From: Duncan Marsh [duncanmarsh@yahoo.com]
Sent: Friday, July 19, 2002 8:32 AM
To: 'John P. Powelson'; 'Vo nPischke Leslie'; 'Herring, Jackson'; 'Van
Sickle Jerry'; 'Holmes Merlyn'; 'Holmes Chris'; 'Conzelman Carol';
'Rubinoff Donna'; 'Von Pischke J.D.'; 'Williams Stephen'; 'Williams,
Faith'
Cc: satohmarsh@aol.com; tobinmarsh@hotmail.com; kmarsh@wsu.edu
Subject: FW: NYTimes.com Article: Still Poor, Latin Americans Protest
Push for Open Markets 

Here's an article on the backlash against free trade in Latin America, fyi.
Should make for interesting discussion.  Duncan


-----Original Message-----
From: articles-email@ms1.lga2.nytimes.com
[mailto:articles-email@ms1.lga2.nytimes.com]On Behalf Of
duncanmarsh@yahoo.com
Sent: Friday, July 19, 2002 12:14 PM
To: duncanmarsh@yahoo.com
Subject: NYTimes.com Article: Still Poor, Latin Americans Protest Push
for Open Markets


This article from NYTimes.com
has been sent to you by duncanmarsh@yahoo.com.



Still Poor, Latin Americans Protest Push for Open Markets

July 19, 2002
By JUAN FORERO

AREQUIPA, Peru, July 13 - The protest that shook this
colonial city last month was very much like others in Latin
America recently. There were Marxists shouting 60's-era
slogans, and hard-bitten unionists. But there was also
Fanny Puntaca, 64, a shopkeeper and grandmother of six.

Though she had never before protested, Ms. Puntaca said,
she could not bear to see a Belgian company buy what she
called "our wealth" - the region's two state-owned
electrical generators. So armed with a metal pot to bang,
she joined neighbors in a demonstration so unyielding that
it forced President Alejandro Toledo to declare a state of
emergency here, suspend the $167 million sale and
eventually shake up his cabinet.

"I had to fight," Ms. Puntaca said proudly. "The government
was going to sell our companies and enrich another country.
This was my voice, my protest."

Across Latin America, millions of others are also letting
their voices be heard. A popular and political ground swell
is building from the Andes to Argentina against the
decade-old experiment with free-market capitalism. The
reforms that have shrunk the state and opened markets to
foreign competition, many believe, have enriched corrupt
officials and faceless multinationals, and failed to better
their lives.

Sometimes-violent protests in recent weeks have derailed
the sale of state-owned companies worth hundreds of
millions of dollars. The unrest has made potential
investors jittery, and whipsawed governments already
weakened by recession.

The backlash has given rise to leftist politicians who have
combined pocketbook issues and economic nationalism to
explosive effect. Today the market reforms ushered in by
American-trained economists after the global collapse of
Communism are facing their greatest challenge in the
upheavals sweeping the region.

"The most worrying reading is that perhaps we have come to
the end of an era," said Rafael de la Fuente, chief Latin
American economist for BNP Paribas in New York. "That we
are closing the door on what was an unsuccessful attempt at
orthodox economic reforms at the end of the 90's."

For a time the policies worked, and many economists and
politicians say they still do. The reforms increased
competition and fueled growth. Stratospheric inflation
rates fell back to earth. Bloated bureaucracies were
replaced with efficient companies that created jobs.

The formula helped give Chile the most robust economy in
Latin America. In Mexico exports quintupled in a dozen
years. In Bolivia, poverty fell from 86 percent of the
population in the 70's to 58.6 percent today.

Still, the broad prosperity that was promised remains a
dream for many Latin Americans. Today those same reforms
are equated with unemployment and layoffs from both public
and private companies, as well as recessions that have
hamstrung economies.

"We privatized and we do not have less poverty, less
unemployment," said Juan Manuel Guillén, the mayor of
Arequipa and a leader in the antiprivatization movement
here. "On the contrary. We have more poverty and
unemployment. We are not debating theoretically here. We
are looking at reality."

Indeed, 44 percent of Latin Americans still live in
poverty, and the number of unemployed workers has more than
doubled in a decade. Tens of millions of others - in some
countries up to 70 percent of all workers - toil in the
region's vast informal economy, as street vendors, for
instance, barely making ends meet. Economic growth has been
essentially flat for the last five years.

Popular perceptions - revealed in street protests, opinion
polls and ballot boxes - are clearly shifting against the
economic prescriptions for open markets, less government
and tighter budgets that American officials and
international financial institutions have preferred.

A regional survey supported by the Inter-American
Development Bank found last year that 63 percent of
respondents across 17 countries in the region said that
privatization had not been beneficial.

"It's an emotional populist attitude people have," said
Larry Birns, director of the Council on Hemispheric
Affairs, a Washington-based policy analysis group. "It may
not be reasoned, but it's real, and it's explosive and it's
not going to be easily contained by coming up with
arguments that free trade is the wave of the future."

In Brazil, South America's largest country and its economic
engine, revulsion with American-led market orthodoxy has
fueled strong support for the labor leader Luiz Inácio da
Silva, known as Lula, who is now the front-runner in the
October presidential election, to the chagrin of worried
financial markets.

In Paraguay protests last month blocked the $400 million
sale of the state phone company by President Luis González
Macchi, whose government has been dogged by a dismal
economy and corruption charges. [This week deadly
demonstrations led the president to declare a state of
emergency.]

In Bolivia the country's political landscape was redrawn
this month when Evo Morales, an indigenous leader who
promised to nationalize industries, finished second among
11 candidates for president.

This spring, the sale of 17 electricity distributors in
Ecuador fell through in the face of political resistance, a
blow to a country that has adopted the dollar as its
currency and is heavily dependent on foreign investment.

Meanwhile, in Venezuela, President Hugo Chávez's
left-leaning government has been intent on scaling back
reforms, exacerbating the divisions that led to his brief
ouster in April.

The backlash in many of these countries gathered momentum
with the economic meltdown in Argentina, which forced a
change of presidents after widespread rioting in December.

While the causes are multifold, many Argentines blame the
debacle on a combination of corrupt politicians and the
government's adherence to economic prescriptions from
abroad that have left the country with $141 billion in
public debt, the banking system in ruins and one in five
people unemployed.

Argentines now look for possible salvation from Elisa
Carrio, a corruption fighter in Congress who has been
scathing in her criticism of the International Monetary
Fund. She is now the early favorite in the upcoming
presidential election.

"This has created the backlash because now there's a debate
all around Latin America," said Pedro Pablo Kuczynski,
Peru's former economy minister and a favorite of Wall
Street who resigned under pressure last week. "Everywhere
you look, people say, `The guys followed the model and
they're in the soup. So obviously the model does not work.'
"

The backlash comes as foreign direct investment in Latin
America has fallen steeply, dropping from $105 billion in
1999 to $80 billion in 2001. A big reason for the decline
is that many big-ticket sales of state companies to private
investors have already been completed. But economists like
Mr. Kuczynski, who say market reforms must continue for
capital-poor Latin economies to progress, are worried.

Bolivia, for instance, was an early convert along with
Chile in the 1990's to what is called the neoliberal model.
It reined in loose monetary policies and shrank the
government by unloading dozens of state-owned companies to
private international investors. The results, particularly
in taming inflation and reducing poverty, were impressive.

But in one of Latin America's poorest nations, it is hard
for Bolivian officials to talk about progress to the wide
portion of the population that continues to live in
grinding poverty and feels that entitlements the government
once provided in the form of subsidized rates for water and
electricity have been stripped away.

The better services that have accompanied the sale of state
enterprises have left many indifferent, particularly in
impoverished areas where residents had invested their own
money and sweat to string up electrical lines or put in
water pipes and drainage.

"Clearly if you're poor and have no water, sewage and live
in a rural area, having three long distance telephone
companies when you have no phone lines doesn't make a bean
of difference," Bolivia's president, Jorge Quiroga,
acknowledged in an interview.

In Peru the resistance to privatization and market reforms
is especially pronounced and, for its government, puzzling.


Unlike most of Latin America, the economy here has steadily
grown since Mr. Toledo's election in June 2001 as the
government has continued sales of assets begun during the
decade-long rule of Alberto K. Fujimori.

Government officials say the program has been successful.
Phone installation, which used to take years and cost
$1,500 or more, now costs $50 and takes a day or two.
Electrical service, once shoddy and limited, has spread
across the country.

The privatization of mines, which is nearly complete, has
improved efficiency and output so much that employment in
that sector and related activities has increased to more
than 60,000 today from 42,000 in 1993.

But government belt-tightening also led to widespread
layoffs. Mr. Toledo's government has been hit hard by
protests and popular discontent, much of it fueled by its
inability to alleviate poverty. Many have blamed the
privatizations, seeing them as a vestige of the
corruption-riddled presidency of Mr. Fujimori, who is now
in exile in Japan.

Here in Arequipa, where the economy was already limping,
when word came that the government was about to sell the
two state-owned electric companies, Egasa and Egesur,
people recalled that Mr. Toledo had campaigned on a pledge
never to sell the companies to private owners.

It did not matter that the government promised Arequipa
half the sale price, and that the investor, the
Brussels-based Tractebel S.A., would invest tens of
millions of dollars more to improve services.

The promises were not believed. Soon the workers
federation, neighborhood organizations and university
students organized protests, suspecting that higher
electricity costs and layoffs were on the way.

"Thanks to our fight, our perseverance, the government
backed down," Alejandro Pacheco, a leader in the protests
here, told a roomful of supporters this week. "Now we need
to do this in the rest of Peru."

http://www.nytimes.com/2002/07/19/international/americas/19PERU.html?ex=1028
095258&ei=1&en=7a5590e1901cf241



HOW TO ADVERTISE
---------------------------------
For information on advertising in e-mail newsletters
or other creative advertising opportunities with The
New York Times on the Web, please contact
onlinesales@nytimes.com or visit our online media
kit at http://www.nytimes.com/adinfo

For general information about NYTimes.com, write to
help@nytimes.com.

Copyright 2002 The New York Times Company

