19. Peoples Movement Challenges Neoliberal
Agenda
Sources:
Trade Matters, American Friends Service Committee, May 3, 2006
Title: Is the US Free Trade Model Losing Steam?
Author: Jessica Walker Beaumont
http://www.afsc.org/trade-matters/trade-agreements/LosingSteam.htm
International Herald Tribune, December 28, 2006
Title: Economic Policy Changes With New Latin American Leaders
Author: Mark Weisbrot
http://www.cepr.net/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=773&Itemid=45
International Affairs Forum, March 31, 2007
Title: Is Hugo Chavez a Threat to Stability? No.
Author: Mark Weisbrot
http://www.cepr.net/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1102&Itemid=45
Student Evaluator: Toni Catelani
Faculty Evaluator: Phil Beard, Ph.D.
The US Free Trade model is meeting increasingly successful resistance
as peoples movements around the world build powerful alternatives
to neoliberal exploitation.
This is particularly evident in Latin America, where massive opposition
to US economic domination has demanded that populist leaders and parties
take control of national governments in Venezuela, Bolivia, Ecuador,
Argentina, Brazil, Nicaragua, and Uruguay.
Latin American presidents are delivering on promises to fix the mistake
of twenty-five years of neoliberal reforms that resulted in the regions
worst economic collapse in more than one hundred years. In the two decades
preceding World Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF) policies,
1960-1980, the regions income per person grew by 82 percent. By
comparison it grew just 9 percent 19802000, and only 4 percent
20002005.
Strong ties between Venezuelas Hugo Chavez, Cubas Fidel
Castro, and Bolivias Evo Morales, Ecuadors Rafael Correa,
and Nicaraguas Daniel Ortega, along with cooperative relationships
with major economies including Argentina and Brazil, are creating the
real potential for autonomous alternatives to US-dictated economic policy
in the Western Hemisphere.
In the past year alone several leaders have announced plans to cut
ties with the World Bank and IMF. After a sweeping reelection in December
2006, Chavez announced April 30, 2007 that, having paid off debts to
the World Bank and the IMF, Venezuela would cut ties with both institutions.1
Chavez has been able to put his nation on a path of solid growth by
fulfilling his 1998 campaign promise to renationalize Venezuelas
oil industry (PDVSA). Though fierce US opposition to his move to end
foreign privatization led to a failed US-backed military coup in 2002,
nationalized oil is now the source of nearly half the Venezuela governments
revenues and 80 percent of the countrys export earnings. Venezuelas
economy has grown 38 percent in the last three years.
Chavez plans to set up a new lending institution run by Latin American
nations and has pledged to support it with Venezuelas booming
oil revenues.1 Venezuelas $50 billion in foreign exchange reserves
is providing financial support to countries in the region without the
exploitive policy conditions attached to WTO and World Bank lending.
Leaders are thus able to deliver on promises to their people, contributing
not only to stability but to the strengthening of Democracy in the region.
In April 2006, Evo Morales announced his rejection of the IMF and any
future FTA with the US. He instead launched the Bolivian Peoples Trade
Agreement (PTA), a socialist alternative to the neoliberal free trade
model. The PTA emphasizes support of indigenous culture, reciprocity,
solidarity, and national sovereignty. Above all the PTA emphasizes improved
living conditions for the whole population as a result of international
trade and investment. Bolivias 2005 passage of a Hydrocarbons
Law raised the royalties paid by foreign gas companies to the government
of Bolivia. While infuriating US corporations, the resulting tens of
millions of dollars in revenue have enabled Bolivia to pay off its IMF
debt and begin to build social programs and national reserves.
In December 2006, Rafael Correa, who recently won the presidential
election in Ecuador on an anti-privatization, anti-US military base
platform, announced plans to restructure Ecuadors foreign debt
in order to increase spending on crucial social programs. Ecuador has
since paid its debt to the IMF and announced plans to sever ties to
the institution. Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega has also announced
negotiations toward an IMF exit.
Argentina was one of the IMFs most publicized successes
turned-crushing-failure at the end of the last century. From 1991 to
1998 the country adopted a host of IMF-recommended reforms including
large-scale privatizations. The economy grew substantially during this
period but went into a terrible downward slide beginning in mid-1998.
At the end of 2001 the whole experiment fell apart, with the country
defaulting on more than $100 billion of debt. The currency collapsed
soon thereafter, and the majority of people fell below the poverty line
in a country that had previously been one of the richest in Latin America.2
When Argentinas President Nestor Kirchner finally refused the
IMFs debilitating repayment mandates, Argentinas economy
began to reboundand it hasnt stopped growing. In a remarkable
expansion, which was never supposed to have happened according to IMF
predictions, Argentinas economy has grown by 47 percent in the
past few years, making it the fastest growing economy in the Western
Hemisphere, and pulling more than nine million people (in a country
of 36 million) out of poverty.2 Argentina decided to make its break
with the IMF in January 2006 by paying off its remaining $9.9 billion
debt.
As of December 2005, Brazil is also free to make its own decisions,
free from IMF interference, after paying off its debt two years ahead
of schedule. We repaid the money to show the world that this country
has a government and it is the owner of its own nose, Lula said
at the time, adding, Brazil has been able to decide that it does
not want another IMF deal.3
While it is an expanding reality that many strong and growing peoples
movements have not been so fortunate as to have representative governmentsthe
people of India (see story #8), Mexico
(see story #18), and Niger (see story
#3) are but a few examplesmore and more elected leaders in
Latin America are providing models of true democratic leadership that
is of, for, and by the people.
Citations
1. Jorge Rueda, Venezuela Pulling Out of IMF, World Bank,
Associated Press, May 1 2007.
2. Mark Weisbrot, IMFs Fall From Power, Washington
Post.com, April 13, 2007.
3. Xinhua, Early Debt Payment Enables Brazil to Make Own Budget
Decisions, Peoples Daily Online, December 16, 2005.
UPDATE BY Jessica Walker Beaumont
Written a year ago, the American Friends Service Committee article
Is the US Free Trade Model Losing Steam? accurately predicted
a growing resistance among Latin American and African leaders to the
current one-size-fits-all US trade policy model.
Proponents of the current US free trade model seem willing to do whatever
it takes to keep the free trade train moving down the track. However
their time is literally running out, in part due to the looming July
1 expiration of fast track authority that gives the Bush
administration the power to negotiate free trade agreements on behalf
of Congress.
Although Bolivia, Ecuador and Southern Africa stand firm against US
Free Trade Agreements (FTA), there remains a coalition of the
willing lining up to get their trade agreements. Pending trade
pacts for Congressional consideration include those with Colombia, Peru,
Panama and Korea. Greasing the wheels to pass these FTAs is a new breakthrough
trade deal with the Bush administration announced by Democratic
leadership on May 10, 2007.
It is said that the deal would improve new free trade agreements by
requiring that they include labor and environmental standards, and by
insuring better access to essential medicines. Sounds good right? Well,
the deal was negotiated in secret with only a handful of Congressional
members, the legal text is still not released, and high-powered big
business groups are supporters. The official outline of the deal reveals
all that is excluded, ignoring a cry for substantial rethinking of US
trade policy.
Meanwhile Bolivia continues to advance its Peoples Trade Agreement.
In April, 2007 Bolivia (along with Venezuela and Nicaragua) decided
to withdraw from the International Center for Settlement of Investment
Disputes (ICSID) housed at the World Bank. This came out of the social
movement started in 2001 against the US multinational Bechtel that sued
Bolivia under the ICSID for $25 million after it was thrown out during
the Cochabamba Water War. Dropping out of the ICSID sends a clear message
that protecting private investment at the expense of the rights of the
people will not be tolerated.
Ecuadorian President Rafael Correa, elected into power on an anti-FTA
and anti-US military base agenda, is considering doing the same. In
April Correa expelled the World Banks representative in Quito,
accusing him of withdrawing funds in protest over the governments
oil sector reforms.
Costa Rica offers a new beacon of hope as they have yet to ratify the
Central American Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA). Huge resistance to CAFTA
grew as people learned it would require the dismantling of Costa Ricas
public telecommunications sector that is funding education. On April
12, 2007 the Supreme Electoral Court approved a measure calling for
a binding referendum on CAFTA, likely to take place in August or September.
The CAFTA referendum will be Costa Ricas first public referendum
since it gained independence from Spain in 1821 (Inside US Trade, May
4, 2007).