation, and development will foster intraregional trade.
Over half of world trade is concentrated in regional markets. Two thirds of
European Unions trade is internal. Mercosur’s internal trade nearly equals a fourth
of its share in world trade. We will raise to a treaty level the South American
Regional Infrastructure Integration initiative, in the framework of the South
American Security and Cooperation Organization.
A multipolar world
We are not party to the configuration of a unipolar world in the realm of
international politics. We will back the efforts of the great powers, such as the
Russian Federation, the European Union, the People’s Democratic Republic of
China, and Japan and of other regional powers, toward the structuring of a
multipolar world that would impart equilibrium to the international system and
allow more room for the political action of developing countries, such as Peru.
Active multilateralism
We will seek a more efficient functioning of all the components of the
United Nations and attach special importance to their role in the establishment
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of a world order based on strict adherence to Public International Law. We will
implement initiatives to reform the United Nations’ bodies related to
development, cooperation, and financing matters in light of the distortions
stemming from the globalization process. We will also give a new impetus to our
participation in the specialized UN, FAO, Unido, and Unicef organisms, among
others.
At the United Nations we will push for an international regime for
promoting and safeguarding a just and equitable distribution of the benefits
derived from the use of genetic resources, so as to prevent biopiracy. We will
advocate greater influence by the United Nations on the development of a system
of fair economic relations, on global economic policies in the area of foreign
trade and financial relations, as well as on its interaction with the Bretton Woods
institutions, the WTO, and other multilateral structures. We will endeavor to
democratize international relations and particularly the financial organizations
such as the IMF, the World Bank, the Iadb, and the multilateral trade organizations
such as the WTO.
Solidaristic globalization
The globalization process does not apportion its benefits in an equitable
manner between developed and developing countries that adhere to its neoliberal
dogma. The industrial countries account for only 15 percent of the world’s
population and yet they always talk about a globalize world.
Major gaps and asymmetries persist in the global society. Under this process,
the vulnerability of developing countries increases, owing to the instability of
the global financial markets. We refuse to remain as open societies as long as the
globalization gains are not fairly and equitably shared. Mere economic opening
does not generate sustained development or increase the productivity of
enterprises, nor does foreign trade alone lead to lasting growth rates. We refuse
to let the market decide for Peruvian society.
The lack of acquired knowledge widens the gap between rich and poor
countries. A key objective of Peru’s economic foreign policy will thus be the
acquisition of knowledge capital, so that our foreign trade may become more
competitive worldwide, thereby increasing our productivity and making our
economic development more sustainable. We will seek knowledge in industrialized
countries and will not refuse foreign entrepreneurs or foreign capital for impelling
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forward our specific industrial and agroindustrial policies, thereby strengthening
Peruvian entrepreneurs and favoring the establishment of mixed enterprises in
the context of a strategic development plan.
The economic aspect of the globalization process should not entail
abdicating politics or the State. Peru will have a strong State that should be the
engine of development and should act in areas in which only the State can
intervene. We will develop both our internal and our external market. We will
thus join the globalization process in a more autonomous, sovereign manner.
We propose to win greater access to the international markets, eliminate their
asymmetries, impose limits to the distortions of the international financial system,
reduce the excessive volatility of international short-term capital flows, revamp
the Bretton Woods institutions, strengthen the G-20, and achieve a World Trade
Organization with more equitable rules.
United States of America
We will preserve our autonomy and independence in our asymmetrical
relations of interdependence with the United States. We will share a common
political stance, as, in our understanding, democracy in Peru will achieve full
legitimacy only when the State will be in condition to meet its internal social
demands. We will cooperate in security matters related to combating terrorism
and drug trafficking. We will negotiate the terms that by right are incumbent on
Peru in respect of the exploitation of our nonrenewable natural resources,
through the State’s control and participation, the incidence of added value on
exploited resources, and the establishment of mixed-economy enterprises, in
the context of an economic policy that will strengthen the State and raise the
quality of life of the Peruvian population, as one of its basic elements.
We will propose the elimination of the Inter-American Reciprocal
Assistance Treaty – Tiar, as it has become an obsolete Cold War instrument,
which did not function at the time of the English aggression against Argentina
(Malvinas).
Western Europe
We see Western Europe as a power pole that is a source of technology
and investment and as one of Peru’s major trade partners. Europe points the
way for the integration of strong States and the exercise of democracy, in addition
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to other fundamental values for cultivated populations. We will intensify the
dynamics of our bilateral relations with the European countries, by creating and
strengthening mechanisms of dialogue, consultation, and cooperation, as well
as through the promotion of reciprocal cultural relations, European investments
in Peru, and trade flows accompanied by increased Peruvian exports with higher
added value. We will give impetus to the political dialogue and cooperation
between CAN and the EU and will further the negotiations to arrive at an
association agreement between the two regional blocs.
Eastern Europe
We will strengthen our relations with Russia, the great Eurasian power and
a Permanent Member of the Security Council. Peru endorses Russia’s objective
of seeking a multipolar order that does not admit the monopoly of or dominion
by any power or group of States over world affairs. Peru also feels empathy with
its opposition to the replacement of basic structures of Public International
Law under the allegation of “humanitarian intervention” or “limited sovereignty.
The nationalist government will share with Russia its stance contrary to the
minimization of a sovereign State’s role in preventing threats of interference in
the internal affairs of other countries. With Russia, we will foster trade and
investments, as well the establishment of mixed enterprises.
Asia and the Pacific Basin
We will expand our political, investment, trade, and technical cooperation
in areas such as seismology, agriculture, desertification, aquaculture, environment,
and archeological resources with the countries of Asia and the Pacific Basin. We
will pay especial attention to the many possibilities of also expanding
nonreimbursable financial cooperation with Japan, which is also bound to play a
major role in the multipolar world aborning.
Trade and investment
We will promote the access of our diversified, competitive exports to
major markets. We will attract stable financial resources in the context of the
new economic policy. We will pursue, both at the bilateral level and in the
international organizations, the elimination of nontariff measures, discriminatory
treaties, phytosanitary regulations, and other protectionist measures that hinder
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the expansion, diversification, and competitive placement of our products on
international markets.
The strategic planning of national development will seek to attract foreign
investments that can bring in advanced technology for development projects
and private entrepreneurial activities that generate employment and exports.
We will abide by a stable treatment of foreign investment in the context of
an economic policy that will ensure that the inalienable rights of the state are
respected, as well as the rights of the Peruvian people, the immediate beneficiary
of the resources generated by our raw materials. China, with a similar regime,
has received one fourth of foreign investments received by developing countries.
Peru will resume its participation in Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation-
Apec, particularly in its economic, trade, and technical cooperation mechanisms.
Foreign debt
In assuming the foreign debt, we will seek to lead the creditor States and
financial organizations into committing themselves to recognize the burden this
debt represents for our economy and the need to find multilateral mechanisms
to lighten its weight and bilateral solutions to make its restructuring possible.
Projection of our culture
Ours is a historic, millenary culture that should dispose of instruments to
impress its character and vigor on international relations. Projection of our culture
will be a major instrument of our foreign policy. It will define our presence and
enhance our prestige in international relations. In many higher studies centers in
the world both Quechua and our historical past are objects of study. We will pay
special attention to the signing of agreements aimed at encouraging, in a sustained,
coordinated, and consistent manner, the deeply-rooted expressions of our
historical as well as of our modern culture, which encompass crafts, literary works,
cinema, music, apparel, fashion, and cuisine and Peruvian ingredients, among
other things.
Peruvians abroad
Approximately two million Peruvians live abroad. Their remittances rank
second as a foreign financing factor in our economy and Peruvian communities
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DEP
around the world witness the dynamism of Peruvian relations with the receiving
countries. We will define and fine-tune policies aimed at improving the situation
of Peruvians on foreign soil by providing consular assistance and information
about their country, and facilitating the issuing and processing of documents,
registration, and identification to promote their rights and duties away from
home. Special attention will be paid to the equivalence of professional titles
accredited on a reciprocal basis.
A revised consular policy
We will intensify the protection of and support to Peruvian communities
abroad, as they form part of the Peruvian population, which is one of the State’s
constituent elements. Accordingly, the work of Peruvian Consulates will not be
limited to the mere rendering of efficient services but will include keeping ties
to these extensions of our population abroad, seeing that they fully exercise
their citizens rights, and assisting them promptly and attentively.
My fellowmen, these are some of our proposals for the realization of a
project for a just, free Nation. This is our serene, affirmative answer to the lies,
insane diatribes, and violent campaign unleashed against our nationalist, popular
position.
I call upon you to work with greater intensity for our victory on April 9,
to organize yourselves, to support the sanest representatives of our people
in beginning the great economic, social, and moral transformation of our
fatherland.
Version: João Coelho
André E. Telting
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Suriname:
macro-economic
overview, challenges
and prospects
André E. Telting
*
Country background
Fact sheet:
2004 GDP: US$ 1.65 Billion
Real GDP Growth 2004: 7.8%
Real GDP Growth 2001-2004: 5% p.a.
2004 GDP/capita: US$ 3,085
Unemployment 2003: 7%
Infant Mortality Rate 2003: 30 per 1,000 births
Life Expectancy Rate 2003: 69.1 years
Adult Literacy Rate 2003: 88.0%
* President of the Central Bank of Suriname.
1.
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Population 2004 (mid-year): 487,024; 2/3 of the population resides in
capital Paramaribo
Main Exports: Aluminium, Oil, Timber, Fisheries, Shrimps, Rice, Gold
and Bananas.
Recent Political Developments
Fair, democratic elections took place on May 25
th
2005. President
Venetiaan was re-elected, and the new administration (referred to as “Nieuw
Front Plus”) comprising the previous government’s “Nieuw Front” coalition,
enlarged by two other political parties (AC and DA 91), represents broader
segments of society. The ruling “Nieuw Front Plus” coalition has 29 seats in
Parliament out of 51 (57%). President Venetiaan favours continuation of sound
macroeconomic policies, enriched with new ideas for accelerated social and
economic development during his third term as President of the Republic.
Key Foreign Policy Issues
Among the different governmental policies importance is attributed to
intensified diversification of international cooperation with Caricom, aiming at
the formation of the Caribbean Single Market and Economy in the near future,
and with the South American Community of Nations, which aims at promoting
an integrated South American area in political, social, cultural, economic,
environmental and infrastructural dimensions.
In the multilateral field, the Surinamese government pursues the
strengthening of relations with institutions such as the IADB, IsDB, EU, EIB,
UN, IMF, WB, NAM, OAS, among others.
In its bilateral relations, the policy of the government is to consolidate
existing relations with the Netherlands, USA, France, India, Indonesia,
China, Japan, Brazil, Venezuela and other countries. The Surinamese-Guyana
maritime dispute is under consideration at the International Tribunal for the
Law of the Sea.
Pro-active foreign policy resulted in the appointment of Mr. Albert
Ramdin, a Surinamese diplomat, as OAS Assistant Secretary General on
July 19
th
2005.
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2. The Economy
Economic Performance and Outlook
In percentage terms real GDP recorded an increase in the 2002-2006
period, rising from 2.1% in 2002 to 5.2% in 2005, with a growth of 5.1% forecast
for next year. Average percentage CPI inflation dropped from 15.5% in 2002 to
9.5% in 2003, with an estimate of 9.3% in 2004, policies aiming to achieve single-
digit inflation in 2005 and 2006. The Budget balance, as a percentage of GDP,
went from –4.4% in 2002 to 0.7% in 2003, –0.8% in 2004, –7.9% in 2005, and
–9.3% being expected for 2006. The BOP current account balance, as a percentage
of GDP, has steadily improved, moving from –11.8% in 2002 to –11.4% in
2003, –9.2% in 2004, and 3% in 2005.
A recovery of the Surinamese economy has been engineered in the past
few years, resulting in persistent growth. According to the IMF Staff Report for
2004 Article IV Consultation, “Economic growth accelerated reflecting increased
mining output and a return of confidence as a result of a more stable
macroeconomic situation”. Real GDP grew at an average rate of 5% in the
2001-2004 period.
The unemployment rate declined steeply from 14% in 2002 to 7% in 2003.
According to GBS estimates, the informal sector accounted for an average 20.5%
of real GDP between 1995 and 2002, and contributed greatly to employment
figures.
The Surinamese Dollar (SRD) was introduced on January 1
st
2004 to replace
the eroded Surinamese Guilder. The new currency simplifies calculations,
transactions and overall economic activities while symbolizing a new era of sound
financial management. It can be said that the Surinamese Dollar has successfully
traversed the teething stage, as the exchange rate has remained stable and inflation
has continued its downward path.
Inflation fell from record highs to single digits. In the March 2003 to March
2004 period, inflation figures turned into single digits, at 9.5%. Average and
EOY inflation are estimated at approximately 9% and 8%, respectively. Inflation
is expected to remain in single digits in 2005.
As for the exchange rate, there has been a convergence of the official and
commercial rates due to prudent monetary policy and fiscal discipline. The stable
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154
exchange rate has contributed to low inflation and gathering confidence in the
economy.
3. Developments in the Real Sector
Engines of Growth
Bauxite: In February 2002, Suralco completed the US$ 65 millions
expansion of its refinery capacity six months ahead of schedule. Annual
aluminium output capacity rose from 1.95 million mt to 2.2 million mt. Due to
logistical problems, temporary importation of bauxite was unavoidable between
January and June to prevent under-utilization of the refinery’s capacity. The
feasibility study of Suralco and Billiton regarding expansion of their activities to
the western region of Suriname is well advanced. Both companies intend to
construct a smelter with a 340 kmt annual output capacity, an aluminium refinery,
new mines, a new hydroelectric dam with a capacity to generate 650 MW, and
other infrastructural facilities. These investments are feasible for proven reserves
of 300 million tons of bauxite. To date, 45% of the Bakhuis area has been
explored and a total of 170 million tons of bauxite gas has been proven.
Gold: Foreign Direct Investments by the Canadian company Cambior in
2003 (approximately USD 95 millions) resulted in formal production start-up
in April 2004. Investments are expected to amount to USD 25 millions in 2005.
In the 10-year period ending 2014, investments of USD 790 millions are expected.
Output for 2005 is estimated at 320,000 ounces (10,000 kg) representing an
export value of some USD 138 millions. Production of 177,600 ounces in the
first half of 2005 exceeded the 101,400 ounces output for the first half of 2004.
In 2005, Cambior is providing employment for more than 1,100 workers,
including contractors. Government revenues are expected to amount to USD
12.4 millions. Cambior has recently entered into an option agreement with two
parties in the Tapanahony and Sarakreek area, located some 75 kilometres south
of the Rosebel project.
Others: In August 2004, Alcoa World Alumina LLC signed a joint venture
agreement with Newmont, a Denver-based gold mining company, for exploration
in the Nassau area. Another large-scale activity involves preliminary exploration
in the Bensdorp area by the state-owned gold mining company Grassalco in
conjunction with the Canadian Canarc Resources. Prospects for both areas appear
highly promising.
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Oil: Potential reserves of 15 billion barrels of crude in the Guyana Basin
have been estimated by the United Nations Geological Survey’s 2000 World
Petroleum Assignment. The 2005-2010 Staastsolie multi-annual policy aims at
the expansion of onshore production, onshore and offshore exploration, the
construction of a 15 MW power plant, the expansion of marketing and sales,
and the expansion of its refinery. Investments required for this multi-annual plan
amount to USD 378 millions, which will be jointly financed by Staatsolie (66%)
and external creditors (34%). In this regard, steps have already been taken, such
as preparations for the construction of the power plant in 2004, involving an
investment of USD 16.5 millions. Construction is scheduled to be completed in
2006. Staatsolie signed production-sharing agreements for offshore production
with the Spanish Repsol YFP in April 2004 and with the Danish Maerks Oil in
November 2004. In August 2005, Staatsolie concluded negotiations with the
American Occidental Petroleum Corporation for the exploration of another
offshore block. Staatsolie acquired 30 percent of the stock of the Trinidadian-
based company Ventrin Petroleum Company Limited in August 2004.
Shareholders of Ventrin also include investors from Trinidad and Barbados.
Bananas: Production and exports were resumed in March 2004. Export
revenues (FOB) are expected to reach 18 million Euros in 2005 and 30 million
Euros in 2006, up from 4 million Euros in 2004. Investments in 2004 totalled
USD 6.2 millions and are expected to reach USD 8.2 millions in 2005 and USD
5.9 millions in 2006. A total of 1,482 people were employed in the sector in
2004, and the workforce is expected to reach 1,523 in 2005 and 1,608 in 2006.
Aquaculture: foreign direct investment in shrimp farming spanning an area
of 1,530 hectares began in May 2004. More than 300 jobs are being created. The
project is due for completion in 2005. Production and processing will commence
immediately and will be entirely destined for lucrative export markets.
Palm oil: An agreement has been signed between the Surinamese
Government and the Chinese company China Zhong Heng Tai Investment Co.
Ltd. to convert a forest area of 40,500 hectares into a palm-oil plantation with
four oil processing units. Total investment is USD 116.6 millions over a 12-year
period, of which USD 62.5 millions are anticipated for the first six years. The
labour force is expected to increase gradually to reach approximately 5,500
(mainly recruited from Suriname) after investments have been completed. A
steering group, installed in November 2004, will monitor implementation of
this project, the start of which is due in October 2005.
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Tourism: Tourism is Suriname’s most recent promising, fast-growing sector.
Approximately 1,000 people have been trained by the Suriname Tourism
Foundation in the last two and a half years, reflecting growing potential. Financial
support from the EU, the Canadian International Development Agency, the OAS
and Unesco has proven instrumental in projects already implemented and in
progress. Preliminary estimates for the development of the sector point to the
creation of 6,000-7,500 direct jobs and an equal number of indirect jobs. Tourism
indicators for 2003 relative to 2000 show significant increases in the number of
tour operators (100%), travel agencies (44%), and holiday resorts (70%).
International tourist arrivals were up by almost 14% in April 2005 compared to
April 2004.
4. Monetary and Fiscal Management
Monetary policy measures in the 2000-2005 period were as follows:
replacement of the credit ceiling and introduction of a system of reserve
requirements; removal of exchange rate ceilings following convergence and
stability of the parallel and official exchange rates in June 2004; and adjustment
of the official exchange rate in response to market forces. It should be stressed
that the adoption by Parliament of amendments to the Central Bank Act in May
2005 has strengthened the Governor’s authority.
With initial ratios of 35.0% for domestic currency and 17.5% for foreign
currency, the Central bank created a low interest mortgage facility from reserve
requirement in order to promote the private housing sector. In July and October
2004, the Bank lowered the reserve requirements on domestic currency to 32.5%
and 30%, respectively. In November 2004, reserve requirements on foreign
currency were increased to 22.5%. The increase of the reserve ratio on foreign
currency to 33a% in February 2005 has served to minimize the discrepancy
between both reserve ratios, and is expected to discourage the preference for
foreign currency loans vis-à-vis domestic loans.
In December 2004, the official exchange rate appreciated slightly
from SRD 2.77 to SRD 2.75 per USD. In May 2005, pressures on the foreign
exchange market urged the Bank to adjust the official exchange rate to SRD 2.78
per USD.
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157
Monetary Performance
The 1999-2000 period witnessed a major expansion in money supply caused
mainly by monetization of fiscal deficits. In 2000, the money supply almost
doubled owing to government borrowing from the Central Bank. Measures taken
by the previous administration (2000-2005) have since resulted in a sharp decline
in money supply growth rates, which fell to 3.9% in 2003. The surge in 2002 was
the result of a one-off average wage increase of 60% for civil servants. Strict
control of expenditures by the government helped lower money supply growth
to 3.9% in 2003. Wage pressures were virtually non-existent in 2003 and 2004,
reflecting a wage policy consensus amongst trade unions, the government and
business organizations. In 2004, monetary growth amounted to 28.2%, due both
to net credit to the government from commercial banks and to net exports.
Monetary Policy Challenges
The monetary situation presents harsh challenges which must be addressed
through the continuation of a stringent monetary policy consistent with low
inflation, prudent management of liquidity and solvency risks in the relatively
highly dollarized banking system and curtailing of lending to the government,
by means of a ceiling set at 10% of budgeted revenues for the fiscal year.
Institutionalized Fiscal Discipline and Fiscal Policy
In conjunction with a tight monetary policy stance, there has been strong
adherence to fiscal discipline. The Government Debt Act (March 2002) restricts
the government to a ceiling of 15% of GDP on domestic debt and 45% of
GDP on foreign debt. It stipulates that were the Finance Minister to exceed
these specific ceilings without Parliament’s approval, he would face a maximum
10-year prison sentence and a maximum fine of SRD 2 millions. The Government
Debt Act also assigns the management of government debt to a new institution,
the Bureau voor de Staatschuld (BSS). The BSS became operational as of
November 2003 and was set up with technical assistance from the Iadb in
cooperation with Crown Agents from the United Kingdom. Following
adjustments in 2003, it needed to focus on measures designed to boost inflows
and control expenditure. In 2004, the government intensified its revenue collection
efforts and simultaneously tightened public spending. Concerns of another hike
in the civil service wage bill were allayed when the government and the largest
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labour union, CLO, agreed upon civil service pay rises of 5% in March followed
by another 5% in September 2004. This set a benchmark for wage negotiations
in other sectors. Although the 2005 budget displays an overall deficit of 7.9%
of GDP, the actual performance of the Government in the first half of 2005
indicates that this is unlikely to materialize. Due to a continued tight fiscal policy
stance, inflows and expenditures balanced early during the first half of 2005
(overall fiscal deficit stood at -0.02% of GDP). The 2006 budget submitted to
the National Assembly for approval shows an overall deficit of 9.3% of GDP.
Based on the performance of the government in recent years and its commitment
to tight fiscal policy, it can be assumed that this deficit will not materialize and
will be substantially lower.
Fiscal Performance
In 1999 and 2000 a stark discrepancy was observed between government
revenues and expenditures resulting in large overall fiscal deficits. Measures taken
in late 2000 (e.g. a 3 percentage points increase in sales tax, introduction of a
lottery and casino tax as well as higher import duties due to the upward adjustment
of the official exchange rate) led to higher government revenues in 2001.
Simultaneous tight control on spending ultimately resulted in a substantial
decline of the overall fiscal deficit from –12.8% of GDP in 2000 to 0.4% of
GDP in 2001. The fiscal deficit in 2002 widened to 4.4% of GDP owing mainly
to a one-off 60% rise in civil service pay, which was lagging behind salaries in
the private sector. In addition, the civil service pay structure was fraught with
glaring disparities addressed via the rise in civil service wages. The overall
government balance shifted to a surplus of 0.7% of GDP in 2003, reflecting the
results of measures for improving revenue and controlling expenditure. These
measures included, among others, a temporary (one year) 10% surcharge on
income tax for the highest personal and corporate incomes bracket, the
adjustments of lottery tax from 5% to 10%, on prices, and from 15% to 25% on
retail sales, no adjustments to civil service pay, and a tight rein on other categories
of expenditure. In 2004, the government managed to keep the fiscal deficit under
1% of GDP, despite an increase in capital expenditures and the abolition of the
temporary 10% tax surcharge levied in 2003. In addition, the government granted
civil servants a moderate phased wage increase, which did not produce
inflationary pressures.
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Government Revenue and Expenditure Trends
In the first half of 2005, the government managed to keep the budget
almost in balance despite increased election-related expenditures.
Public Sector and Institutional Reform
The main goal of public sector reform is to improve the organization and
efficiency of the government sector so as to enhance its effectiveness. The main
components of the reform are reorganization of the civil service, rationalization
of state-owned enterprises, institutional strengthening of the planning and
monitoring framework, decentralization, and private sector development. In
this respect, the following steps have been taken: installation, in February 2003,
of a steering committee (9 Ministers); installation of a technical committee, also
in February 2003; an agreement signed between Suriname and Undp for
development of a strategic plan for PSR in February 2003; an Iadb grant for a
project to develop a strategy for long-term modernization of the State (road
map for the PSR), the duration of which will be June 2004 – December 2005;
synchronizing of Undp and Iadb projects to avoid overlaps; financing of USD
5 millions secured via a loan agreement between Suriname and the Iadb for the
Public Sector Strengthening Program in August 2004; privatization of three
major state-owned enterprises, namely the SRO rice company, the Sbbs banana
company and the Bruynzeel lumber company, now in the final stages; restructuring
of the four state-owned banks, for the completion of which several studies have
been carried out with support from the IDB, recommendations being forwarded
to the government; a pilot project on decentralization already being implemented
with assistance from Iadb.
Institutional Reform
Forthcoming legislative developments are to include amendments to the
Investment Act, a new Foreign Exchange Act, a new Supervision Act on Financial
Institutions, and an Act on Insurance Companies.
Fiscal Policy Challenges
Maintaining fiscal discipline and fiscal liability as well as containing wage
demands are of the utmost importance to price and exchange rate stability. It is
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thus necessary to redouble tax collection efforts in order to increase the
government’s revenue base.
5. Government Debt
As of 2001, Suriname has maintained its government debt levels within
the Maastricht criterion of 60% of GDP. Preliminary figures from the Bureau
voor de Staatsschuld (Debt Management Office) show a significant decline of
the government’s external debt-to-equity ratio. As of 2002, the government’s
external debt to GDP ratio has been well below the 45% ceiling.
Government External Debt by Creditor
The bulk of government external debt is owed to multilateral and friendly
donor countries on favourable concessionary terms. The main creditors are
multilateral agencies such as the Iadb, EIB, and the Islamic Development Bank,
and countries like the USA, Brazil, the Netherlands, Japan, China and India.
6. The Financial Sector
The government has committed itself to modernizing the financial sector.
New legislative instruments are expected to enhance the supervisory powers of
the Central Bank significantly. Reform of the banking system requires the adoption
of a series of measures. These include: updating of the regulatory framework in
line with the Basel Core Principles for Effective Bank Supervision (completed);
restructuring of the four state-owned banks with assistance from Iadb, following
studies on financial evaluation of the state-owned banks (completed); improving
access to financial services (completed); and identification and assessment of
reform options (completed). The cornerstone of modernization will be a new
Banking Supervision Act. The current Banking Supervision Act will be replaced
by three legislative instruments which are currently being drafted: Act on Financial
Institutions to supervise Banks and Credit Unions; Act on Insurance Companies
for supervision of Insurance companies; and Act on Pension and Providential
Funds (completed).
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7. External Accounts
Balance of Payments on a Cash Basis
The volatility of the BOP in recent years largely reflects the country’s
reliance on international market conditions for its export commodities and
for the inflow of capital.
Balance of Payments
Improvements have been made with regard to the reporting system and
coverage of transactions between residents and non-residents. Although
commodity exports (aluminium, gold, crude oil and agricultural products)
benefit from the current favourable prices on international markets, the current
account balance has been recording a persistent deficit as of 2001. This reflects
net outflows mainly due to transport expenditures, travel expenses, dividend
transfers by the bauxite companies, and interest payments on external government
debt. As of 2001, the aforementioned current account deficits have been offset
by net capital and financial account inflows resulting in overall credit balances,
except in 2002 when the current account deficit rose by almost 56% and net
private and public capital account inflow was negative. The large surplus in 2001
was largely due to disbursement of the USD 123.8 millions NIO loan. The rise
in the overall balance in 2004 was mainly the outcome of declines in current
account deficit (7%) and capital account outflows (43%).
Liberalization of International Trade
A process of gradual liberalization has been initiated since the early nineties,
the aim being to clear away impediments to trade, stimulate exports, channel
foreign exchange transactions back into the official system, enhance efficiency,
and reduce costs in the economy. The first phase involved moving away from
the fixed exchange rate and allowing residents to possess foreign currency holdings
and make forex deposits at both local and foreign banks. Subsequent phases are
to include the removal of a license requirement for importation/exportation of
services, license requirements for importation and exportation of most goods,
and abolishment of the requirement to surrender proceeds from exports of
goods and services. The next phase involves the removal of the license
requirement for international capital transactions as a consequence of Suriname’s
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membership of the Caribbean Single Market and Economy. On-going
liberalization, encouraged by multilateral institutions, and (regained) macro-
economic stability has had the following effects: higher efficiency in both
international trade transactions and the exchange market; repatriation of capital
and increasing foreign exchange deposits at local banks; and investments in the
mining and agricultural sectors, among others. As a result, importers/exporters
no longer have to cope with time-consuming licensing procedures. Exporters
are also free to decide when to sell foreign currency holdings, affording them
more effective leverage on the price of foreign exchange. Financing of imports
with “own funds” reduces pressure on the banking system to supply foreign
exchange for import transactions. Foreign currency holdings by residents have
increased substantially over the years.
Increased foreign exchange holdings have prompted the Central Bank to
impose foreign exchange reserve requirements and to adjust the reserve ratio
regularly so as to steer the process and minimize risks.
8. Growth Prospects
Prospects for the Mining Sector
The bauxite and aluminium industry is set for further expansion.
Major investments by Suralco and BHP Billiton in Western Suriname, totalling
USD 2.5 billions, involve a new aluminium smelter with an output of 340 kmt
and construction of a hydroelectric plant with a power generation capacity of
650 MW.
Prospects for the gold sector
Prospects are likewise bright. Cambior’s Gros Rosebel gold mine officially
began operating in April 2004. Ensuing benefits include increased employment.
More than 1,100 workers are currently employed. Additional jobs will be created
in the second phase of construction. Corporate taxes (as of 2007), royalties (2%
of sales) and personal income tax will boost foreign currency earnings. In addition,
0.5% of sales proceeds will be set aside for social projects. Output is expected
to increase by 15% in 2006.
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Oil sector performance
Staatsolie’s multi-annual plan aims to increase recoverable onshore oil
reserves from 85 million barrels in 2004 to 2,115 million barrels. Moreover,
offshore investments are being anticipated based on the production-sharing
contracts signed with the Spanish oil company Repsol YFP and Maersk Oil
from Denmark. A third production-sharing contract is pending with the American
Occidental Petroleum Corporation.
Economic Diversification Away from the Mining Sector
Diversification of economic activity in the following sectors will definitely
boost the country’s foreign exchange earnings:
Tourism: the following projects sponsored by the Suriname Tourism
Foundation have been/are being implemented:
a) Integrated Tourism Development Plan. This program is implemented
with technical assistance from Carl Bro, a Danish Consultancy Bureau,
and is funded by the USA. The main elements are institutional
strengthening and legislation, product development, and human
resource development.
b) Training program: financed by the Canadian International
Development Agency (completed).
c) Small Tourist Business Project: financed by the Organization of
American States (completion scheduled for December 2005).
d) Unesco Youth Path Project: focusing on human resource development
(October 2004 – December 2005).
Palm oil: foreign direct investment in the palm oil sector by a Chinese
company will provide a substantial increase in employment, foreign currency
earnings and overall economic activity in the eastern part of the country.
Revision: Mark Ridd
DEP
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* President of Abreu, Abreu & Ferrés Estudio Jurídico
ince the end of the last decade there has been a series of debates in
Uruguay about specific, situational issues related to its insertion in the world
economy, such as the pros and cons of its participation in Mercosur and
compliance with is obligations thereunder, economic relations with the United
States, Latin American integration, and similar topics. Most of these issues are
discussed in connection with punctual political objectives, without the necessary
interrelation, without a strategic vision, and often with a lack of knowledge of
concepts, information, and basic rules pertaining to the subjects under discussion.
To some, Mercosur has been a failure and has curtailed Uruguay’s
development possibilities. To others, it provides a refuge from the “perversities”
S
Uruguay’s insertion into
the world economy:
a political and strategic
view
Sergio Abreu
*
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DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
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of globalization and of the transnational capital and the powers that covet it.
Regional integration is seen as a history of frustrations or as the source of
solidarity that will solve a goodly portion of our problems. These differences
interfere with the possibility of defining consistent development policies and
strategies as well as policies for insertion into the international economy.
But Uruguay has much to think about and to decide in respect of its
insertion into the international economy. In the course of 174 years of political
independence, Uruguay has had to define—explicitly or implicitly—the terms
of its insertion into the world economy. During this lengthy process, our country’s
original role among regional and world powers, which prevailed in the 19
th
century, gave way to a model of a country centered on the predominance of the
State and on its management of society and the economy, which was characteristic
of a major part of the 20
th
century, and ends up with the effects of globalization
on a society that has not yet finished to define a new development and coexistence
model.
The turn of the century was dominated by the most serious economic
crisis in our history, followed by a remarkable recovery accompanied by major
changes in the direction and composition of external flows. This political,
economic, and social crisis reminded us of our vulnerability and evidenced the
frailty of the instruments being applied and the importance of those that have
been postponed.
1
The recovery, the expectations about the development of the
international economy, and the policies of the other Mercosur partners place us
in a fluid scenario, in which we must engage in analysis and definition with a
strategic vision of our options, actions, and negotiations. It is essential that the
debate be moved from a situational to a strategic plane and from punctual
concerns to an integrated vision of insertion into the international economy that
takes into consideration the political, social, and economic aspects.
1. Political and strategic aspects
Insertion into the international economy involves all aspects of the country’s
external relations, both with the world at large and within the region. It
encompasses foreign policy, economic relations, and the different aspects of
1
Particularly the mechanisms of consultation and coordination of macroeconomic management and
harmonization of incentives to investment, production, and exports within Mercosur.
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Uruguayan society’s interaction with the outside world. Although we concentrate
ourselves on the economic aspects of insertion into the world scene, we should
not lose sight of the fact that economic relations are part and a determining
factor of foreign policy.
The political and strategic view of external economic participation
presupposes that it is both an instrument and a condition of the national
development strategy. It is an instrument because it must serve the development
strategy. It is a condition because the options for insertion into the world
economy are limited by the structural characteristics of production and the
domestic market, the allocation of factors, and geography, as well as by the
characteristics of the global market and the regional environment. Development
and insertion into the international economy are like two faces of the same coin:
they have value only together and if they are consistent with each other.
A strategic view of insertion into the international economy requires an
analysis of the scenarios under which this participation will occur, a definition
of the national interest, and certain conceptual issues, which are essential for
decision-making in this regard, and equally essential are the effects of vicinity
and the boundaries between ideologies and pragmatism.
1.1 Scenarios
Insertion into the international economy occurs simultaneously under three
scenarios with different scopes, characteristics and norms, though interrelated
and independent: the multilateral, the regional, and the bilateral scenarios.
1.1.1 Multilateral scenario
The multilateral trade system administered by the WTO and its ensemble
of commitments and disciplines is the broadest sphere of Uruguay’s insertion
into the international economy. Gatt’s role, now assumed by the WTO, is not
limited to the liberalization of international trade through negotiation rounds.
WTO’s disciplines form the universally accepted minimum normative structure
that governs international trade relations. Moreover, WTO negotiations—
currently being carried out in the Doha Round—will determine the future of
world trade’s general normative framework and will have direct implications
for some issues of essential interest to Uruguay.
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The WTO plays two basic roles. On the one hand, it is the forum where
trade liberalization is negotiated by its members
2
, which now include nearly all
countries and customs regions that participate in international trade. On the
other hand, it provides a system of norms and commitments aimed at establishing
a regime of free, fair competition without distortions, a system consisting of
Gatt 47’s historic legacy and the results of the Uruguay Round, complemented
by the dispute settlement mechanism that has been negotiated to guarantee
universal compliance with these norms. This ensemble of norms, concessions,
and commitments represent a minimum common threshold that endows
international trade with certainty, predictability, transparence, and reliability—
values that are pillars of the system.
Despite its contribution to freer trade and fair competition, the international
trade system has a long way ahead to improve itself.
The advances in multilateral trade liberalization and the significant economic
opening achieved in the nineties by the developing countries in general—and by
Latin American countries in particular
3
—were accompanied by a policy trend
in the major world players—particularly in the United States—toward a unilateral
solution
4
of trade issues, through three types of action:
Search for unilateral trade concessions from other countries.
Abusive recourse to new forms of protectionism, such as voluntary
restrictions, the application of internal legislation in respect of subsidies
and dumping investigations, or market organization market. These new
protectionism forms reflect resistance to submitting to the same
parameters as the rest of the system, i.e., to WTO norms to determine
violation of rights.
The unilateral definition of “new” unfair practices with the intention of
creating “new” rights and disciplines, under threat of the application
of reprisal measures.
2
Currently, 147 countries.
3
In the mid-eighties, the average tariff practiced by the region on the basis of the NMF was approximately
50 percent. By the end of the Uruguay Round, it had dropped to 15 percent. The trade flow, affected by
MNA, also dropped significantly and the subsidy policies were subjected to an intense dismantling process.
4
Simultaneously with the Uruguay Round multilateral negotiation, the United States had frequent recourse
to Section 301 and to antidumping actions as an instrument to obtain commitments to limit exports.
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In addition, the main trade problems of developing countries remain
unsolved—such as the lifting of restrictions and the elimination of agricultural
trade subsidies—while in regulatory areas such as intellectual property,
environmental protection, treatment of investments, or government procurement,
discussions seldom reflect those interests. The Doha Round’s main mandate was
to look at the needs of developing countries but the prospects for its results are
uncertain.
1.1.2 Regional scenario
The traditional view of economic integration prevailing in the fifties and
oriented toward the analysis of European integration was grounded on two
concepts. On the one hand, the concept of “second best, as there was no
possibility that all countries would simultaneously liberate their trade. On the
other hand, the possibility of generating strong stimuli for creating and
rechanneling trade among the countries in the process of integration, starting
from high protection levels vis-à-vis third countries.
The establishment of the Latin American Free Trade Association-Lafta in
1960—for the purpose of creating a free trade zone pursuant to article XXIV
of Gatt—reflected a strategy that combined the preservation of trade among
the countries of the region, then threatened by instrumental changes, with the
extension of the import substitution mechanism to the regional sphere as a form
of overcoming the narrowness of domestic markets. Uruguay’s participation in
Lafta helped support an industrialization model based on protection vis-à-vis
external competition and oriented toward end-products by light and intermediate
industries. The failure in establishing the free trade zone called for by the 1960
Treaty was due to various factors, the main one of which was the impossibility
of liberating—under a multilateral scheme—a substantial portion of reciprocal
trade, given its structure, the expectations about supposed effects of liberation
on national production, and the distribution of integrations costs and benefits.
The establishment of the Latin American Integration Association-Aladi in
1980 provided coverage for the proliferation of bilateral and multilateral agreements
in the framework of weaker regional preference mechanisms and trade regulation.
5
5
Regional tariff preference, origin norms, and safeguard clauses.
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Uruguay signed agreements of this type with the other countries of the region;
with several changes, these agreements are still in force.
6
Although a subregional integration component existed practically from
the outset, witness the establishment of the Andean Group, it became stronger
and integration’s main thrust beginning with the negotiations that led to the
establishment of Mercosur and to Mexico’s participation in Nafta with Canada
and the United States.
Under current conditions—multilaterally low tariffs and overlapping of
preferences as a combined effect of the fact that nearly all countries participate
in more than one preferential association scheme or engage in free trade with
one or more than one group of countries—the direct effect of tariff preferences
is limited and greater emphasis is laid on the institutionalization of market access
conditions, so as to ensure more stable rules of the game for economic operators,
and on exploring the opportunities offered by close neighbors. Mercosur is a
clear example of the synergy produced when trade barriers are eliminated
between neighbor countries, which, in addition, enjoy a strong historical relation.
The trade liberation programs under the agreements signed in the Aladi
context have helped to improve conditions for reciprocal market access and
have ensured that a substantial share of intraregional trade is already tariff free
or that it will be so in the short run. Recently, the Mercosur and the Andean
Community countries started a process of convergence between the two
subregional blocs.
The negotiations aimed at the establishment of a hemispheric free trade
area—the Ftaa—have stagnated after a lengthy process of preliminary discussions.
In reaction, the United States have negotiated a free trade agreement with Chile
and a free trade treaty with the Central American countries and the Dominican
Republic, have concluded negotiations with Peru, and are close to concluding
negotiations with Colombia and Ecuador.
Partly in reaction to the Ftaa, the South American countries have established
a South American Community of Nations, one of whose aims is the establishment
of a South American free trade zone.
6
One decade later, Aladi’s Partial Scope Agreements would be utilized to formalize subregional integration
mechanisms, such as Mercosur.
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After forty-five years,
7
Latin American integration is a process with the
participation of a multiplicity of institutions, a different geographical coverage,
and different objectives. Without ignoring the achievements related to various
aspects of intraregional relations, none of the major integration movements have
managed to reach its original objectives.
8
These frustrations have their origin in
the voluntarism present at the time of setting objectives and programs; they
become increasingly more marked owing to the tendency to compare Latin
American with European integration.
9
Institutional pluralism, focus diversity,
and changes of course that have characterized the integration process in Latin
America have consistently reflected the possible direction to be taken.
Experience teaches us some lessons. In the first place, integration programs
that extend over too long a period of time prove of little relevance or, in most
cases, unsustainable.
10
Secondly, compliance with the “heavy” commitments
pertaining to harmonization or coordination of instruments and policies has
proven very difficult. CAN’s and Mercosur’s programs aimed at improving
customs unions are typical but not unique.
11
Thirdly, advances and stagnation in
the regional sphere are closely linked to the status of negotiations and multilateral
agreements and to the trends in the international economy.
12
If we leave rhetoric aside, it would be very difficult to find true examples
of solidarity among the countries of the region, such as the case of one country
7
We take as a starting point the 1960 Treaty of Montevideo and the first Central American economic
integration treaty.
8
This fragmented, dispersible process is representative of the reality and diversity of the countries of the
region, the plurality of development strategies, and the changes that occurred in the region and in the
international context into which the countries must integrate themselves.
9
Latin America’s situation and integration advances cannot be compared with the process that led to the
creation of the European Union. European integration cannot be explained apart from World War II, the
Marshall Plan, and the strategic value Europe did have for the United States during the first stage of the Cold
War. The customs union theory itself was initially developed to assess and define the foundations for the
establishment of a common market in Europe. The historical, political, and economic underpinnings that
gave support to the establishment of the European Union have no parallel in Latin America.
10
The establishment of a Latin American free trade zone-Lafta, the Andean Group’s successive changes, and
Mercosur’s decisions’ timetable serve as an illustration.
11
As of 1964-965, Lafta engaged in an ambitious instrument coordination and harmonization program that
was also adopted by the Andean Group and, in some aspects, was continued under Aladi. However, at the
time of making decisions that implied a commitment on the part of member countries to change their norms,
most projects stagnated, or the decisions made by regional bodies failed to be put into practice.
12
The obligations assumed by the countries of the region before Gatt, the Customs Cooperation Council, and
then before the WTO and under OMA exerted pressure for the adoption of measures aimed at the harmonization
and modernization of foreign trade instruments in the region. The advances and stagnation in multilateral
negotiations affected trade negotiations both within the region and in relation to third countries.
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postponing its national interests so as to meet the needs of other countries or of
the processes in which it participates. As a matter of fact, initiatives now under
way stem from moves on the part of some countries for specific political ends.
13
1.1.3 Bilateral scenario
The multilateral system leaves enough room for both bilateral and
plurilateral negotiation. In our region, Chile and Mexico have signed free trade
agreements with the United States, the European Union, and other countries
outside our region. Mercosur and CAN are considering going the same way,
although facing more difficulties, in part because this is a joint negotiation that
implies the need to define objectives and instrumental issues within the blocs,
and in part because of the content and current status of trade and economic
relations.
Joint negotiation by the integration blocs is the expression of their role as
a platform from which they can insert themselves into the global economy and
the tool that would permit the countries involved to complement and potentiate
their position in the world in every respect.
In the case of ties to neighbor countries, though, we must make it clear
that Mercosur does not encompass all aspects of neighbor relations. To a greater
or lesser degree, there will always be room within or outside Mercosur for bilateral
relations and negotiations between Argentina and Brazil, without Mercosur’s
participation. Multilateral relations among the four countries materialize partly
in and support bilateral arrangements, which are possible only between two given
countries.
1.2. Conceptual aspects
Under this heading, we look at three issues that provide a basis for the
formulation of a strategy for insertion into the world economy strategy: the
Uruguayan economy’s neighbor condition and vulnerability; the incidence of
ideologies; and the identification of the national interest.
13
The South American Community of Nations results from the endorsement of Brazil’s leadership on the
continent, which, from a Latin American standpoint, clashes with Mexico’s presence. Venezuela’s approximation
to Mercosur and the acts of generosity by some of our countries are due to the need to avoid isolation in the
confrontation with the United States. Within Mercosur itself, the establishment of Focem aims at neutralizing
the smaller countries’ demand that asymmetries be addressed.
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1.2.1 Neighbor condition, asymmetry, and vulnerability
In Uruguay’s case, geographical, historical, cultural, and economic ties to
Argentina and Brazil have always had a strong impact on the country’s social,
economic, and political development. The condition of neighbor has been a
source of opportunities but also of risks. The macroeconomic seesawing
movements and the expansion and recession cycles in the neighboring markets
have exerted intense effects on Uruguayan production and market, including
tourism. The impact of the 1998-2002 recession period and of Argentina’s
financial collapse in late 2001 caused the most serious economic crisis in
Uruguayan history.
The major problem for Uruguay stems from the abrupt changes in
macroeconomic management and in the sectoral strategies in neighbor countries.
In addition to creating turbulence in the trade in goods and services, these changes
are a negative element for investments geared to the subregional market, because
despite free access to this market, export possibilities can be subject to significant
variation.
Uruguay’s neighbor relations are markedly asymmetrical. It is not only a
question of the size of its neighbor countries but of the great difference in the
effects of events or economic measures on either side. Whereas what happens in
Uruguay cannot affect the Argentine and the Brazilian economies in any way,
what happens in these two countries has immediate, significant effects on the
Uruguayan economy. With respect to trade in goods, Uruguayan total exports
to Mercosur vary from around 50 percent—47 percent in 1995; 48 percent in
1996; 50 percent in 1997; 50 percent in 1997; and 55 percent in 1998—and their
composition is quite different from exports to the rest of the world.
14
Between
1999 and 2002, exports to Mercosur countries suffered a substantial decline
both in absolute and in relative terms, while recovery in 2004 and 2005 put them
at 26 percent and 24 percent, respectively. During this same period, imports
from Mercosur countries experienced a much lesser decline and accounted for a
share of total imports similar to that of 1995, when it was 46 percent. In other
aspects of the economy, such as tourism, the financial system, or the real estate
market, Argentina’s situation and the price relation between our two countries
have decisive effects.
14
Certain Uruguayan products are exported only to neighbor countries. When these exports drop, it is very
difficult to find alternative markets.
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Moreover, certain projects that are a priority for our country depend on
the active participation of our neighbor countries. The promotion of Uruguay
as a logistic platform for the Southern Cone’s transport and trade is probably
the most outstanding but not the only case.
For Uruguay, Mercosur meant the possibility of conducting neighbor
relations within a more stable, predictable, and manageable political and
operational context. Although this would not be a full solution to the vulnerability
of the Uruguayan economy, it would at least condition the governments’ behavior
and permit a better prediction and control of the effects of economic events.
Nevertheless, Mercosur cannot play this role without the effective harmonization
of macroeconomic management, strict compliance with the commitments to
market access, a more thorough harmonization of the different elements that
govern or affect the functioning of the markets, and achievement of an agreement
on norms pertaining to investment.
The great challenge is how to regulate a markedly asymmetrical relation
with unstable neighbors,
15
so as to garner benefits and administer risks. The first
step in this connection is to clearly see what we can expect from our neighbor
condition and from the other markets and to formulate a strategy for insertion
into the world economy that does not relegate the latter to a residual role in
relation to Mercosur.
1.2.2 The ideological issue
Ideologies normally play a role in decisions as to what is good and what is
bad, what should or should not be done. The negation of ideology and the
exaltation of pragmatism is in itself an expression of ideology.
The formulation of a strategy and specific decisions pertaining to insertion
into the world economy should be based on an equilibrium between the
promotion and defense of national interests and the principles and values
prevailing in society: not everything that may be useful to national interests is
acceptable to society and not everything that is desirable in terms of principles
and values is compatible with the national interests.
15
Instability and its effects on the Uruguayan economy have been much greater in the case of Argentina. The
Brazilian economy’s behavior and its expansion and recession periods have had less traumatic effects, although
they too have significantly affected the Uruguayan economy.
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A comprehensive approach to insertion into the world economy that
addresses the ensemble of political, social, and economic aspects should establish
the compatibility between national interests and political ideologies. In this
connection, two aspects deserve pointing out.
First, as President Vázquez has said, Uruguay has only friendly countries.
This an important statement because it means setting limits to the influence
of political considerations or preferences on State affairs and accepting the
consequences of the end of the Cold War and the changes in terms of global
conflicts.
Secondly, recent discussions reflect a view of regional economic integration
and the intensification of extra-regional economic relations, particularly in the
case of the great economic powers as opposite choices. This dichotomy reflects,
in part, the repudiation of global capitalism on the part of some sectors and, in
part, the concept of regional integration as an instrument of solidarity and defense
vis-à-vis the threats and inequities of the action of the world economic powers.
Unfortunately, this way of thinking does not take into consideration the effect
of the opening of the economies of the region on the role and mechanisms of
regional integration. As regards economic and trade aspects, integration has
ceased to be an option of development based on a broadened, protected market
to become a platform for modernizing the economies and strengthening
competitiveness so as to enhance the possibilities of insertion in the global
economy.
16
In Latin America, the modern “open regionalism” concept has
replace, in theory and in practice, the approach to integration as an import
substitution instrument, typical of a predominantly protectionist scenario.
We cannot continue to look at the events of the 21
st
century through lenses
appropriate to the mid-20
th
century. Political approaches must be updated, on
both the national and the international planes. For the sake of national
development, we must replace the concepts of “good guys” and “bad guys”
with those of “partners” and “competitors.” The sustained growth of
employment, income, and resources for the implementation of social policies is
the measure of the new sovereignty.
16
In Mercosur’s case, notwithstanding the difficulties encountered in joint negotiations with the European
Union and the United States, relations with third countries have been one of the main components of the
integration process.
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For Uruguay, integration, on both the regional and the subregional planes,
should continue to be an aspiration and an instrument of insertion into the world
economy. But we must realistically and precisely look at what we can expect
from the countries of the region and from their different groupings from the
standpoint of our priority national interests. The role we assign regional
integration in our strategy for insertion into the world economy should be the
result of an assessment of the possibilities it has of contribute to our national
interests and not of any ideological posture.
1.2.3 The national interest
The strategies for both development and insertion into the world economy
should be grounded on a clear definition and interpretation of our national
interests. These should determine our strategic objectives and priorities, without
disregarding the mainstay of our foreign policy: principles and realism.
Today these interests are clearly defined: higher employment, income
distribution, poverty alleviation, and the reversal of social disintegration on
sustainable terms. These are the most pressing needs, which must be addressed
by the strategies for development and insertion into the world economy. Poverty
and social exclusion are the major obstacles to liberty and sovereignty as well as
a vulnerability factor, more important than neighbor concerns and economic
structure. There is liberty only when the members of a society are able to meet
their basic needs without restriction and have equal opportunities; and the only
sovereign nations are those that can ensure the welfare of its subjects.
17
Economic and investment growth is the real source of employment and
income, as well as of resources to finance social programs. The modernization
of the productive structure, the continuous improvement of productivity and
competitiveness, and the quality of human resources are the contributing factors
of sustainability.
This approach highlights the importance of insertion into the world
economy and of public policies related to income distribution, employment,
education, and promotion of productivity and competitiveness.
17
The term “welfare” is used in the sense of a proper distribution of goods and services available to society,
which does not necessarily mean wealth or ease.
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A macroeconomic management conducive to stability and equilibrium is
a necessary, although not a sufficient condition. It must be accompanied by an
incentives policy to direct growth toward activities likely to contribute to
productive structure changes, job generation, and income distribution, while
ensuring a balance between the benefits and costs for society. It must also be
accompanied by an external negotiation strategy capable of improving the
conditions of market access for our national production, attracting investments,
and making possible the access to technology and development financing.
In the medium and long run, education, advances in the knowledge
economy, the pursuit of dynamic comparative advantages, attention to the
obstacles to competitiveness and productivity that depend on changes in the
organization of the public sector and in public management are the policy areas
that should help narrow the productivity gap that separates us from developed
countries in sectors that do not substantially depend on national resources.
Accordingly, the national strategy for a county’s insertion into the world
economy should be conceived and implemented in function of objectives that
are consistent with national interests and so that it would provide the instruments
to serve these objectives.
18
This is why we should ask and answer some key
questions: What is the current view of regional (South American) integration
and what is the role it plays in Uruguay’s strategic and economic policies? What
is the role of the neighbor condition in our insertion into the world economy
and what is Mercosur’s role as an instrument for deepening and regulating these
relations? Which kind of Mercosur is good for us, and which can we have? Should
we continue to consider trade and economic relations with third countries as a
component strategically dependent on our membership in Mercosur—or is the
possibility of relations with third countries a condition for participating in
Mercosur? Should we indulge the luxury of not exploiting every opportunity
offered by the United States market because of our disagreement with the U.S.
foreign policy and with some relevant aspects of the U.S. trade policy?
To answer these questions we must have clearly in mind the
requirements a strategy for insertion into the world economy must meet to
18
At times, instruments become objectives. A value is sometimes ascribed to Mercosur in itself, independently
from national interests, as if association with neighbor countries were more important than addressing
employment, income, and poverty problems.
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satisfy a “productive country”—i.e., the countrys national interests on the
economic plane.
19
As we understand it, the “productive country” concept refers to an
economy in which the production and marketing of goods and services generates
growth, employment, and income. Financial operations are an additional service
that should support the production of goods and of services, and the State
should stop being a heavy burden on private activity. It is in light of this concept
that policies should be formulated and positions adopted for advancing insertion
into the world economy in respect of global, regional, and national issues.
First, trade and investment should lead to gradual changes in the production
structure that would have a bearing on the job demand and reduce the current
vulnerability. The way to achieve this objective lies in the development of dynamic
comparative advantages, trade diversification, and incorporation of technology
and knowledge into production and marketing.
Secondly, trade integration and a broadened regional market can contribute
to the improvement of productivity and competitiveness as well as to the
exploitation of dynamic comparative advantages, in so far as they facilitate the
regions active, efficient insertion into the global economy. Regional integration
should improve the conditions of participation in the global economy instead
of raising obstacles to it.
Thirdly, the establishment of a broadened market and stable conditions
of access to this market are essential for attracting investments that attach priority
to market size and security.
Fourthly, certain strategic projects for Uruguay’s development can be
implemented only in association with neighbor countries. The development of
logistic services connected with trade and transport depend on the availability
and improvement of the physical infrastructure in the Southern Cone and on
negotiations that can be carried out solely with Mercosur countries, Bolivia, and
Chile. For the success of an appropriate strategy for insertion into the world
economy it is essential to be clear about which projects are intrinsically dependent
19
We are talking about the link between the insertion into the world economy contents—trade, services,
investment, and financing and the spheres in which these are provided with the requisite instruments—and
the growth, employment, income, and sustainability objectives.
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on the neighbor condition, which can be addressed independently from it, and
which can be a contributing factor.
Lastly, the strategy’s sustainability and the management of vulnerability
are also key requirements. Voluntarism and lack of foresight are the main sources
of frustration and crisis for the countries of the region.
For a “productive” Uruguay, Mercosur should ensure the following:
A consistent, credible broadening of the market, capable of neutralizing
current limitations to attracting investment;
A scenario that facilitates production specialization, the establishment
of regional production chains, and the strengthening of entrepreneurial
management; and
A dynamic platform for the adoption of joint stances on the multilateral
scene and for negotiation with third countries in accordance with the
open regionalism concept.
The contribution of the external environment to job generation and income
distribution and the creation and maintenance of conditions for sustainable
national social and economic development, while respecting the values deemed
fundamental by our society, set a limit to ideologizing and pragmatism in the
definition of a strategy for insertion into the world economy.
20
2. Integration: projection and content
Integration should always be seen as a political phenomenon that can prosper
only to the extent that there are shared, converging interests among the countries
involved and that divergences are assimilated as shared dissatisfaction. It is
sustainable only as long as it is perceived by societies as an effective instrument
for meeting their needs and expectations.
The establishment of customs unions or free trade zones has obvious
economic and social repercussions in the countries involved and implies subjecting
to collective management the decisions about foreign trade regulation and trade
negotiations with third countries. Integration and cooperation in other areas also
20
Extreme ideologizing can perpetuate underdevelopment and poverty. Extreme pragmatism can clash with
political and ethical values deemed essential by our society.
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presuppose joint resources, decisions, and management. Unless it is grounded
on compatible interests and society’s support, political will deteriorates into mere
voluntarism.
In Uruguay’s case, regional economic integration as a development option
must take into account two elements. First, trade integration and free trade within
the region are insufficient as an answer to the needs of the countries with respect
to employment, income distribution, and social and institutional stability, as well
as to the objective of narrowing the productivity gap vis-à-vis the developed
world.
21
Secondly, Latin American integration should be an instrument for
achieving better conditions of insertion into the global economy. We must
integrate to compete and not to protect ourselves from the rest of the world.
22
In the mid-20
th
century, economic integration was conceived as a “second best”
in view of the impossibility of promoting the full liberalization of international
trade. This provided the foundation for articles XXIV and XXI of Gatt and was
a central element in the customs union theory. In Latin America, economic
integration emerged as an answer to the changes in the international economy
and to the exhaustion, in most countries, of the import substitution policy owing
to the narrowness of the markets. In a world dominated by protectionism,
regional preferences and integration programs led to a significant growth of
intraregional trade and to the diversification and strengthening of economic
links among the countries of the region.
Nevertheless, the progressive liberalization scenario that prevailed as of
the mid-eighties reduced the effects of preferences and brought into the fore the
need to connect the regional integration schemes with the multilateral system
and to adopt negotiations with third countries as one of the key instruments of
those schemes.
23
Mercosur was born in this period.
21
The region’s active, effective insertion into the global economy requires addressing the various determinant
factors of competitiveness and of creation, development, and exploitation of dynamic comparative advantages.
The integration effort must encompass changes in the countries’ productive structure through incorporation
of the knowledge economy, development of the supply of competitive goods and services, improvement of
the physical infrastructure and basic services, promotion of investment and quality employment, and
strengthening of entrepreneurial management.
22
The practice of open regionalism would strengthen the promotion and defense of regional interests in the
multilateral system and effective joint negotiation with third countries and groups of countries. It would also
boost the dynamic comparative advantages of the region and project it into the global economy.
23
As a result of this change, the establishment of customs unions, which had been postponed (Mcca, Andean
Group) gained a new impetus.
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Both for Mercosur and for the other economic integration movements,
the strategic updating of their role should rest on three pillars:
A comprehensive approach to the regional market, which should address
issues pertaining to the competitive development of the production
and marketing of goods and services and to the acquisition of dynamic
comparative advantages;
24
A search for better conditions of insertion of the region and its countries
into the global economy; and
Effective treatment of the asymmetries among the countries being
integrated.
25
Up to 1998, Mercosur experienced a highly significant increase in trade
among its State Parties. This growth was due to market opening, exchange
alignment, capital flows associated with the dynamism of the domestic markets,
and the privatization of basic services. However, there were already signs of
problems in that expansive environment. On the one hand, the State Parties had
to adapt and adjust the perhaps too optimistic timetables of programs that
were critical for improving the customs union and the common market, but
without changing the objectives and the official view of the process. On the
other hand, although the performance of trade within the bloc was auspicious,
the same did not happen outwardly. The very reasons that fueled the dynamism
of the internal market limited the conditions for competing on the international
market.
By the end of 1998, though, a prolonged recession of variable intensity in
the regional markets caused a drop in trade, amidst social, political, and economic
conflicts of unprecedented intensity in our countries.
Today Mercosur is a stagnated process plagued by numerous cases of
noncompliance and by incipient differences among members about its very
24
Mutual cooperation in support of national efforts in areas such as the improvement of productivity and
entrepreneurial management, the incorporation of knowledge into production and marketing, attracting
investment, financing, support for the establishment of production chains among enterprises of different
countries, land development and promotion of neighborhood trade, technological updating, improvement
of physical infrastructure and basic services—all this will have a relevant role in taking advantage of the
opportunities offered by regional trade and in channeling regional production to the global market.
25
The effects of asymmetries have been one of the main causes of the failure and stagnation of integration
schemes.
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essence. The credibility of economic operators and social agents has declined
and there is a risk of stabilization at a level lower than five years ago and far
removed from the expectations embodied in the Treaty of Asuncion.
Negotiations with third countries show Argentina’s and Brazil’s unwillingness to
open their markets. What is most serious is the difficulty the State Parties have in
defining—explicitly and on the basis of their real capacity to commit
themselves—the objectives and goals of the process and to address, with
common sense and an association spirit, the various issues related to free market
access and to attracting investment.
The causes are numerous and go beyond the recession that has affected
the region in recent years, but three of them should be born in mind in the search
for solutions.
First, the States Parties have experienced profound political, economic,
and social changes, with structural repercussions caused by the 1999-2002 crisis.
Protectionist tendencies have reemerged, sectoral sensitivity increased, and
attention to social problems, seen from a short-term perspective, has become a
high priority for all partners. The composition and destination of trade flows
have changed.
26
All these elements are reflected in trade policies and in the efforts
to attract investment.
Secondly, the economic asymmetries and the imbalance in trade results—
two concepts not contemplated in the Treaty of Asuncion—have become the
central topic of discussion among the partners. Mercosur is characterized by a
congenital, irreversible imbalance in an integration process in which one of the
members concentrate about 70 percent of regional GDP, of the regional market,
and of the bloc’s external flows.
27
One effect of this characteristic is that
everything that Brazil does has a decisive impact on the bloc’s functioning and at
the same time lays a heavy responsibility on Brazil for directing and sustaining
the course of the integration process in its economic aspects. As a matter of
fact, three different situations coexist with respect to asymmetries: the economic
and political differences (in reality, differences not only between pairs of countries
26
Intra-Mercosur trade has declined in both absolute and relative terms and the sale of farm commodities and
agroindustrial goods, in different degrees in the different countries, is becoming the main export base.
27
To this it should be added that both in Brazil and in Argentina there are notorious regional differences, with
states or provinces in deep social and economic dearth. Some attempts to address these regional differences
have contributed to the imbalance in both trade and investment flows.
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but among all four countries); regional differences within one country, which
affect all four countries (including Uruguay); and the effects of national policies
or measures, particularly those adopted by Argentina and Brazil, which accentuate
the uneven levels among countries, as is, for instance, the case of investment
incentives or different treatment of free zones.
Thirdly, the States Parties’ different approaches to Mercosur’s role in
accordance with their national interests are reflected in the way they view bilateral
matters as well as in their common trade policy.
28
The adhesion of Venezuela misdirects efforts and runs the risk of
politicizing communal external management. In other words, it shapes Mercosur’s
external relations according to a confrontational model, impelling it away from
the traditional Brazilian concept based on a developmental nationalism with a
definite trade tendency.
In light of the preceding general observations, Mercosur so far has not
become the instrument that would warrant focusing on the needs of a
“productive” Uruguay and justify itself as the channel for our country’s insertion
into the world economy.
As regards trade in goods, the recession and crisis experienced by the
Mercosur economies caused a collapse of Uruguay’s exports to Argentina and
Brazil and a contraction of its exports to Mercosur, which dropped from 1.533
billion dollars in 1998, when they accounted for 55 percent of total exports, to
624 million dollars in 2003, or 31 percent of total exports. The recovery of
exports thereafter was based on the markets of third countries, particularly the
United States. In 2004, exports to Mercosur totaled 764 million dollars. This
performance contrasts with the increase in exports to third countries, which
28
Mercosur had its origin in the projects aimed at strengthening the bilateral integration of Argentina and
Brazil. Argentina is paying special attention to its trade relations with Brazil. Because of this, trade imbalances
and Brazilian exports in some sectors have become a significant problem and are being dealt with by the two
countries, without the participation of the other partners. For Brazil, Mercosur has become an instrument of
its foreign policy, particularly to assert its position as a regional power, to win a significant place in the
international context, and to achieve its objectives with respect to the liberalization of the trade in farm and
industrial goods and to intellectual property. The difficulties in the negotiations with the United States and
the European Union, redundant regional initiatives such as the establishment of the South American
Community of Nations, can be partly explained by Brazil’s foreign policy. Uruguay, on the other hand, keeps
up its expectation that Mercosur will ensure free access to the regional market, encourage investment, and
provide a platform from which to project itself into the international market.
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climbed to 1.147 billion dollars. Imports from Mercosur, on the other hand,
have not substantially changed and Mercosur remains as Uruguay’s major
supplier.
29
The aforementioned situation led to macroeconomic imbalances and
recession in the Argentine and Brazilian markets as well as in Uruguay’s market.
Other factors were the protection and financial measures adopted by Argentina
and Brazil and the application of export tariffs by Argentina, in disregard for
the principle of free movement of goods under the Treaty of Asuncion. In 2002,
Argentina began to implement a policy that includes special incentives to
investment; taxation of exports aimed at depressing the price of certain products
on the domestic market and at lowering the price of industrial inputs; and
adoption of a series of measures to protect industrial sectors. The recent
agreement between Argentina and Brazil to introduce safeguard clauses into
Mercosur—under the label of “competitive adequateness clause”—moves farther
away the establishment of an actual customs union and thereby Uruguays
expectations of counting on a broadened market with stable, secure access
conditions.
With respect to investments, the lack of secure conditions of market access
and harmonization of incentive systems has caused most investments in goods
production to be channeled to Brazil. When investors choose Uruguay, as is the
case of cellulose plants, the neighbors’ attitude is to attempt to block them so as
to force a benefits distribution, thereby violating clear norms of international
coexistence and explicit commitments under agreements in force. We cannot
have great expectations in this regard either, unless Argentina and Brazil
substantially change their attitude.
The consistent postponement of commitments about macroeconomic
coordination moves farther away the possibility that Mercosur will help overcome
our vulnerability, and sustains the risks stemming from any macroeconomic
measures and events in the neighbor countries.
As regards joint negotiations with third countries, despite the time already
elapsed, no results have been achieved (EU, Ftaa) or those achieved are quite
29
In 1995, Uruguay imported 1.321 billion dollars from Mercosur, which amounted to 46 percent of total
imports; in 2004, it imported 1.384 billion dollars, or 44 percent of total imports.
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meager (India). While the other countries of Latin America have signed or are
about to sign trade and economic agreements with the EU, the United States,
and other developed or developing countries, the Mercosur countries remain
isolated. This situation is the outcome of the trade strategy followed by Brazil,
now coupled with Argentina’s new protectionist orientation, and of the attempt
to solve under bilateral agreements the most complex issues under negotiation
in the multilateral sphere. Uruguay’s interests in this matter are different and
more specific than those of its neighbors, and the lack of agreements with major
trade partners increases the vulnerability of our exports.
So far the asymmetries have not been addressed at all. The recent
establishment of the Structural Convergence Fund has the merit of being the
first explicit and practical acknowledgement of the need to deal with the effects
of the asymmetries, but cannot be considered a solution. A real treatment of the
asymmetries requires agreement on a definite, stable Mercosur profile, as yet
nonexistent.
On the other hand, Uruguay has had to face Argentina’s and Brazil’s dual
criteria with respect to the requirement of compliance with the commitments
agreed in Mercosur’s bodies. The clearest, most recent case is the invoking of
Decision 32/2000 about the implementation of the common trade policy and
the “informal” authorization for Uruguay to negotiate a trade agreement with
the United States. This attitude disregards the fact that that decision forms part
of a set of decisions approved in mid-2000 under the label “Mercosur’s
relaunching ,” which included issues such secure access to markets, the adoption
of a common customs code, the Common External Tariff-CET’s improvement,
incentives to investment, and coordination of macroeconomic management.
There has been no compliance with any of these commitments or they have all
been postponed. The set of decisions about the “relaunching of Mercosur”
should indeed be revised in accordance with the partners’ compliance capacity,
while maintaining the issues’ logical interconnections. It is not reasonable to
require joint negotiations with third countries when internal issues directly
associated with such negotiations have not been resolved, such as secure access
to markets, CET’s integrity, or the incentives systems.
Furthermore, in recent years Argentina and Brazil have carried out bilateral
negotiations in the context of Mercosur, forgoing the participation of Paraguay
and Uruguay in the drafting of such important decisions as the introduction of
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the so-called competitive adequateness clause. This tendency, coupled with the
results already pointed out and the deterioration of bilateral relations with
Argentina, may give rise to a negative, pessimistic perception of the future of
our participation in Mercosur and of our neighbor relations. One must shirk
these situational pressures to be able to approach insertion into the world
economy and participation in Mercosur on the basis of the most enduring national
interests and of the possibility of restoring the association ties within Mercosur.
Withdrawal from Mercosur is not an option for Uruguay. Uruguay must
promote solutions for current situations pertaining to trade and investment in
the context of a Mercosur that is effective and credible, and at the same time
seek alternatives for overcoming the limitations caused by today’s protracted
indefiniteness and uncertainties.
2.1 Economic and trade aspects
The maintenance of the objectives and commitments, such as the
establishment of a customs union and the decisions about “relaunching
Mercosur”—unless they are grounded on the partners’ earnest commitment to
abide by them—only perpetuates the indefiniteness and uncertainty that
characterize the current situation. Leaving that behind and seeking a model
consistent with the countries’ current interests and their real commitment
capacity—a model with balanced components—would inject realism into the
expectations and provide clear rules for operators. In addition, this alternative
is consistent with the possibility of resuming more ambitious integration
objectives in the future.
With respect to trade issues, it is necessary to devise a scheme that would
ensure conditions for regional market access, define the scope of the national
treatment, and clearly identify the trade regulation matters to be covered by
harmonization, coordination, and cooperation programs. Exporting o the
regional market should be a secure, predictable process and not guesswork or a
hurdle race. If, however, safeguard mechanisms such as the competitive
adequateness clause should be adopted or the application of practices that restrict
or distort competitiveness by the governments should persist, the partners should
be able to resort to compensation as regards both imports and exports. These
types of flexibility are not desirable but should not be discarded. They should at
least be subject to agreement and not the result of the acceptance of a fait
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accompli, and should allow the partners to use measures to correct market
distortions whenever possible.
30
The establishment of the customs union will regain validity as an objective
provided a credible program for its improvement is agreed upon. This
presupposes decisions pertaining to the elimination of multiple collection of
the CET, exceptions to the CET, the free movement of goods, the harmonization
or adoption of common norms for trade regulation, and the implementation of
a common trade policy. The flexibility of commitments about market access
and the free movement of goods would be consistent with the continuation of
the process for establishing a customs union only if this flexibility is transitory
and agreed by the countries and not the result of unilateral decisions.
The ensemble of commitments associated with the establishment of a
customs union should be consistent, particularly during a new transition period.
The conditions of access to a broadened market, the application of the CET,
the regulation of trade, and the implementation of a common trade policy should
be in perfect harmony and should be obligatory for all. As pointed out in relation
to the commitments undertaken at the “relaunching of Mercosur” in 2000, it is
not logical to require compliance from some members while tolerating
noncompliance by others.
The sectoral or investment incentive systems should be the result of
agreements aimed at a greater balance in the direct foreign investment flows to
compensate the different capacity of countries to attract investment, particularly
in view of their market’s size. This criterion is valid for the establishment of the
customs union but also for other subregional market structuring options.
The secure functioning of the subregional market depends on the
establishment of mechanisms and instances conducive to a systematic
coordination of macroeconomic management (including monetary, exchange,
financial, and fiscal policies), the adoption of measures for balancing the
conditions for attracting investment, and a review of sectoral and national
30
An example: when Argentina introduces export taxes, it is failing to comply with the Treaty of Asuncion’s
disposition about the free movement of goods and at the same time it is encouraging Argentine exporters who
use inputs that are subject to export taxes and depressing the prices of the Argentine market for exporters of
the other countries. This lack of compliance would legitimize the application of compensatory duties on
Argentine imports that enjoy export taxes benefit and of compensation for exporters to the Argentine market
that are affected by the depressed prices.
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development policies. The extent and depth of the commitments pertaining to
these matters should match the extent and depth of the commitments pertaining
to the subregional market’s operation.
The treatment of asymmetries and the evaluation and possible adjustment
of the results of the States Parties’ participation in the integration process are
part of the search for mechanisms and opportunities to ensure that benefits are
reaped by all.
31
The issue is not limited to Paraguay and Uruguay. There is also
a significant asymmetry between Argentina and Brazil that is definitely the main
cause of Mercosur’s stagnation. Mercosur’s Structural Convergence Fund has
the merit of being the first practical expression of acceptance of asymmetries
within Mercosur but is clearly insufficient. Other measures should be considered,
such as compensatory mechanisms for situational or structural imbalances,
whether internal (States Parties) or external; support for production reconversion;
borderland development programs; authorization for bilateral negotiation with
third countries that does not harm joint negotiations; and flexibility of positions
regarding certain special regimes (as is the case, in Uruguay, of temporary
admission and free zones).
Lastly, it would be convenient to include the systematic treatment of issues
that transcend Mercosur’s geographical area, such as energy integration, physical
structure integration, and cooperation in the area of knowledge economy, thereby
moving Mercosur beyond a narrow trade front, but without neglecting a general
projection.
2.2 Legal and institutional aspects
Mercosur institutions have a major role in ensuring the success of the efforts
aimed at directing and imparting dynamism to the integration process. Its design
and operation must be consistent with the trade model and the definitions adopted
about coordination of macro and sectoral policies and projects related to physical
structure, energy, and asymmetries.
In this connection, four aspects stand out.
31
As regards Uruguay, the treatment of asymmetries should assimilate the experience of the Lafta and Aladi
relatively less developed countries: they do not negotiate principles or status but practical solutions to real
problems; they do not demand solidarity, but base themselves on common interests.
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First, the establishment of expeditious procedures for incorporating the
decisions of Mercosur bodies into national legislation. Currently, a large
percentage of Mercosur countries’ decisions entailing commitments for the States
Parties are not put into practice. This results in legal uncertainty and in a sort of
double veto, as to the rule requiring consensual decisions is added the possibility
of postponing or blocking effective compliance.
Secondly, the participation of two federative States in Mercosur requires,
according to their respective constitutional provisions, the involvement of
provincial or state authorities, as well as departments and municipalities, in the
commitments undertaken.
Thirdly, a more efficient, agile institutional structure should be established,
capable of ensuring the continuity and transparence of the approach to the various
issues, gradually incorporating elements of community management. At the
process’s current stage, decisions entailing obligations for the States Parties should
continue to be intergovernmental, but Mercosur should be able to count on
some organ responsible for promoting and defending the integration process’s
integrity and orientation as well as the interests of the member countries. The
Secretariat should have greater operational capacity and technical autonomy.
The incorporation of community elements into the institutional
organization does not imply supranationalism. At a time of indefiniteness and
behaviors that deviate from the basic obligations assumed under the Treaty of
Asuncion, the governments’ control over the process is essential. But equally
essential is a proper representation of the common interest, even when the
corresponding organ lacks authority to impose decisions on the States Parties.
A Mercosur Permanent Representatives Council-Mprc should form part
of the institutional structure as an organ with well-defined functions. It should
be either a permanent intergovernmental body that ensures continuity in the
treatment of the different issues and addresses emergency situations,
32
or an
organ responsible for promoting and defending community interests before the
national administrations and Mercosur’s decision-making organs. Whatever the
decision adopted, it is necessary to formalize its functions, the selection of its
members, and its links to intergovernmental organs and the Secretariat.
32
It should be something similar to Aladi’s Representatives Committee.
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Moreover, the recent establishment of the Mercosur Parliament must be
digested by the organization. In practice, Mercosur ‘s structure would consist of
four elements: an executive arm, consisting of the Common Market Group, the
Common Market Council, and meetings of Heads of State; a Parliament
representing the Sates Parties’ political systems and structures; a mechanism
endowed with its own institutional support for the settlement of disputes; and a
technical and logistic support organ, which would be the Secretariat. The Mprc
could form part of the executive body or be the depositary of community
interests. Such a structure may not be ideal, but under the current indefiniteness
circumstances it seems more reasonable to postpone its review until the countries
have reached decisions about Mercosur’s objectives and the mechanisms for
achieving them.
In light of these observations, the Mercosur Parliament does not provide
a solution to the current problems nor presents an obstacle to it. Its functions do
not imply the introduction of supranationalism in Mercosur decisions and still
less an appropriate answer to Mercosur’s current problems. It does not arise as
a natural outcome of the process’s maturity but rather as a screen to disguise the
existing inconsistencies at the heart of its functioning. In other words, the
timeliness of this decision could be questioned, but once it has been made,
discussion about the Mercosur Parliament would mean a distraction from more
essential aspects that should be debated.
Lastly, one should consider the establishment of a definitive dispute
settlement instrument that would offer security to both State Parties and
individuals and serve as a dissuasion element in noncompliance cases. The
protection of Mercosur citizens should not leave room for the States to negotiate
their rights and obligations and to make them hostages to an exchange of tolerant
and flexible concessions among governments.
On the legal and institutional planes it is necessary to ensure equilibrium in
two aspects. First, there must be equilibrium between the scope and the exigency
of the commitments undertaken by the States Parties. As has already been pointed
out, a logical consistency is essential in the treatment of certain issues and
commitments and attention has also been called to the interdependence of access
to the subregional market, CET’s integrity, the provision of instruments for a
common trade policy, and the establishment of consultation mechanisms in
reference to macroeconomic management. Secondly, there must also be
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equilibrium in the institutional organization, which should respect the assignment
of functions to the different organs, so that these can effectively operate at each
stage of the subregional integration process.
3. Insertion into the world economy: a comprehensive proposal
A comprehensive proposal for Uruguay’s economic integration into the
region and into the world must encompass all the aspects and spheres involved
as well as providing both substantive and methodological solutions.
The presentation of the strategy by spheres of application should not make
us lose sight of the coordination and interdependence of the actions defined for
each sphere.
Participation in Mercosur will be at any rate a first magnitude element in
Uruguay’s development strategy and insertion. However, what may happen to
Mercosur does not depend on our interest or will but on decisions by all partners,
in which so far the interests and approaches of Brazil and Argentina have prevailed.
Different alternatives for Mercosur’s future will affect the extent and content of
Uruguay’s economic links outside the subregional context and on the role
Mercosur may have as an axis of our insertion into the world economy.
The strategy rests on two pillars. On the one hand, it depends on growth
based on investment and exports of goods and services and oriented toward
higher employment, income distribution, and the availability of resources to
support the programs aimed at combating poverty and exclusion. On the other
hand, it depends on the sustainability of growth, which in turn depends on the
continuous improvement of productivity and competitiveness, the adequateness
of the goods and services productive structure, the strengthening of enterprises,
education, and attention to the other vulnerability factors that affect Uruguay’s
economy. These two pillars embody Uruguay’s substantive interests that must
be included in all discussions about insertion into the world economy. Positions
related to regional integration, Mercosur, participation in the WTO and in other
multilateral economic forums, and economic negotiations with third countries
or extra-regional blocs must give priority to our expectations related to exports
of gods and services, investment, and reduction of our economy’s vulnerability.
Our disposition toward integration or our rejection of the foreign policy or
trade practices of the major economic powers cannot serve as arguments that
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would lead us to perpetuate poverty and exclusion and to be stingy about
resources for social policies.
3.1 Participation in Mercosur
For Uruguay, the regional sphere encompasses participation in Mercosur,
in Aladi and in all other functional scenarios related to market and product
diversification, within the framework of a definite strategy.
In respect of Mercosur, Uruguay is interested in the preservation of the
integrity of an integration process that is political, economic, and social; the
achievement of an agreement about its fundamental instruments; and the
establishment of a starting platform that is consistent with the agreement and
with the States Parties’ commitment capacity, as well as with a balanced view of
their interests. In other words, the future Mercosur should be defined so as to
provide a framework for the solution of current situations and thereby establish
an agreed starting point with respect to political, trade, and economic
commitments, the solution of current conflicts, and the adequateness of the
institutional structure. Not everything has to be immediately resolved but set on
a credible solution path.
For Uruguay, the best Mercosur configuration, as already pointed out,
would result from the recovery of the original objectives and expectations
regarding the establishment of a customs union and a common market, which
would be the best environment for improving competitiveness and the conditions
for integration into the global economy, complemented by effective approaches
to asymmetries. This would imply the following:
A trade and economic scheme that is respected and credible—emphasis
on these two attributes;
Effective consultation mechanisms to address macroeconomic
management;
Commitments regarding incentives to investment that balance out the
States Parties’ possibilities of attracting investment;
An effective trade policy that accepts the smaller partners’ possibility
of negotiating with third countries in the context of joint negotiations—
in the form of advances and/or complementation—or of prior
consultation with the other partners;
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Preservation—provided this does not go against essential elements of
the common trade policy—of instruments aimed at attenuating
asymmetries, such as temporary admission and free zone regimes, as
well as other instruments that would permit our development as a
regional center of logistic services for transport and trade;
An institutional entity in which community and government are in
equilibrium and which is in conformity with the commitments
undertaken by the partners, as well as ensuring legal security through
expeditious internalization procedures and effectiveness in the settlement
of disputes.
This notwithstanding, our priority should be having the States Parties
exonerate each other so that they may define a credible process with stable,
respected rules, legal and political security, and balanced commitments. It is
preferable to have a Mercosur with a lower profile than originally conceived,
but which is consistent with the commitment capability of its member countries,
and with the maintenance of its objectives and mechanisms, which are not
supported by the actual position and conduct of the States Parties. The recovery
or achievement of consensus about Mercosur’s objectives and associated policies,
whether they reaffirm or revise the essential initial decisions, is necessary, so that
the solution of punctual conflictive situations may help strengthen the process
or keep it from further deterioration. Today the lack or weakness of decisions in
this direction, coupled with a series of specific cases of deviation from the trade-
related commitments in force involving all States Parties to a greater or lesser
extent, fuels doubts about the validity of Mercosur’s instrumental and substantive
objectives, with the attendant effects on the conduct of economic operators.
A similar scenario presupposes agreement on appropriate compensation
for the existing asymmetries, including the asymmetry between Argentina and
Brazil.
At a first stage, the States Parties should agree on solutions for the different
situations affecting market access. These solutions might include transitory
mechanisms to facilitate the restructuring of certain critical sectors, or to set a
transition period for the solution of punctual difficulties in the process of
establishing a customs union. What is important is that these cases be really
exceptional and jointly administered by the States Parties, leaving aside the
bilateralism observed today. This stage would be crucial for restoring the
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credibility of Mercosur and of the member countries’ capacity to proceed with
the subregional integration process.
The main constraint to setting Mercosur on course again is the change in
the orientation of Argentina’s economic policy since 2004. Brazil’s positions
and practices have not significantly changed since the early transition period and
have not greatly affected conditions of market access. But the persistence of
protectionism in technology-intensive industrial sectors and the intention of
leading the positions of developing countries in the area of agricultural trade
pose a major obstacle to the conclusion of trade agreements with third countries.
On Argentina’s side, though, difficulties are greater. Argentina is levying exports
tax, adopting strong mechanisms of incentives to production, investment, and
exports as well as some punctual measures that affect imports. It is also attempting
to reverse the deindustrialization of the past decade, precisely in the sectors that
concentrate the trade in industrial goods with Brazil. Uruguay applies some
import restriction measures in response to those imposed by Argentina and to
the need to assist certain sectors that were particularly affected by the 2002 crisis.
We are definitely confronted with positions that reflect the different intensity
and magnitude of the turn-of-the-century crisis in Mercosur countries and the
asymmetries, particularly those between Brazil and Argentina.
Under these circumstances, an exoneration exercise and a redefinition of
the integration process might include a “strategic withdrawal” to solve the most
pressing situations and put Mercosur off to the medium and long run, putting it
on a more solid basis, with equilibrium of interests among the States Parties.
During this transition, it is necessary to observe consistency between the
commitments and the objectives that may be established. In particular, the
requirements of joint trade negotiations should be consistent with the
commitments and compliance with them in respect of market access conditions,
the functioning of the subregional market, CET’s integrity, harmonization of
trade policy instruments, and macroeconomic coordination. This aspect is
particularly important for Uruguay. Equal consistency should be sought in respect
of substantive commitments and their administration needs, institutional
organization, and the scope of the dispute settlement system.
Such an exercise might or might not produce results and might maintain
the indefiniteness scenario of the process’s development, the recurrent negotiation
of punctual noncompliance with market access commitments—which could be
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institutionalized through some kind of safeguard mechanism—, maintenance
of the present conditions pertaining to investment incentives and possibly a
conduct as a flexible bloc in multilateral negotiations and in negotiations with
third countries.
Maintaining the status quo does not mean that Mercosur will disappear or
become a mere nominal institution. But it will be necessary to find alternatives
to meet its member countries’ need of insertion into the world economy.
In any case, account should be taken of the fact that subregional projects
are being proposed and considered in the areas of physical infrastructure
development and energy integration in the Southern Cone (Mercosur + Bolivia
+ Chile + Peru) and Venezuela. Addressing these issues and greater participation
of associated countries could “oxygenate” Mercosur and contribute toward new
equilibriums. For Uruguay, physical infrastructure and energy integration are
two priority areas. However, these initiatives do not cancel out the need to solve
trade differences and charter the process’s future. Latin America has a long
experience of sidestepping in integration matters and its recurrence should be
avoided.
We must also think about Venezuela’s admission as a Mercosur member,
which has already been formally applied for, and the likely admission of Bolivia
as well. The objectives contemplated by this expansion of Mercosur are more
political than economic, although the two countries’ participation might
significantly increase the possibility of arriving at an agreement on energy
integration. The risks attached to their adhesion should be weighed. A
politicization of Mercosur that might put it in confrontation with the great
economic powers would make its negotiations with the European Union and
the United States even more difficult, if not bring them to a halt. Moreover,
negotiations aimed at incorporating new members would detract attention from
the central issues that the current State Parties should attempt to solve.
Mercosur’s development depends in large measure on the agreements
Argentina and Brazil may arrive at with respect to their reciprocal economic
relations. As a matter of fact, Mercosur was born from the agreements signed
by these two countries in the late eighties with a view to broaden and deepen
bilateral integration. In recent years, they have sought between themselves to
find solutions for their differences and to define measures to be adopted in specific
areas of integration, even though such solutions ought to be formalized by
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Mercosur organs and might affect Paraguay and Uruguay as well. We cannot
disregard the weight that the economic links and problems between Argentina
and Brazil have on Mercosur’s functioning or the fact that, under certain
circumstances, problems between the two countries might be better resolved
bilaterally. Be as it may, systematic bilateralism in internal negotiations erode the
association ties and detracts from Mercosur’s character as a joint project of four
countries.
Every country can and should have the opportunity to contribute to the
designing of the future scenario and to the solution of current or future situations.
The bilateral approach may complement or expedite but never replace joint
consideration of issues that are proper to Mercosur, Without disregarding
Argentina’s and Brazil’s weight, Uruguay can and should play a role in the
decisions aimed at defining Mercosur’s future.
In an asymmetrical society, Uruguay and Paraguay have a relevant role in
the legitimization of the direction imposed by the other partners. But when the
larger partners have a different view about how the society should be conducted
or do not have answers for crisis situations, the two countries’ role is expanded
for the search and proposal of formulas to restore lost equilibrium and preserve
the meaning and strength of the ties that bind the partners together. For playing
this role it is necessary to formulate proposals and devise approaches conducive
to a resumption of Mercosur’s political and economic dynamics. It is not a
question of sweeping under the rug the conflictive situations troubling us but of
creating an environment in which these or any other situations that affect relations
among the partners may be harmoniously addressed and resolved, in light of
the national and group reasons and strategies that have led to the establishment
of Mercosur. We should extend the same earnest, legitimate zeal with which we
seek to claim and safeguard our national interests to the preservation of our
consensual relations as democratic neighbors, avoiding the adoption without
consultation of measures that may serve legitimate national objectives but which
interfere with the equally legitimate rights and interests of the other partners. We
are not advocating supranationalism at this stage of the process but rather
common responsibility. The great task facing us is to restore the responsibility
of Mercosur’s partners toward society and to practice a common approach
discipline and ensure the transparence of national decisions liable to affect the
whole. This will be possible when all partners look at Mercosur as an instrument
for social and economic development, political equilibrium, and preservation
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of democracy in our region, as well as for enhancing its position as a bloc on the
international scene.
Leaving Mercosur is not an option for Uruguay; neither was staying out
of it when it was established. What should be discussed and defined is what kind
of Mercosur is best for Uruguay, in light of the possibilities of negotiation that
can be predicted today, and what is the role Mercosur can play in our strategy
for insertion into the world economy.
Uruguay’s trade and economic relations with the other members of Aladi
have been traditionally weak, with the exception of relations with Chile and,
more recently, with Mexico. However, these markets do provide an opportunity
for diversification, both as regards trade in goods and services and attracting
investments.
With respect to Chile and Mexico it is convenient to deepen the negotiation
of market access conditions to overcome certain barriers, particularly in the
area of sanitation and trade in services. They can also be a source of appropriate
investments for making small and medium enterprises viable. Possibilities in
relation to Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru are not so clear, but all diversification
possibilities should be explored.
As regards the other regional organizations, Uruguay’s importance for
improving physical interconnection and energy integration should be taken into
account. Active, constructive participation in these organizations is important
for making the countries of the region aware of the Uruguayan economy’s
vulnerability problems.
3.2 Bilateral relations
Depending on the results achieved in redefining Mercosur, Uruguay has
two basic options for defining its own strategy for insertion into the world
economy.
One option would maintain regional integration through Mercosur as a
platform for its insertion into the world economy, with flexibilization of the
common trade policy and joint negotiation to seek links with third countries
that might help reduce our economy’s vulnerability and contribute to the
sustainability of our national economic development. In this case, links with
third countries would not be seen as a residual element of the strategy for insertion
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into the world economy but as a factor to redress asymmetrical relations in the
region.
The other option would be associated with Mercosur’s continuing
stagnation and indefiniteness and would attempt to ensure the security and stability
of economic ties, involving Mercosur, bilateral relations with neighbors,
participation in the multilateral system, and trade and investment agreements
with third countries.
Mercosur is not the only sphere for the management of relations with
Argentina and Brazil. Relations with the two countries will continue to enjoy
priority and privilege under any circumstances. Mercosur’s shortcomings can be
bypassed through bilateral negotiations.
It will be necessary to define and implement a new approach to trade policy
so as to preserve an open market and to lay greater emphasis on the large markets
of developing countries (China, India) with a an eye on attracting investments
and technology, exporting services and knowledge, exporting agroindustrial
goods, concessions on labor-intensive products
33
, and development of
production/marketing niches, all of which has led or may lead to trade and
economic cooperation agreements.
Investment guarantee treaties, free trade treaties or even agreements limited
to certain goods or punctual aspects are instruments we have utilized and of
which we can make wider use for the duration of Mercosur’s indefiniteness. There
are no legal obstacles to trade negotiation with third countries. There is no logical
basis for requiring a strict discipline in this regard as long as there is no effective
program for establishing a customs union and as long as noncompliance persists
in respect of market access and the CET.
Without prejudice to our participation in joint negotiations Mercosur may
carry out, Uruguay should prepare and plan negotiations with third countries
with a view to potentiate trade in relatively specific sectors or products indicated
by our country’s exporting possibilities. The instruments for exploiting these
possibilities may vary, but it is necessary to bear in mind the provisions of article
XXIV of Gatt.
33
In 2004, under concessions granted by the United States through programs to combat drug trafficking, Peru
exported over 700 million dollars in apparel to the United States, while Colombia exported about 400 million
dollars. These exports had a great impact on employment and income in the two countries.
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Uruguay should define its specific interests to be negotiated at least with
the United States, Canada, the European Union, Japan, China, Korea, and Russia
and do a systematic analysis of the possibilities offered by other markets.
Uruguay has advantages and disadvantages in these negotiations. On the
one hand, the volume of our supply would not have a strong impact on most
markets; this could facilitate the negotiation of better access conditions. On the
other hand, though, the size of our economy limits the expectations of other
countries and may discourage negotiation.
Uruguay’s actions in this connection must be transparent and coordinated
with Mercosur, while avoiding to hurt joint negotiations and using them to
improve its negotiating capacity.
3.3 Participation in the multilateral system
Uruguay has little possibility of influencing the decisions of the WTO
or other multilateral organizations. It can have no determinant weight in the
definition of common positions Mercosur or other countries may adopt at these
forums, either.
Nevertheless, active participation in the multilateral sphere and in the
definition of Mercosur’s positions is important for preventing the effects of
decisions made at these forums on our trade and economy as well as for projecting
our country’s image.
4. Conclusions
1. Foreign policy should be based on the definition of a medium- and
long-term strategy. Though important, the discussion of punctual aspects should
not encourage decision-making counter to its the hard-core position.
2. Uruguay’s insertion should be on three levels: multilateral, regional,
and bilateral. The globalization process favors the discussion of vital issues in
light of broader scenarios that for long were restricted to national policy.
3. The economic opening concept reflects an incontrovertible reality that
may be managed, but there is no denying that it is the main instrument for raising
the productivity of the national economies.
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4. Integration and Mercosur are irreplaceable scenarios that arise from
our economic reality and, essentially, from geopolitics. Nevertheless, our country
should redefine its stance in accordance with the changes occurring inside and
outside our region. Scenarios that are not inclusive are not advisable.
5. Insertion into the world economy at the multilateral level and, at the
regional level, integration and Mercosur can be seen as political projects not to
be confused with political ideology. For Uruguay, confrontation is not viable as
a relationship style and runs counter its foreign policy. Principles and pragmatism
can be compatible if managed according to a defined strategy.
6. Small economies can assume a protagonist role owing yo their capacity
to advance proposals, not only in defense of their national interests but also in
the conduct and analysis of the scenarios in which they participate. Their proposals
should be heeded because of the foundation on which they rest and the
professional earnestness with which they are formulated.
7. All the issues raised by Uruguay are related to a strategic project.
Accordingly, an interministerial, interdisciplinary negotiating team should be
set up, centered on its institutional management and with capacity for
simultaneously addressing numerous scenarios. Without a strategic conducting
wire and without technical support, it will lose its direction as well as respect and
credibility inside and outside the country.
The State’s Foreign Policy is also made of concessions by all the country’s
political forces. The lack of a clear message or the differences brought out into
the public have no effect other than intensifying the country’s vulnerability.
Version: João Coelho
DEP
“There is another world and it is in this one”
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“There is another world
and it is in this one”
José Vicente Rangel
*
*
Executive Vice-President of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela.
have always endeavored to ensure that this is not a mere republican
liturgical act and that, on the contrary, its substance should transcend empty
formality, and that this obligation incumbent upon ministers and high-ranking
State authorities under article 244 of the Constitution should not become an
ineffectual ritual.
This act signifies the acknowledgement by one of the government
branches—the Executive Branch, in this case—of the authority that embodies
the people’s sovereignty, namely, the National Assembly. It signifies the
acknowledgement of this body’s control and inspection authority over
administrative and political management. Therein lies its importance and meaning.
Today, once again, the Executive Branch submits is management to the
review of the people’s representative body. It does it democratically, without
reservations, and in a transparent way, based on the fundamental principle of
this body’s control over the functions of each of the government branches, as
established by the 1999 Constitution and in accordance with the system of
Presentation of the report and rendering of accounts by the members of the
Council of Ministers to the National Assembly. Caracas, march 2, 2006.
I
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DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
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cooperation linking the different government bodies for the achievement of the
State’s general objectives. These are our guiding principles. This is what underlies
the Bolivarian Constitution. This is the way it is under the actual Rule of Law,
such as it exists in Venezuela.
In connection with this presentation of the Report and Rendering of
Accounts by the members of the Council of Ministers, let us briefly look at the
political and institutional process that started on January 23, 1958. The deception
that this process represented for the people’s hopes and for the very functioning
of representative democracy became evident precisely as these kinds of event
were examined.
Under the Fourth Republic there was a succession of eight constitutional
periods dominated by two alternating parties under puntofijismo. During this long
lapse of time the presentation of the Report and Rendering of Accounts to the
Parliament by the ministers was a merely symbolic practice. The norm established
by the 1961 Constitution was dead letter. Reports were never reviewed. They
never elicited an institutional response or gave rise to an investigation for the
purposes of approval or disapproval. The opposition at that time could
accomplish nothing, except for hot testimonial debates, whose effects were
curtailed with bureaucracy’s complicity. Nothing could be done in view of the
famous, overwhelming wave of raised hands directed from a distance by
Miraflores and party heads.
And what about the submission of reports under the Fifth Republic?
I have a record of participation in this kind of event as I have been Minister of
Foreign Affairs and of Defense as well as Vice-President of the Republic under
President Chávez. As such, I have considerable experience, coupled with a feeling
of frustration. Each time I discharge a constitutional mandate, I stress importance
of this and call upon the Legislature to undertake a responsible review of the
ministerial reports as this is undoubtedly a prime opportunity to assess the quality
and effectiveness of management in the different areas of public administration
and to monitor the functioning of the Government and of the State.
Mr. President, Deputies, what I am about to say should be taken as a criticism
of the Bolivarian representation at the National Assembly in the recent past. It is
true that the Revolution parliamentarians have had to face difficult, complex
situations, episodes in which the very existence of the democratic, constitutional
order has been at stake, which obviously consumed time, energy, and resources.
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Nevertheless, my view is that there is no valid excuse when ineludible
commitments to the people and the revolutionary process are at issue. I do
believe that self-criticism is healthy. At the outset of a particular stage such as the
current one, all the more demanding because of the burden the people have laid
upon your shoulders, at a time when the productivity and image of the Legislature
depend solely on you, the commitment to duty becomes all the greater. This is
the challenge before you at this crucial moment.
Now then, what has the opposition, significantly represented in the Fifth
Republic Parliament, done with respect to the reports? Nothing! It did not even
attend the presentation of reports as mandated by the Constitution. We should
have been able to count on similarly represented puntofijismo opponents to review,
with decision power, the ministerial reports of that time. But this did not happen.
This was precluded by the condition of being a minority in a regimen that crushed
dissidence. I have no personal regrets but deem it important to point out this
contrast and to make a contribution to the Venezuelans’ historical memory.
These observations, of a strongly testimonial character, lead us to a
reflection I consider important—a reflection about the concept of opposition
and the oppositions role in a democracy, which goes beyond mere representation.
Foreign visitors often show interest in learning about the Venezuelan
opposition and I usually say that we have a serious problem with it, not because
it is strong, active, and intelligent, but because it does not exist for the sake of
the country’s democratic functioning. It does not exist for the sake of the Rule
of Law or of the citizens, but for the sake of extra-constitutional adventure.
Opposition does not consist only in opposing a given government but
also in helping to arrive at, civilized, reliable civic options. The Venezuelan
opposition has done its best to disappear from the scene instead of democratically
leading a major segment of public opinion. This is how it has changed from a
situation when it had power to put entrepreneurs, priests, the military, governors,
mayors, and deputies on the streets to what it is today—nothing, a chaos, a lethal
abyss where it accumulates mistakes and inconsequent actions: April 11, the oil
strike, the terrorist “Guarimba Plan,” Plaza Altamira.
Do you, María Cristina Iglesias, Aristóbulo Istúriz, Nicolás Maduro, recall
the surrealist dialogue with opposition representatives around that table at the
Meliá hotel, when they proposed a provocatively unconstitutional consultation
referendum, for the sole purpose of bringing heat to bear on the streets in
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preparation for the oil strike? From the hotel they moved on to Plaza Altamira,
as if nothing had happened, holding up the arms of military traitors, and
instigating a coup d’état.
Does one not know the oppositions history in the election processes during
the Fifth Republic and the immoral trick of the subsequent questioning based
on false denunciations? Where are, for instance, the so often promised and
publicized proofs of fraud in the August 2004 recall referendum? Why did not
the opposition participate in the December 4 parliamentary elections? Was it
because it did not trust the electoral system or because it was afraid to realize its
size? The fact is that when this opposition wins the election, as was the case in the
gubernatorial elections in Zulia and Nueva Esparta and in the mayoral elections
of Chacao, Bruta, El Hatillo, Lecherias and various other Zulia locations, there
is no fraud; but when the Bolivarians win in these same gubernatorial and mayoral
elections, yes, then there is fraud. Is the electoral system being actually questioned,
or is it a question of excuses used by an opposition that lacks votes and must
hide its weakness by alleging that it does not know the electoral system? The
answer is obvious.
My intent is not to give advice to the opposition but to talk about my
experience as an opposition individual that has always been in a flagrant minority
within the ranks—a loner, a target of frequent threats together with other
companions who have persevered without weakening and without abdicating
our principles.
My parliamentary friends, I have a logical question: What is the oppositions
purpose? Answer: to devise alternatives, as did President Chávez, for instance.
How did President Chávez wage opposition? Rising from below, with no
resources, he built a following on the streets, brought together various segments
of the population, patiently working, without precipitation and without
provocation. This is a fact. We could cite many other examples from the history
of our country and of the world.
When those who call themselves opposition are incapable of waging
opposition, they lose their legitimacy. They are anything but opposition; and this
is what is happening in our country now. The Government and the parties that
back the revolutionary process hold meetings, workshops, dialogue; they hold
discussions at the Miraflores Palace, at the Vice-President of the Republic’s office,
at the ministries, in the centers where civilians, parties, labor organizations, workers,
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and professionals hold civic meetings with various segments of society:
entrepreneurs, the Fedecamaras that represent the largest businesses (elements
who have broken the Land Law, for instance), and with the heavy weights of the
economy; with agricultural producers, cattle raisers, estate owners, workers,
students, university presidents, academic professionals; with the Catholic
hierarchy, evangelical churches, and representatives of the Jewish community
and of all the communities settled in our country. However, it is impossible to
meet with the so-called opposition parties and leaders, who nevertheless do not
hesitate in meeting with members of the U.S. Embassy and with any visiting
Chávez opponent. As a result, we have an opposition that does not engage in
politics, holds no dialogue, and which thus remains unseen, except by the media.
Today, for instance, the opposition members are not on these premises, as they
have, of their own volition, refused to participate and to represent a segment of
the population. But they were absent even before, when they were by right elected
deputies, failing to discharge the fundamental ethical duty of at least attending
the Chamber’s sessions. Accordingly, their absence is not noticeable. We do not
notice it.
This is why I am going to say something that perhaps, out of prudence, I
should not say. But sometimes it is convenient to put prudence slightly aside.
Irresponsible attitudes such as those taken by the party-and politically-determined
opposition end up by eliciting the citizens’ repudiation, which entails the risk of
the country’s getting used to functioning without opposition, which is bad and
undesirable and should be repelled by every democratic-minded individual. It is
not as if the Government bans opposition—under Chávez no party has been
outlawed and nobody has been persecuted for expressing himself and exposing
his ideas, as occurred under puntofijismo, with the closing, for example, of the
Communist Party, MIR, and other political and social organizations. Neither has
parliamentary representation been subject to repressive measures, as occurred
when several left deputies were detained in the sixties in flagrant violation of the
Constitution. At this current stage, there have been parties involved in conspiracy,
open defenders of a coup, and their legality has been respected. There have also
been parliamentarians who engaged in adventures against constitutional order,
such as a deputy who used to sit right here, who was appointed minister by
Pedro Carmona. Nevertheless, his immunity was not taken away nor was that of
others that had a similar conduct.
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In this political and social process, which is profoundly democratic and
respectful of the Rule of Law, the opposition is not suppressed or persecuted.
What happens is that the opposition such as we have eliminates itself. It is not
excluded; it excludes itself.
Let us look at what has happened since December 4, 2005, an emblematic
date when the opposition excluded itself from parliamentary life. The country
keeps on functioning. Polls indicate that its refusal to participate was a grave
mistake, an opinion shared by many who abstained. The National Assembly is
functioning normally—I even dare to say that it is functioning better than it did
when the opposition held to its seats here. It now legislates with greater speed
and efficiency. At the Vice-President’s office I have a list of the projects now being
discussed in the various Assembly Commissions. It is quite an impressive list.
Deputies have gone out on the streets to establish a live, direct connection
with the communities. A fruitful, effective cooperation has been established with
the other Government branches. Investigations are being carried out with
earnestness and thoroughness: the case of the Ezequiel Zamora de Barinas sugar
mill and of some others is illustrative and evidences the determination of the
different branches of government to combat corruption and the old vices that
plague public administration.
It is clear that the democratic response, which puts an end to the
oppositions irresponsible way of acting out of the institutions, is a milestone. It
is a responsible reaction on the part of the Bolivarian forces to the oppositions
irresponsibility, to the torpor of this sector that still acts as if it were the
Government to which it became accustomed after forty years of exercising power
with impunity, making it forget what it is to be in the opposition. I am saying all
this because the opposition such as we have must be urgently criticized so that it
may resurge in proper form to play a serious, responsible, and democratic role.
This is what all of us Venezuelans desire.
We, the members of President Hugo Chávezs Cabinet, submit this report
to you, the people’s representatives, to be carefully, thoroughly checked with a
scalpel, X-rays, and laser beam or with whatever you may deem appropriate,
just as the opposition used to do when it was present at this Parliament. We do
not want special privileges. The members of President Chávez’s Cabinet do not
want them. If there are management flaws and vices, please proceed without
inhibitions, as it is incumbent upon an autonomous, sovereign, fully responsible
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State body. Differently from his predecessors, Chávez, the chief of the Executive
Branch, does not cover up for anyone, does not tergiversate, does not protect
the corrupt, drug traffickers, and dishonest people. Nor does he tolerate lack of
ability in his government apparatus. You must rigorously play the control and
criticism role others have abstained from. The way is open before you to engage
in decisive action.
We submit to your consideration the outcome of persistent team work,
free of pressure by outside groups and of economic and social interests other
than the determination to govern for the majority. Briefly, this report covers the
following key aspects among others:
Ministry of the Interior and Justice
The identification system has been reinforced in 2005. To this end, a
Fundación Misión Identidad [Identitfication Mission Foundation] was
established, which made possible the reliable, sure, and efficient issuing
of identity cards to 4,752,614 citizens.
The modernization of the identification and foreign status systems and
the records and notary’s offices was begun.
The Citizens’ Security Plan was launched, under which both prevention
and State security actions are undertaken.
Under a joint policy of the Ministry of the Interior and the Ministry of
Defense, the latter represented by components such as the National
Guard, a far-reaching action has been undertaken against drug trafficking.
Incidentally, the U.S. Government once again has come out with the
rigmarole it repeats every year, citing Venezuela as a kind of drug
trafficking paradise. In an incisive statement carried by the media
yesterday, Minister Chacón refuted the reckless affirmation by the U.S.
Government, which has no moral authority to set itself up as a judge in
this matter. The Washington Government has no moral authority
because the country with the highest consumption of drugs is precisely
the United States, with approximately forty million drug users.
In addition, high-ranking members of President George Bush’s
government are involved with drug trafficking and the U.S. financial
system is also deeply interpenetrated by the drug traffic. The U.S.
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Government not only lacks moral authority to accuse Venezuela in this
regard; from the practical standpoint of a well-coordinated policy to
combat drug trafficking, it has had a resounding failure. Today it uses
the fight against drug trafficking as a mere political banner, as drug
trafficking and traffickers are to be found in the United States and not
in Venezuela.
A plan to make the penitentiary system more humane has been
implemented, covering the entire inmate population of 19,879
individuals.
A public order policy without repression is in place. The terrible
instrument of repression to address the public order issue has been
thoroughly extirpated from Venezuela. This does not mean that no
punctual occurrences arise, owing to irresponsible policemen and
anarchical police forces. I do say, though, in an absolutely responsible
way, that repressing citizens is not a State policy, a policy of this
Government, differently from what happened under Fourth Republic
governments, when repression was the essence of the public order
policy. In this respect, there is a world of difference in the way the
National Government has acted each time a human rights violation has
occurred. It has not shirked its responsibility; it has put into action the
competent jurisdictional bodies.
As regards drug trafficking, I should add that drug seizures in the country
have risen forty percent since the DEA left Venezuela.
Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Something very important happened in 2005: the National Government,
through the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, coordinated humanitarian and
solidarity actions with countries of the region. As usual, this elicited
irresponsible criticism from opposition sectors, for which human tragedy
means nothing, under the coarse allegation that we are spending the
Venezuelans’ money outside the country, with the intention of belittling
this policy’s importance.
I want to tell the people’s representatives and the media that we are
proud that, without neglecting our country’s needs—as witness the
missions through which the Venezuelan poor have received support
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from the State as never before—we have been able to help men and
women in Latin America who have been hit by tragedy and natural
disasters. The fact that we can reach out to the populations of Granada,
Santo Domingo, and Jamaica and to give a hand to the victims of Bolivia
and of any nation hit by tragedy should fill us Venezuelans with pride
and satisfaction, as our convictions do override petty considerations.
Our foreign policy has encouraged multipolarity and faced up to the
sole pole represented by the great imperial power. We do not accept a
world dominated by one power. We believe in multipolarity, which
allows the manifestation of all expressions of the world in a framework
of peace and dialogue.
With the firmness characteristic of the Bolivarian lineage, we have given
impetus to Latin American integration, showing a determination and a
calling evident in the way President Chávez, through the Foreign
Ministry, has multiplied the integration effort. As a result, Venezuela
has joined Mercosur. This is one of the most notable accomplishments
of our foreign policy, which no one, save those not attuned to our
country, can repudiate.
We currently maintain the best relations with every country in the world,
including countries with which we have political and ideological
differences. Only with one we do not have good relations, owing to its
own fault, not ours, namely, the United States. Venezuela’s Foreign
Ministry and its Head of State have earnestly sought good relations
with the United States, but with the despicable team now presiding over
the White House it is impossible to maintain good relations. The gang
of four consisting of George Bush, Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld,
and John Negroponte precludes the possibility of maintaining relations
in a climate of dignity and mutual respect. Although Venezuela is
conscious that it is a small country that cannot militarily compete with
the Empire, it exerts its sovereignty in utter dignity and is not willing to
renounce it.
Owing to our foreign policy, each day we become better known in the
world as well as better recognized, which may be even more important.
We become more recognized because of our domestic achievements,
the design of our foreign policy, the way we have forged an alliance not
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only with Latin America but with the world in general, in the pursuit of
a policy of understanding and dialogue.
Each day we feel prouder of being Venezuelan in the concert of nations.
This is no rhetoric figure on my part. This is confirmed by a survey
published today by the National Opinion Research Center, which says
that Venezuelans and Americans are the proudest of their respective
countries.
This survey shows, for instance, that Venezuela ranks first with an 18.4
score, followed by the United States at 17.7; Australia at 17.89; Austria
at 17.4; and Chile at 17.1.
Why this recognition? Why is this so? Because we Venezuelans have
implemented a process that confers dignity on the poor. The poor have
ceased to be inhabitants of a country to become citizens and if you are
citizen of a country, you are also a citizen of the world. This is why no
matter what some members of the media may say with the intent of
belittling the Venezuelans’ capacity and of demoralizing them, the result
is totally different. This country is proud of what it is today and of what
it will continue to be.
Ministry of Finance
The number of loans approved by the public financial system rose 94
percent as compared with 2004.
Significant features of financial management have been the entry into
operation of the Treasury Bank and the establishment of Fonden, the
National Development Fund.
Collections by the National Customs and Tax Integrated Service-Seniat
in 2005 totaled 38.46 billion bolivares, a 142.1-percent compliance with
the established target. Whereas before no taxes were paid, the might
who did not pay them now have to do so and are subject to collection.
A total of 327 applications for foreign exchange surrender (ALD) have
been processed, amounting to 20,156 million, a 13.6-percent increase
over 2004.
A new methodology has been adopted for the national public budget
and has been applied in the preparation of the 2006 budget.
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The famous Argentine debt bonds, so much questioned by the
opposition and some mediocre economists, have earned Venezuela
profits of about US$75 million. Moreover, half of these bonds, of the
money invested in them, worth billions of dollars, have already been
bought by the private banking sector, consisting of twenty six Venezuelan
banks. The bonds were not mediocre but their critics certainly were.
The country risk, which stood at 270 in 2005, dropped to 217 yesterday,
as I have been told by Nelson Merentes. We are on the brink of
investment, that is, we are in and optimal situation that offers
extraordinary prospects for foreign investment.
Ministry of Defense
In 2005, joint work by the military and the civilian sectors became
consolidated. In the barracks, perfect tranquility has prevailed—
tranquility conducive to work, professionalism, and the definitive defeat
of any type of adventure. This was the outcome of the historic connection
established between the National Armed Force and the Venezuelan
people. This binomial, which has been a decisive factor over seven years
in the defense of the constitutional order and the revolutionary process,
became firmly and unequivocally established in 2005.
At this point I must express recognition for the National Armed Force,
the highest military authority.
Several projects have been implemented in connection with the
procurement and maintenance of weapons systems and with training,
as never before. Barracks and military equipment have been revamped.
Today our Armed Force is uniquely and efficiently equipped, also as
never before.
Projects have been implemented to revamp and modernize the National
Armed Force’s infrastructure, with emphasis on units along our borders.
Our border policy has been reactivated. We have thousands of men
and tens of posts along our borders as required by security and defense
as well as by the need to counter the scourge of contraband and drug
trafficking. We have for the first time managed to put firmly in place a
National Armed Force security cordon along the 2,216-km border we
share with Colombia. Our borders have become a key factor in the
Government’s policy, closely linked to our national defense.
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As regards education, enrollment at Universidad Nacional
Experimental de las Fuerzas Armadas – Unefa has risen nationwide.
The current number of Unefa students is impressive.
The general lineaments of the new military doctrine have been defined
and publicized. For the first time in our modern history, Venezuela has
a national security and defense policy. Not a borrowed policy based on
a design conceived abroad, but a policy formulated by Venezuelans, by
Venezuelan officers, in accordance with our national defense needs. The
old notion that the Armed Force operated as a kind of occupation
force has been superseded by that of a Force closely associated with
the nation and the people and identified with common objectives. This
is the new security and defense reality in which, incidentally, the
asymmetry in case of an eventual conflict does play a decisive role.
Ministry of Light Industry and Commerce
The Ministry of Light Industry and Commerce promoted Venezuelan
exports on the international market by holding five major trade
negotiation rounds with Chile, Colombia, Cuba, the United States, and
Uruguay, which resulted in business deals totaling US$1,637,500. The
Ministry has also held the Exponaval Venezuela Internacional 2005, at
which it publicized the 2006-2010 Venezuelan Naval Industry Investment
Plan, which foresees a demand totaling 79 billion bolivares.
It has strengthened the strategic alliance for technological transfer,
capability building, training, and trade among the countries of the region,
in the context of the First Latin American Encounter of Enterprises
Rehabilitated by Workers, held in Caracas.
The domestic market has been strengthened as a result of five business
rounds, when the demand identified by twenty three enterprises and
government agencies operating in the area of goods, works, and services
totaled 1.4 billion bolivares.
In connection with the Executive Branch’s plan of endogenous and social
economic development and productive job generation launched by the
Government, the Ministry implemented the Mobile Venezuela and the
family basket programs. The objective is to ensure the populations rights
in every area of the national public action.
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Ministry of Basic Industry and Mining
The price of iron ore sold by CVG Ferrominera was revised. Since
November 15, 2005 the price was set at 100 percent of the international
price, whereas it stood at 40 percent before that date.
On a proposal by the Ministry, the Executive Branch issued Decree
3895, a landmark for the national transformation industry, which
guarantees the provision of raw materials to be made into products
with higher added-value.
An investment plan has been launched to rehabilitate basic enterprises
and to give rise to a new generation of enterprises in key sectors for the
country’s industrial development.
Work has been expedited on the construction of the second bridge
over the Orinoco River and the Caruachi Hydroelectric Plant, both to
be opened in the first semester of 2006.
A US$750-million loan has been approved by the Inter-American
Development Bank for the Tocoma hydroelectric project.
Ministry of Tourism
The Ministry of Tourism supported the promulgation of the reform
of the Tourism Organic Law.
Preliminary investment was made in the following endogenous
development nuclei: La Tortuga, Morro de Puerto Santo, Río Caribe,
Canaima, El Yaque, el Tirano, and Chichiriviche.
Norms have been established for financing the endogenous
development of domestic tourism.
The 1-percent collection target has been exceeded, with an increase of
57.62 percent.
The Ministry held the First Caracas International Tourism Fair-Ficar
2005, in which fifty-six countries participated.
Support was given to the development of communities with tourist
assets, through the reinforcement of 17 mixed state funds.
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Through the tourism capacity-building program, 31,741 people have
received training.
The Ministry coordinated the expansion of the Venezuelan Consortium
of Aeronautic Industries and Air Services-Convisa, which carried
173,208 passengers and totaled 3,074 of flight hours in its first year.
Ministry of Agriculture and Land
A Crop and Production Plan and an Integral Production and National
Agricultural Development Plan for 2006 have been prepared.
A total 6.33 billion bolivares has been spent on the financing of 2.32
million hectares and to help raising the agricultural GDP above 2.6
percent.
Legal security has been granted 143,212 peasant families, small and
medium producers in an area of 1,215,152.68 hectares, who received
3,000 cartas agrarias (agrarian deeds), 80 land titles, 780 proofs of right
of continued occupancy, and 29 funds have been redeemed.
Ministry of Higher Education
The Sucre Mission received 94,787 new college graduates, a 72.7-percent
increase over 2004
The Community Integral Medicine training program recruited 15,325
students, after training 5,000 people’s consultants.
The Cuba-Venezuela agreement has been enhanced and a Latin American
School of Medicine has been established in Ciudad Gurí.
Fundayacucho benefited 8,586 active students.
A total 20.7 billion bolivares have been paid out under 2002-2003
homologation norms.
In accordance with the transparence policy, the Ministry paid the
outstanding labor debt of 646 billion bolivares, thereby benefiting
95,031 university professors.
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Ministry of Education and Sports
In 2005 Venezuela was declared free of illiteracy. The eradication of
illiteracy was a historic victory.
The Simoncito Plan [day care], the Bolivarian elementary and secondary
schools, and the Robinsonian technical schools projects have been
consolidated.
Enrollment rose to 11,810,336, including the various educational levels
and modalities, as well as educational missions. By the end of 2005 we
should have 16 million students. You can figure the percentage in a
population of 25 million. I believe this is a world record.
Over 150,000 students benefited from food programs.
Grants were awarded 1,125 educational and cultural institutions.
A total 3,560 teachers were trained.
Under the productive school project to contribute to food security,
3,000 agroecological school vegetable gardens were established.
The Seventh National School Games event was held and the participation
of Venezuelan delegations in various international sport events received
support. As if this were not enough, we won the Caribbean Series. We
have also won the Rio Carnival competition, which has bothered some,
who are in mourning over it.
Ministry of Health
The national public health system has been strengthened by the
consolidation of the Barrio Adentro I, II, and III program, which has
built 957 consultation offices, 12 popular clinics, seven of which are
already open; 100 rehabilitation rooms, and a high technology center.
Under the “Yo Soy” National Identification Plan, 75 hospital units for
recording births have been set up and are in operation.
I know that this review is somewhat long. I could not digest it when I
was a deputy, but as the opposition says that we have done nothing in
Government, it serves at least to show it what we have done in just one
year—2005.
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The National Hygiene Institute produced 6,685,791 vaccine doses to
be used in the extended immunization and zoonoses control program
and 100,000 doses of new combined tetra- and penta-vaccines (Cuban-
Venezuelan Agreement) as part of the development of new products
to meet the needs identified by the Ministry.
With respect to major health problems affecting the population, it has
been possible to enhance the effectiveness of cancer control.
Investment on prevention and on guaranteed treatment for all individuals
living with HIV has increased.
Further progress has been made by the organ transplant program, with
more than 200 transplants made.
Progress has also been made in the provision of bone implants,
ortheses, and prostheses.
Guaranteed free treatment of all tuberculosis patients has been
maintained.
Ministry of Labor
Seven Labor Inspection Offices have been modernized in accordance
with the new model of administrative labor justice that dignifies and
expands the effective coverage of services.
The stability and job preservation scheme has been extended until March
31, 2006, which benefits all workers earning a basic monthly salary of
up to 633,600 bolivares.
Five hundred forty-eight new local and national labor organizations
have been registered and 2,528 have updated their records.
A total 564 collective bargaining agreements have been signed, which
benefited 195,549 workers directly.
Nationwide, 260,833 users have been universally and freely assisted with
advice and representation before administrative instances as well as
judicial instances with labor competence.
The National Employment Service has signed up 7,490 enterprises and
130,074 users of the service.
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Under the co-management scheme involving workers, entrepreneurs,
and the Government, three enterprises have been established and are in
operation: The Endogenous Venezuelan Paper Industry-Invepal, the
Endogenous Venezuelan Valve Industry-Inveval, and the Endogenous
Venezuelan Textile Industry-Invetex. This is an ongoing process that
will be further intensified in the coming months.
At the hospital ambulatory care centers maintained by the Venezuelan
Social Security Institute-IVSS, 6,283,690 patients received attention.
Ministry of Infrastructure
Work on the construction of the bypass viaduct in Vargas state has
begun. The shortcut has been open. I prefer the word shortcut to bypass.
Incidentally, at the presentation of his report, Minister Ramón Carrizales
will hand out the book with a little bag containing the screws.
The country’s major highways have been repaired.
A Latin American Children’s Cardiologic Hospital has been built.
Housing rents have been frozen.
Significant progress has been made in the construction of mass
transportation systems to be inaugurated in 2006: the metro systems of
Maracaibo, Caracas, Los Teques e Valencia. And they say we have not
built anything!
A trolleybus system is being developed in the state of Mérida—the
Operative Vitrina Tromérida.
The Caracas-Tuy Medio railway system is integrated into the basic metro
network and the National Railway Plan.
Progress has been made in respect of the “deep-water port”
construction project.
A Water Bodies and Islands Council has been set up.
Implementation of a project has begun to modernize the air control
system nationwide. Today our airports are first rate. This is the root of
the problem we have with the United States, which refuses to recognize
it and this is why U.S. airlines cannot fly to Venezuela.
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Ministry of Energy and Oil
Implementation of a policy aimed at full sovereignty in respect of oil
was started, the beginning with the termination of the so-called
operational agreements and with the changeover to mixed-economy
enterprises. We are talking about oil sovereignty as this country never
new before. A stop has been put to the disorder prevailing under the
former PDVSA management. Today Venezuelan oil is truly Venezuela’s.
It is administered and managed by Venezuelans, for the sake and benefit
of Venezuelans and nobody else.
For this very reason, the Siembra del Petróleo Plan has been given a thrust.
Also given a thrust was the quantification and certification Magna Reserva
project in the Orinoco Oil Belt.
The harmful tetraethilic lead is no longer a component of our gas.
Progress has been made in respect of the Petrocaribe and Petrosur
energy cooperation agreements.
The National Petrochemical Plan was drafted and put into execution
with the reactivation of the fertilizer plant of the El Tablazo
petrochemical complex and the development of an olefins plant in Jose.
Unrestricted support, both financial and organizational, has been
extended to the various missions, that is, support to the people. Oil for
the people.
Impulse has been given through Fonden and Fodespa to the endogenous
development nuclei, social production enterprises, and cooperatives as
well as to the implementation of major infrastructure works, such as
railway trunks, hydroelectric plants, and highways.
Ministry of the Environment
Fifty-nine kilometers of steel tube have been installed as the first stage
of the Bolivarian aqueduct of Falcon State, (a 215-billion bolivares
investment) which will benefit 450,000 inhabitants.
The beds of rivers affected by the February flash flooding caused by a
fierce tropical trough (vaguada) have been restored (a 110-billion
bolivares investment).
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Work has begun on recovery and maintenance of the Guaire River basin
(a 128-billion bolivares investment).
Work has begun to restore the El Guapo dam (a 66-bllion bolivares
investment).
The Los Guayos, Taiguaiguay, and La Mariposa treatment plants in the
states of Aragua and Carabobo have been restored, thereby advancing
the drainage of Lake Valencia.
Construction work has been done by Mesas Técnicas de Agua in the
construction of aqueducts and sewerage.
Implementation of the National Productive Reforestation Plan was
begun, with the setting-up of 34 conservation committees and ten
conservation brigades.
A first endogenous development nucleus was established in the Muaina
community in the Delta Amacuro state.
Twenty-one land deeds for over 600,000 hectares have been awarded
to the ethnic groups Kariña, Warao, Pumé, and Kiwi.
Ministry of Planning and Development
The Ministry of Planning and Development coordinated the
macroeconomic policies in support of the consolidation of economic
growth.
It gave impulse to compliance with the millennium goals and promoted
a social inclusion analysis.
It prepared the Annual National Operational Plan according to a new
concept, whereby projects became the central axis of the public
administration agencies’ annual management.
It established a hierarchy of government actions according to integration
fronts and decentralization axes.
It promoted the Northern Plain Axis as an area on which to focus the
land policy.
It brought inflation under control—inflation was less than 4 percent in
February. I do not know anything about economy, so I asked Jorge
Giordani and Merentes, who are experts, if this meant that we were
José Vicente Rangel
DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
219
entering a deflation phase, as I had understood that deflation was worse
than inflation. They told me that deflation is not a danger when there is
growth and we are indeed growing as never occurred in Venezuela before.
Ministry of Science and Technology
The Ministry of Science and Technology has assumed responsibility
for encouraging and developing knowledge generation and transfer
processes geared to endogenous development, national sovereignty,
and social inclusion.
It has supported the promulgation of the Science, Technology, and
Innovation Law.
It has signed a Simón Bolívar satellite agreement. We now have a satellite;
we are now a first-class country.
It has established the Venezuelan Technological Industry for Assembling
Bolivarian Computers; the Technological Innovation Center; the
National Telecommunications Development and Research Center; and
the National Chemical Technology Center, among others.
It has put the Pegamma plant into operation.
It has built a pharmaceutical plant.
It has implemented the National Seed Plan.
It has established 76 productive innovation networks, 150 infopoints,
97 infocenters, two infomobiles, and one infolab.
It has implemented Decree 3390 on free software.
It has prepared the National Science, Technology, and Innovation
Plan-CIT.
It has held the Second National CIT Fair.
It has granted 571 higher education scholarships in the various fields of
knowledge. Science is finally part of the Venezuelan State policy. The
Venezuelan State finally has a policy aimed at the country’s scientific
development.
“There is another world and it is in this one”
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Ministry of Communication and Information
With the implementation of the means legislation, the Ministry of
Communication and Information has ensured the following:
Venezuelan music accounts for 50 percent of all radio broadcast
programs;
Broadcast publicity is 85 percent nationally produced;
Advertisement aired is 100 percent Venezuelan;
Advertisement, promotion, and campaigns connected with alcoholic
beverages and cigarettes have been banned from the radio and from
both general and subscription television;
Language, health, sex, and violence are subject to special schedules—
general, supervised, and adult viewers. Social control to improve
content quality is carried out by 920 user organizations.
The Ministry has given impulse to the development of the National
Independent Production-PNI and certified over 5,000 national
independent producers.
It has expanded the coverage of State management and intensified the
dissemination of the Bolivarian thinking and the transmission of regional
values, as well as the room for appropriate youth participation.
It has established the new Televisión del Sur-Telesur, with live signal 24
hours a day. Incidentally, the newscast is extraordinary—I recommend
it. And Jesús Romero Anselmi has returned to channel 8.
Ministry for Popular Economy
The Ministry for Popular Economy has trained 264,720 lanceros and lanceras.
It has established 6,814 cooperatives thusly classified: agricultural
battlefront, 2,251; service battlefront, 1,730; industrial battlefront, 723;
infrastructure battlefront, 723; and tourism battlefront, 514.
It has put into operation 130 Endogenous Development Nuclei-Nude.
Through the financial and microcredit institutions it has extended 5,335
loans to the Vuelvan Caras mission cooperatives, totaling
861,450,816,496.68 bolivares.
José Vicente Rangel
DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
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Food Ministry
The Food Ministry has distributed upwards of 6 million kilograms of
food per day to the most vulnerable segments of the population.
It has benefited 15 million citizens with top quality products while saving
an average of 37 percent in relation to market prices.
It maintains over 14,000 sales establishments.
It has established 900 cooperatives and over 1,400 private enterprises.
It maintains 6,000 restaurants, which serve 900,000 low-income people.
It has achieved the country’s largest grain storage capacity, raising the
number of silo complexes from 6 to 27, which has increased storage
capacity from 100 million to 1.3 billion kilograms, thereby benefiting
43,000 agricultural producers.
It has begun to build the country’s most modern cold storage facilities
network (Barcelona, Maracay, Maracaibo) and recovered the La Guaira
and Quibor cold storage facilities, each with a capacity of 6 million
kilograms.
It has recovered and put into operation three agroindustrial enterprises:
Café Venezuela, which had been inactive for 11 years; Frutimoca, now
Fruticasa, inactive for 16 years; and Enfria, now called Logicasa.
It has worked together with entrepreneurs and producers to prepare
and begin implementation of the Livestock Development Plan.
Ministry of Culture
The ensemble of goals and achievements of the Ministry of Culture,
established in 2005, may be evaluated from both a qualitative and
quantitative standpoint. It should be pointed out that 99 percent of the
317,940,654,545 bolivares allocated under the budget law and
amendments have been spent—314,673,704,418.43.
Today, culture is part of the people’s life. It has ceased to be an elitist
culture to become a clear expression of the will of the Venezuelan
State and Government to extend culture to all segments of the
population.
“There is another world and it is in this one”
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Ministry of Housing and the Habitat
The Ministry of Housing and the Habitat has contributed to the change
in the habitat by integrating the excluded population into the labor
market.
It has generated 44,999 direct jobs and 134,997 indirect jobs in the
popular communities.
It has assisted 84,430 families through its different strategic lines of
action: Closing the Cycle; Replacing Shacks with Houses-Suvi, Average
Home Plan; New Settlements; VIII Program; Land Committees; and
Rehabilitation.
It has built 41,330 new homes.
It has made possible direct housing subsidies; long-term mortgage loans
with resources from the Obligatory Savings Fund-FAO; mixed credit;
community funds credit; OCV-FAO credit totaling 1,181,791.33 billion
bolivares, which has benefited 31,800 middle class families. There remain
12,405 housing issues to be solved in 2006.
It has established a strategic alliance with the State banking sector
(Treasury Bank, Industrial Bank of Venezuela, Banfondes, and National
Housing Bank).
It has extended long-term mortgage loans with resources from the
Obligatory Savings Fund, totaling 660.550 million bolivares, thereby
benefiting 21,193 families.
Ministry of Popular Participation and Social Development
The activities of the Ministry of Popular Participation and Social
Development, established on August 31, 2005, have been geared to compliance
with the constitutional mandate of social protection as a social right and a right
to organization and public participation as a community right. Accordingly,
the Ministry has:
Reinforced the integration of productive chains through projects that
promote community organization.
Benefited 783,265 adults and elderly citizens under an integral care and
financial assistance policy.
José Vicente Rangel
DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
223
Awarded 6,542 land titles to 24,640 families.
Given 543 homes to needy people.
Benefited 128,912 families with infrastructure works and equipment
for the thorough rehabilitation of districts.
Assisted 336,809 children and adolescents through the program titled
“Social integration of handicapped children, adolescents, and youths.
Distributed 1,200,000 top-quality school uniforms to pre-school and
elementary school children from low-income families.
Built 579 popular health care centers that have benefited 723.750 people
and generated 13,896 direct and 20.265 indirect jobs.
Integration and Foreign Trade Ministry
The Integration and Foreign Trade Ministry has coordinated and set up
negotiation scenarios and integration processes.
It has given impulse to trade-related events in conjunction with Uruguay,
the Brazilian state of Paraná, and the Havana Fair, and to binational
encounters that have led to the signing of 136 cooperation agreements
with countries of the region.
It has coordinated trade-related events that have led to upwards of 106
cooperation agreements with strategic allies such as Iran, China,
countries of the Middle East and other countries of Asia, France, Spain,
Italy, and the European Union.
The Vice-President’s Office
The Vice-President’s Office has fully discharged its constitutional functions
as the President of the Republic’s immediate collaborator and public
administration coordinator. As such, it has developed activities that encompass
the following:
The New Phase and the Mobile Ministries. Priority in 2005 has been
attached to the deepening of the guidelines for the “New Phase, New
Strategic Map” announced by the President of the Republic in
November 2004. This has involved the institutional strengthening of
the Vice-President’s Office, which has to do a permanent job as a political
“There is another world and it is in this one”
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224
and strategic institution, whose efficiency requires dynamism and
flexibility.
Conduction of the New Phase is the responsibility of the Presidential
Coordinating Office, which is presided over by the Executive Vice-
President and whose other members are the Ministers of Planning and
Development, Science and Technology, Light Industry and Trade, and
Defense.
Through this mechanism 237 productive projects were approved in
2005, which were submitted by governor and mayors and totaled
1,152,380,584,654 bolivares, thusly distributed:
No. of projects Allocation
Governors’ 30 293,889,353,458
Mayors’ 207 858,491,231,196
Total 237 1,152,380,584,654
Promotion of citizens’ participation and establishment of close relations
with all State institutions, particularly with the National Assembly. This
continuous activity of the Vice-President’s Office ensured the fluidity
shown by institutions in 2005.
Mr. President, Messrs. Deputies,
We have worked at the core of the National Government and for all
Venezuelans, particularly for the neediest, the lowliest, those that have been always
relegated and excluded. We have been moved by the conviction that it is possible
to improve the condition of our people, to eliminate the poverty pockets created
by injustice and privileges, so that Venezuelans are no longer led by delusion of
postponing social and ethical redemption according to a view that situates
happiness further away.
The French poet Paul Eluard, supreme advocate of liberty, once said:
There is another world and it is in this one. The other world is right here and it is here
that we must create the happiness of all Venezuelans, without excluding anyone.
Let us make this into a reality, under the sign of solidarity, peace, democracy,
justice, and genuine respect for the human condition, which is an essential factor
José Vicente Rangel
DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
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DEP
of a true revolution, such as the one led by President Hugo Chávez, in which the
Venezuelan people play a protagonist’s role.
My distinguished colleagues of the Council of Ministers will submit to
you their 2005 reports. The verdict lies in your hands. Whichever it may be, it
will be accorded total respect from the National Executive Branch because we
live in a democracy and under a true Rule of Law. Thank you.
Version: João Coelho
Pedro Lira
226 DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
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* Director of the National Fine Arts Museum, Santiago, Chile.
Pedro Lira
Milan Ivelic
*
The Letter
Oil on Canvas – 116 x 58 cm
Milan Ivelic
DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
227
edro Lira probably painted “La Carta” (“The Letter”) in the last years
of the 19
th
century. Unfortunately, the artist never dated his paintings, so a
tentative date for it can only be established through comparative study of his
works’ subject matter. We may thus place “The Letter” sometime between 1885
and 1890. It was a period in which the painter produced numerous works having
women as their central subject.
Who was Pedro Lira?
The artist was a member of the Chilean aristocracy of the time, and this in
itself would eventually cause him problems, starting with his family. In a society
dominated by prejudice and class cleavages, to be a painter was not regarded as
a particularly prestigious occupation. He was forced to pursue law studies and
to graduate as a lawyer in order to fulfill his father’s expectations. Once such
paternal command was obeyed, however, he devoted himself entirely to his
artistic pursuits and never worked as a lawyer.
Lira studied art at the Painting Academy that had been established in 1849,
and his first teacher was the director of the Academy himself, the Italian
Alessandro Cicarelli, who started Lara in the rigor of neoclassical drafting and
the rationalism of neoclassical aesthetics. Lira’s next steps took him to Europe,
where he spent the following ten years (1873-1882), most of which in France.
He perfected his skills there with Jules-Elie Delaunay, Jules Bastien-Lepage, Jean-
Paul Laurens and Evariste Luminais. This academic orientation is evident in the
works of his historical and mythological cycle, which include “Prometheus
Bound” (1883) and “The Foundation of Santiago” (1885), the latter a large-
scale work that won him second-place medal at the Paris Salon of 1889.
Back in Chile, Lira continued to work as a painter while systematically
disseminating and teaching fine arts. He also found the time to write a
“Biographical Dictionary of Painters” (1902), and to create and develop an
exhibition space (1885) known as “The Parthenon” on account of its Doric
columns, which preceded the establishment of the National Arts Museum (1910).
Lira’s strong and commanding personality ensured him a central role on the
Chilean artistic scene.
P
Pedro Lira
228 DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
228
“The Letter” is an example of the artist’s Romantic inclinations, which
bear the mark of Delacroix, a painter for whose work he developed a keen
interest. Lira eventually left behind historical and mythological subjects to focus
more intimately on his personal, subjective self, though he never abandoned the
visible world, the concrete data of reality. Representation and perception are
joined into one in his work. This attitude always led him to privilege fidelity to
the model and to respect the formal structure of things, placing his excellent
technique at the service of his chosen subject matter.
In a room, a woman, elegantly clad in a fine long dress that betrays her
social status, is represented in a pose that is both innovative and intriguing. It
leads the observer to focus his attention on the nape of her neck, her hair and
the folds of her dress. Pedro Lira has condemned us never to see her face, so
that her identity will forever be just as mysterious as the letter she hides behind
her back at the realization that the door to the room is being opened.
Who will walk in? Maybe her strict father? A jealous husband? Who wrote
the letter? What are its contents? What are the womans feelings as she suspends
her reading at the impending presence of someone approaching the door?
“The Letter” is a mysteriously beautiful work of conjecture.
Pedro Lira came to realize, at last, that art is able to show reality by
hiding it.
Version: Manuel Carlos Montenegro
DEP
Milan Ivelic
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229
Construtora
Norberto Odebrecht
The Backbone of South American Integration
The Madeira Complex can impart a new direction to the
development of the South American Center-West and
provide a new model for the region
ercoeste—the region and the market covered by this word may be
crucial to a promising future for South American countries. Brazil, Bolivia, and
Peru are about to take a decisive step toward the integration of production
and thus toward the economic progress of the South American Center-West.
The Madeira Complex, a project of utmost regional importance, is to be
established on the border shared by these three countries, more precisely, along
the Madeira River and its tributaries. This strategic location with a huge
hydroelectric potential to be exploited can have a pivotal role in the integration
of water transport among the partner nations, as Brazil would gain access to the
Pacific Ocean, Peru to the Atlantic, and Bolivia to both, thereby interconnecting
the two oceans.
www.odebrecht.com.br
M
Objectives and challenges of Argentina’s foreign policy
230 DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
230
The Madeira Complex has everything to become an international
showpiece, demonstrating that it is possible to achieve the integration and
development of South American countries and their institutions, to the benefit
of riverine populations and towns, without harming the environment. High
investment in technology, through the use of bulb turbines for low head, which
allow the reservoir to be slightly larger than the basin naturally formed during
the river’s yearly overflowing, endows the project with a distinctive feature from
an environmental standpoint.
The regional import of such an integration project can be assessed by the
fact that the area contemplated includes, on the Brazilian side, the state of
Rondônia, the northwest of the state of Mato Grosso, the upper and lower
Acre River valley, and the south of the state of Amazonas. On the other side, it
includes Bolivia’s Pando, Beni, and Santa Cruz de la Sierra departments, and
Peru’s Madre de Dios department.
The area within Brazil is of great strategic importance as it abuts the
northwesternmost portion of the area of agribusiness expansion on Brazilian
(as well as on Bolivian) soil and forms part of the zone known as the deforestation
belt. It lies between two macroregions served by separate power systems—one
isolated (formed by the Rondônia/Acre and the Manaus grids) and the other
linked to the Center-West and Southeast-South systems).
Moreover, the area lies in the biome transition zone between the savannas
and the Amazon rain forest and is located in the valley of the Middle Madeira
and its tributaries. Natural obstacles (rapids) in the stretch between the cities of
Porto Velho and Guajará-Mirim preclude a waterway connection between the
Upper Madeira and its headstreams in Bolivia and Peru, and the Lower Madeira,
in the portion that extends from Porto Velho to the Amazon River, which is
already fully integrated into ocean navigation.
In the last century an attempt was made to overcome the natural obstacles
presented by the Madeira River, through the building of the Madeira-Mamoré
railway to connect the cities of Porto Velho and Guajará-Mirim in the state of
Rondônia. This railway was part of Brazil’s counterpart under the 1903 Brazil-
Bolivia agreement, known as the Petropolis Treaty. The agreement, which
contemplated a swapping of lands and other compensatory measures, was aimed
at endowing Bolivia with an outlet to the Atlantic Ocean.
Brazil faced great hardship in laying this railway owing to the regions
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231
insalubrious conditions, which resulted in countless cases of malaria and other
tropical diseases. Despite the great effort spent on it, the railway was closed in
the 1970s because of the debacle of Brazilian rubber on the international market
and of President Juscelino Kubitschek’s decision to invest on highways as factors
of national integration. Today only a thirty-kilometer stretch is in operation for
local tourism.
Between 1970 and 2000, the region experienced a surge in population,
from 170,000 to 2.3 million people. Particularly in Rondônia, the population
increased more than twelvefold in this period, totaling 1.4 million in 2000. To a
great extent, this is an urban population. The population of the Porto Velho
municipality, for instance, is 82 percent urban.
No more than 20 percent of urban homes in this region are connected to
sewerage systems (IBGE’s 2000 Census); in such precarious conditions,
demographic concentration is explained by the comparative advantage of an
urban setting vis-à-vis the lack of access and electricity in nonurban areas.
These factors, coupled with thermal electric generation based on diesel (a
high-cost, extremely polluting fossil fuel with limited expansion possibilities, the
supply of which requires a huge logistic effort), curtail productive activities and
make them dependent on services or products of low aggregate value, thereby
leading the population to resort to the less onerous alternative of living in urban
centers, notwithstanding the latter’s shortcomings. The area thus remains shackled
by limiting conditions in respect of physical infrastructure in Brazil as well as in
Bolivia and Peru—precarious or nearly nonexistent access and scarce electricity
supply, which choke economic growth.
The implementation of the Madeira Complex can thus impart a new
direction to the development of the three countries and provide a kind of
backbone for the South American integration process. The implementation of
the Madeira River waterway and the construction of the planned hydroelectric
plants—Santo Antônio (3,150 MW) and Jirau (3,300 MW) between Porto Velho
and Abunã, on the Brazilian side; Binacional (3,000 MW) on the Guaporé River,
between Abunã and Guajará-Mirim, on the Brazilian-Bolivian border; and
Esperanza Falls (800 MW) on the Bolivian side—can give a thrust to regional
development, thanks to the integration of the energy (10,650 MW) and transport
infrastructure linking Brazil, Bolivia, and Peru, with the addition of 4,225
navigable kilometers upstream from Porto Velho.
Objectives and challenges of Argentina’s foreign policy
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232
Furthermore, as the requisite transmission lines are also planned, the
generation of a significant supply of low-cost electric power, a strategic, key
input for inducing the development of the South American Center-West, will
allow the linking of the electric grid of the states of Rondônia, Acre, and (western)
Mato Grosso to the Amazonas grid and to both the Brazilian and the Bolivian
Interlinked Electric Systems.
Integration and cooperation between Brazil and Bolivia in the area of
electric power would be achieved through the construction of the Guajará-Mirim
hydroelectric plant, with and estimated installed capacity of 3,000 MW, and of
the Esperanza Falls plant, situated entirely on Bolivian soil, with an estimated
installed capacity of 800 MW.
Today, hydroelectric power generated in Bolivia has a guaranteed market
in Brazil, which requires between 3,000 and 4,000 MW a year at the current
development pace. Thus, electricity sales could earn Bolivia about 400 million
dollars annually, which nearly equals the country’s current annual deficit. As
Bolivia’s energy requirements rise, Brazil would decrease its purchases
accordingly, pursuant to plans.
In addition, the waterway would allow Bolivia to increase its grain
production through the use of 11 million hectares that currently have no access
to the foreign market, as there is no way crops could be taken to market.
Preliminary estimates based solely on the price of soybean on the international
market point to an addition of 8 billion dollars to Bolivia’s GDP, should this
crop be adopted. This means a positive impact of about 100 percent on the
country’s GDP, which would significantly reduce Bolivia’s external vulnerability.
What is even more important is that Bolivia could become the logistic hub
of the connection between two
oceans, linked to the Atlantic by
the Madeira-Amazon waterway
and to the Pacific by the
multimodal linkage to the Peruvian
ports, the anchor project of the
Peru-Brazil-Bolivia Integration
Axis (Axis 6) of the South
American Regional Integration
Initiative-IIRSA undertaken by the
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Jorge Taiana
233
twelve countries of our subcontinent and which has the support of the Andean
Development Corporation-CAF, the Inter-American Development Bank-IADB,
the Financial Fund for the
Development of the Plate River
Basin-Fonplata, and Brazil’s National
Economic and Social Development
Bank-Bndes. This would facilitate
access to the American, European,
and Asian markets in terms of
logistics and transportation costs.
The Madeira River and its
headstreams in Peru and Bolivia form
part of this corridor named Axis 6
by Iirsa. Thus, the implementation of
river navigation on the Madeira
River’s Bolivian headstreams would
allow the operation of a network
interconnecting Axis 6 and Axis 3 (Center Inter-Oceanic Connection) through
Bolivia’s Santa Cruz de la Sierra region, making this region accessible.
Moreover, electric power generation makes possible the development of
the agricultural goods processing
industry with aggregate value, in
addition to the birth of a promising
naval industry to meet this productions
transport requirements. The Santa Cruz
de la Sierra, Beni, and Pando
agribusiness could become more
competitive owing to the lower freight
costs of the waterway modal transport.
Mining could also be contemplated,
given the access possibilities that would
make such activity feasible, spurring the
creation of jobs and exponentially
benefiting productive chains in the three
countries involved in the project.
Objectives and challenges of Argentina’s foreign policy
234 DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
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The replacement of
land transport by waterway
transport, the feasibility and
rational development of
agricultural diversity in the
South American Center-
West, the removal of
obstacles to traffic toward
major metropolitan areas, the
elimination of log floating
down the rivers of the region,
and the replacement of thermal energy by hydroelectric energy generation, which
is cheaper, renewable, and nonpolluting, are some of the project’s environmental
benefits.
Thus, in addition to making the area less dependent on the extraction of
natural resources by increasing and diversifying economic dynamics with higher
aggregate value products while preserving natural assets, the undertaking tends
to enhance the State’s presence in the form of institutions that are prepared for
the governance of the region. This would make institutional initiatives more
effective at the different government levels and lead to the elimination of conflicts
and to orderly land tenancy. A direct consequence of the regions greater
participation in the domestic and the international market—as a frontier for
business, employment, and income expansion resulting in trade balance surpluses
for the countries involved—tends to be a significant improvement in human
and social development indicators in the urban centers and among the riverine
populations, owing to proper access to essential public services in the areas of
health and education, which in turn keep pace with progress.
Brazil is forging ahead toward the achievement of the contemplated
objective through its state and private enterprises. In 2004, Furnas Centrais
Elétricas S.A. and Construtora Norberto Odebrecht S.A. submitted to the
National Electric Energy Agency-Aneel feasibility studies on the Hydroelectric
Exploitation-AHE of Jirau. In 2005, AHE feasibility studies were also submitted
for Santo Antônio, in addition to the Strategic Environmental Evaluation of
these two Brazilian hydroelectric plants, which are to be the object of invitation
for bids in 2006.
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Taking a major step toward the materialization of this project that could
give a new direction to the development of the entire South American Center-
West through the productive integration of the different Amazon subspaces
into the so-called Marcoeste requires greater synergy among the institutions of
the neighboring countries. This in turn should be based on convergence ensured
by public-private partnerships and investment in programs for improving and
expanding the subcontinental infrastructure. This is an essential step for opening
up regional opportunities that can make South America less vulnerable
economically as it seeks to build a multipolar world geopolitics.
Version: João Coelho.
DEP
Pedro Lira
236 DIPLOMACY, STRATEGY & POLITICS – APRIL/JUNE 2006
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Grupo
Andrade Gutierrez
Andrade Gutierrez in Peru:
partnership for development projects
rojects for the integration of Latin America, a dream that has kindled
hearts and minds for generations, must overcome all manner of obstacles if they
are to come to fruition. The political and strategic interests of the nations
involved, the economic and financial constraints on the investments required
and a host of geological, climatic and environmental adversities often hamper
approval and implementation of such projects. Despite the setbacks, however,
much has been done to promote regional development and integrate South
America.
With more than 20 years’ experience in Latin America, operating in most
of Brazil’s neighbouring countries, the Andrade Gutierrez Construction
Company has acquired considerable first-hand knowledge of the dreams that
fire Latin America’s imagination and the challenges that must be surmounted
to bring them into being. In Peru, where they have already completed a number
www.agsa.com.br
P
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of important projects, Andrade Gutierrez have been working since 2005 on
two undertakings that represent a decisive step along the road to dearly-sought
integration of South America. These are the North and South road routes
built under concession in a Public-Private Partnership (PPP) scheme similar
to what already exists in Brazil but which is a novelty in Peru. The projects are
part of the Plan of Action for Integration of South American Regional
Infrastructure (Iirsa), and signal the fact that Peru has made a head start in
relation to other South American countries in seeking solutions to boost
development.
Projects inaugurate partnership model
The projects Andrade Gutierrez has won in public tenders are key to
plans for integrating Peru and enabling it to place its goods and services on
strategic markets. In the partnership model these projects inaugurate, the
Peruvian Government acts as guarantor, providing funding institutions with
surety. According to the company’s market manager in Peru, Ronaldo Alves
Pereira, “the projects reflect Andrade Gutierrez’s maturity in the international
arena where it has established a solid position and built up an undeniably good
track record.
The first contract is the North Amazonas Multimode Axis, referred to as
the North Axis. This is a 960-kilometre-long highway linking the river port of
Yurimaguas in the Peruvian Amazon to the seaport of Paita on Peru’s northern
Pacific coast. The project comprises construction and surfacing of 130 kilometres
of highway in addition to improvement and recovery of the remaining 830
kilometres. When construction work is at its height, the project will employ up
to 1,500 workers.
This road cuts across the three types of landscape found in Peru: it departs
from the plains of the Amazon Forest, crosses the heights of the Andes and
finally traverses the desert reaches of the Peruvian coastline to the Paita seaport,
providing a link between the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans along the Amazon
River. “We have already worked in these regions and we know the geological
problems we are up against and the variations in rainfall we will have to deal
with, as well as the logistics required for a job of this kind. Our experience has
stood us in good stead,” states Pereira.
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The total cost of the project is estimated at US$ 205 millions, with financial
support from CAF
1
and IDB
2
supplementing funding from the shareholders.
Andrade Gutierrez has a 40% stake in the consortium formed with the Brazilian
construction company Norberto Odebrecht and Peru’s Graña & Montero. The
contract was signed in June 2005 and the concession on the highway is for 25
years, including the four years to be spent on construction.
The second contract is for a concession of the same length and will have a
direct impact on the economies of both countries (Brazil and Peru). This is the
South Inter-Oceanic Transportation Corridor project, known as the South Axis.
It is designed to interconnect Peru and Brazil, linking Rio Branco (capital of the
Brazilian State of Acre) to the ports of Ilo and Matarani in southern Peru. It is
considered the biggest ever paved road construction project in Peru’s history.
For Brazil, the highway is important as it will facilitate exportation of its produce
through Peruvian ports on the Pacific Ocean as from 2007. The Governments
of Brazil and Peru have also agreed to back investment projects in their respective
frontier zones to boost cross-border bilateral trade.
The cost of this second project is approximately US$ 180 millions, to be
financed by the concessionaire company with support from Proex and CAF
and additional funding from the stakeholders. Andrade Gutierrez has a one third
share in the undertaking and is operating in association with two other Brazilian
construction companies, Camargo Corrêa and Queiroz Galvão.
The project includes construction from scratch of a 300-kilometre stretch
of single-lane highway in the South of Peru, linking the Peruvian town of
Azángaro in the Andean altiplano to Inambari on the edge of the Peruvian Amazon
forest. It involves a major logistical challenge in transporting building materials
and equipment over great distances to places where access is tricky. Another
difficulty is the variation in altitude: half the length of the road is to be built at
altitudes above 3,500 metres in the upland plateau while, in the jungle areas,
building work will be carried out just 500 metres above sea level. That difference
requires adaptations for the entire crew.
Expectations are high surrounding this project. The Peruvian President,
Alejandro Toledo, has declared to the press in his country that this will represent
1
Corporación Andina de Fomento (Andean Development Corporation).
2
Inter-American Development Bank.
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the realisation of a long-held dream of the Peruvian people. “You will be able
to reach Brazil in 24 hours along this road, compared with the fortnight it takes
to make the journey now,” he said. Indeed, the old dream of integrating South
America is at long last coming true. Integration and the enhancement of the
South American bloc’s competitive capacity call for investments to reinforce the
physical links between the countries comprising it. That implies interlinked
transportation systems and road access to the Oceans on both sides of the
continent – the Atlantic and the Pacific.
Weaving a way through the Amazon forest
The implementation of these two key projects under the umbrella of a
regional development policy is the most recent instance of the presence of
Brazilian companies in Peru. Andrade Gutierrez’s involvement in infrastructure
projects in Peru reaches back almost 15 years to the expansion of the liquid
cargo terminal at the Port of Talara. That was followed by work on the South
Pan-American highway, the power tunnel for the San Gabán Hydroelectric Plant,
the Tarma-La Merced highway and the La Oroya-Huayre highway, all concluded
in the 1990s. Since the year 2000, the company has carried out work on the
Cuzco-Cambapata and Neshuya-Pucallpa highways.
In April 2004, Andrade Gutierrez commenced work on one of the most
difficult projects it has ever undertaken: recuperation of the Campanilla-Pizarrón-
Puerto Pizana section of the Fernando Belaunde Terry highway deep in the
Peruvian Amazon jungle. Completed in a record 18 months, this project
demonstrated the capacity of Brazilian engineering to overcome highly adverse
climatic and geological conditions, complicated access to operating zones and
the unstable social environment in the region.
The stretches Andrade Gutierrez worked on are located between the districts
of Juanjuí, Campanilla, Pólvora and Tocache in the San Martin province. The
region has 107 thousand inhabitants living in 42 small towns and villages. Travelling
from one village to another for commercial activities demanded time and money.
The 176-kilometre segment between Juanjuí and Tocache would take no less
than 15 hours to cover. A vehicle breaking down, though, meant many more
hours or even extra days for the journey. Local shopkeepers regularly lost up to
30% of their wares on account of precarious transportation. High maintenance
costs for equipment and fuel consumption added further to the cost of
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production. Government estimates reckoned that the San Martin province lost
as much as 250 thousand dollars a year due to the dreadful state of the road. Cut
off from the outside world, these villages easily fall prey to drug-traffickers and
guerrillas. The development of formal economic activities (e.g. agriculture,
livestock and industry) had thus been drastically affected over the years.
In response to a movement led by local municipal authorities, the United
States Agency for International Development (USAID) decided to invest funds
to recover the highway. An agreement was signed with the United States Army
Corps of Engineers (USACE), which assumed responsibility for organising
bidding for the contract and for overseeing the work until delivery to the Peruvian
Government. In partnership with the Ministry of Transports & Communications,
a public contest was opened for recovery of the Fernando Belaunde Terry highway
in August 2003. The contract, with a budget of US$ 230 millions, envisaged
rehabilitation of the precarious existing road. That required the construction of
drainage channels, control of erosion, environmental protection and asphalting
of the road base. Owing to the considerable experience it had acquired on similar
projects, Andrade Gutierrez was chosen for the job by USACE in February
2004. The go-ahead for work to begin was delayed 75 days, authorisation being
granted only in April. However, neither the construction company nor the agency
overseeing the project could imagine the almost insoluble difficulties that had to
be tackled on a day-to-day basis.
Obstacles and solutions
The initial challenge was setting up the construction site itself. It proved
well nigh impossible to transport equipment to the site chosen at Nuevo San
Martin. Dense vegetation had engulfed long stretches of the road, trucks got
stuck in the mud or fell into huge craters and the few wooden bridges along the
route could only take light vehicles. It took two whole months to install the
camp, which was only complete in mid-July. Such difficulties were encountered
along the entire route and also defied the team working from the other end of
the highway in Campanilla.
Working conditions were highly adverse. It rained throughout 2004. Special
techniques had to be employed to contain the constant mudslides. The engineering
project had to be redesigned to surmount the natural obstacles encountered and
adapt to local circumstances. The drainage system employed required mounting
450 culverts. e company mobilised no less than 160 pieces of heavy equipment
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and trucks to get the job done. Work was subject to rigorous environmental
control since the road ran through diverse ecosystems and natural reserves.
Much of the success of the undertaking can be attributed to the bond of
trust Andrade Gutierrez managed to build up with the local communities.
When work was in full flow from June to September 2005, the company had
1,100 workers employed on the project, more than 60% of them from the San
Martin region and the remaining 40% from the area between Campanilla and
Puerto Pizana. Nearby communities were drawn into the project, supplying a
variety of support services. Cooperation was intense throughout. The
company’s health services were made available to the population, and local
schools received improvements. Social projects of local interest were
developed in partnerships between the construction company and the
communities involved. Open dialogue prevailed at all times, making the
construction a project of collective interest.
Once again, the excellence of Brazilian engineering was put to the test and
Andrade Gutierrez was able to prove its maturity in overseas projects.
Construction work undertaken in such adverse conditions demands not only
superior technical capacity but also the ability to meet other fundamental
requirements. These include experience in providing logistic solutions and
effective mobilising of resources, the capacity to adapt to local custom, respect
for specific legislation in the host country and credibility to fulfil the contracts
entered into. It was the combination of these attributes that enabled the company
to conclude work on the Fernando Belaunde Terry highway.
More than just a construction project, this undertaking has opened the
doors to development and progress for thousands of families who had long
awaited such an opportunity. Peru has reintegrated one of its most remote regions
into the social and economic life of the country. The time taken to travel from
one end to the other of the highway has dropped from 15 to 4 or 5 hours.
Transportation firms have resumed their activities, and the cost of freight has
fallen, making end products cheaper for the regions population. The impact of
the highway continues to reflect in various sectors of the economy. Private
investors – both Peruvian and foreign – are arriving to finance agricultural and
industrial projects, attracted by the renewed means of communication. A time
of hope is dawning in the heartlands of Peru.
Version: Mark Ridd
DEP
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D E P
DIPLOMACIA ESTRATÉGIA POLÍTICA
Volume I Number 3 April / June 2005
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D E P
DIPLOMACIA ESTRATÉGIA POLÍTICA
Volume I Number 2 January / March 2005
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D E P
DIPLOMACIA ESTRATÉGIA POLÍTICA
Volume I Number 1 October / December 2004
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