The Rise of
Food
Fascism:
Agrarian
Elite
Foments Coup
in Bolivia
By Roger
Burbach
03/07/08 "Bolivia
Rising"
-- - Like
many third
world
countries
Bolivia is
experiencing
food
shortages
and rising
food prices
attributable
to a global
food
marketing
system
driven by
multinational
agribusiness
corporations.
With sixty
percent of
the Bolivian
population
living in
poverty and
thirty-three
percent in
extreme
poverty, the
price of the
basic food
canasta--including
wheat, rice,
corn, soy
oil and
potatoes, as
well as
meat—has
risen
twenty-five
percent over
the past
year with
prices
gyrating
wildly in
the local
markets.
As in most
other
countries
affected by
the food
crisis, the
overall rise
in food
prices is
attributable
to the
workings of
the free
market—when
the price of
one or
several
commodities
goes up, the
consumers
turn to
other food
stuffs,
thereby
driving up
these prices
as well. In
an effort to
halt the
effects of
this
unregulated
market, the
government
has enacted
price
controls and
even
prohibited
the export
of beef,
most of
which is
produced on
haciendas.
But these
measures
have been
largely
ineffective:
A black
market
flourishes
as agrarian
commercial
interests
openly
flaunt the
central
government’s
price
controls,
even
directly
exporting
commodities
like beef
and cooking
oil at
higher
prices to
the
neighboring
countries of
Chile and
Peru.
This is
taking place
as Bolivia’s
first Indian
president,
Evo Morales,
is facing a
sustained
challenge by
a right wing
movement for
autonomy
that is
integrally
linked to
the very
agribusiness
corporations
that are
profiting
from the
upsurge in
food prices.
Based in the
eastern
province of
Santa Cruz,
a powerful
agrarian
bourgeoisie
is
determined
to upend the
government’s
agrarian
reform
program and
to halt
Morales’
efforts to
more
equitably
distribute
the wealth
that flows
from
Bolivia’s
oil and gas
fields. Its
ultimate
goal is to
topple
Morales and
the Movement
Towards
Socialism
(MAS) that
backs him.
The
corporate
dominated
agro-industrial
complex in
Santa Cruz
is centered
on the
growing,
processing
and export
of soy
beans. Two
of the
world’s
largest
agribusiness
multinationals,
ADM and
Cargill,
play a major
role in the
regional
economy.
They are
primarily
exporters of
Bolivian
soybeans and
sunflower
seeds while
ADM co-owns
with a
Bolivian
firm the
largest
vegetable
oil
processing
plant,
Sociedad
Aceitera del
Oriente. (1)
Giant
agribusiness
corporations
like John
Deere have
commercial
outlets in
Santa Cruz
as Bolivia
manufactures
no heavy
agricultural
machinery.
Multinational
companies
supply most
of Bolivia’s
agrichemicals,
while
Monsanto and
Calgene are
promoting
genetically
modified
seeds.
Peruvian and
Colombian
agribusiness
interests
have also
set up
processing
plants in
Santa Cruz,
including
the Romero
Company from
Peru which
has joint
international
operations
with
Cargill,
while large
soy growers
from the
neighboring
Brazilian
state of
Mato Grosso
have settled
on Bolivian
lands.
The agrarian
bourgeoisie
of Santa
Cruz is
orchestrating
the movement
for
provincial
autonomy in
order to
seize
control of
the region’s
extensive
resources
from the
national
government.
The
referendum
on autonomy
that was
unconstitutionally
voted on and
approved in
Santa Cruz
on May 4,
2008 would
allow the
provincial
administration
to write its
own
contracts
with
multinationals
and to
exercise
direct
control over
the police
and law
enforcement
agencies.
Autonomy
would also
enable the
province to
override
national
legislation
promoted by
Morales and
MAS on
agrarian
reform and
the control
of public
forests and
subsoil
rights,
including
natural gas
and oil.
The economic
policies
favoring the
rise and
consolidation
of the
agrarian
bourgeoisie
allied to
global
agribusiness
took shape
in the
mid-1980s
when the
International
Monetary
Fund stepped
in with a
structural
adjustment
program.
Hyper-inflation
had gripped
the country
from 1983-85
and in
exchange for
the
refinancing
of Bolivia’s
public and
international
debt the
government
agreed to a
series of
“market
reforms,”
including
the
reduction of
tariffs and
the slashing
of state
subsidies
and
assistance
for the
growing of
basic food
commodities.
(2)
These
measures
overturned
the strong
role the
state had
come to play
in the
economy with
the Bolivian
revolution
of 1952.
Along with
the
nationalization
of the tin
mines, the
worker and
peasant
backed
revolution
led to an
agrarian
reform that
broke up the
hacienda
system in
the Andean
highlands
which had
bound much
of the
Indian
population
to the land
in virtual
servitude.
With the
takeover of
the large
estates by
peasants,
rural unions
and Indian
communities,
the
production
and
marketing of
basic food
stuffs
increased,
particularly
in the 1950s
and early
60s. (3)
But another
agrarian
dynamic
began to
take shape
in the
eastern part
of the
country
during these
years.
Bolivia has
three main
geographical
zones; the
Andean
highlands or
plateau in
the west
where the
agrarian
reform was
concentrated;
the valleys
located more
in the
center and
to the
south; and
the plains
or low lands
that extend
into the
more humid
and tropical
regions in
the east.
In the 1960s
and 70s, a
new landed
class
emerged in
the low
lands
centered in
the province
of Santa
Cruz.
Seizing
control of
large swaths
of the
plains and
rain
forests,
often
illegally or
through
government
concessions
acquired
through
bribes, the
new landed
barons
raised sugar
cane and
cotton while
plundering
the rain
forests for
lumber. The
reactionary
character of
this region
was
manifested
early on
when General
Hugo Banzer
from Santa
Cruz
overthrew a
leftist
general
backed by a
popular
assembly in
1971, ruling
the country
with an iron
hand for
seven years,
much like
the military
regimes in
other
countries in
the Southern
cone that
took power
in the
1970s. (4)
The IMF
reforms of
1985
privileged
the role of
Santa Cruz
vis-à-vis
other parts
of the
country.
With the
privatization
and closure
of many of
the state
tin mines in
the Andean
highlands,
tens of
thousands of
miners were
thrown out
of work.
Many
migrated to
the Chapare
region in
the
south-central
part of the
country,
becoming
coca
farmers,
while others
went to the
east to
squat on
small
patches of
land and
serve as an
agrarian
labor force
for the
large
estates that
were favored
with credits
and
infrastructure
loans backed
by the World
Bank. Then
in the 1990s
vast tracts
of land were
turned over
to the
cultivation
of soybeans
and by the
turn of the
century
Bolivia’s
export
revenue from
soy
production
was second
in
importance
only to that
of the
natural gas
and oil
fields.
The rise of
this
agribusiness
complex has
plundered
the natural
resources of
eastern
Bolivia. As
the frontier
for soybeans
advances
further into
the
rainforests,
the older
depleted
lands are
either
abandoned or
turned into
extensive
cattle
grazing
pastures.
Given the
highly
mechanized
nature of
soy farming,
there are
few
employment
opportunities
in the
countryside
for either
the local
indigenous
population
or for those
who migrate
from the
Andes
searching
for work. As
Miguel
Urioste, the
director of
the Land
Foundation
in La Paz
explains:
“This mono
export
model—promoted
actively by
the World
Bank for 15
years—is a
lamentable
demonstration
of how,
those that
decide
public
policies…in
the third
world, do
not take
into account
the enormous
environmental
costs or the
lamentable
economic and
political
effects
produced by
this model.
The
monocultivation
of soy has
concentrated
land in a
few hands,
it has
transnationalized
property
rights, it
has impeded
new humanely
planned
settlements
and
concentrated
thousands of
poor
peasants
without
lands to
generate
wealth,
employment
and well
being.” (5)
While
Bolivia
ranks among
the world’s
ten top soy
exporters,
the
production
of domestic
food stuffs
by the
peasantry
has
stagnated or
declined and
the urban
population
has come to
rely more
and more on
imported
grains.
Today
Bolivia
imports
sixty-nine
percent of
its wheat,
forty-five
percent of
its rice,
and
forty-two
percent of
its corn.
(6) In 2004,
even the
World Bank
was
compelled to
admit: 'the
rural
economy is
increasingly
polarised
between the
small
peasant
sector
producing
foodstuffs,
on the one
hand, and
the
agro-enterprise
sector
producing
cash crops
for export,
on the
other’. (7)
The Civic
Committee of
Santa Cruz,
a business
organization
lead by
agribusiness
interests,
is at the
center of
the drive
for
provincial
autonomy.
According to
Bret
Gustafson,
an analyst
of the Santa
Cruz elite
and its
political
and cultural
institutions:
“The Civic
Committee is
an unelected
entity
dominated by
business and
agro-industrial
elites who
have a long
history of
resisting
control of,
and
demanding
subsidization
by, the
central
government.
Typical
business
members
include the
private
chamber of
commerce,
the
cattlemen,
the
agro-livestock
chamber, the
industrialists,
the forestry
chamber, the
soy-producers
chamber, and
professional
organizations
(doctors,
lawyers,
architects).
Other
“civic”members
include
representatives
of
provincial
civic
committees,
of carnival
comparsas,
and of
social clubs
or
“fraternities.”
(8)
Branko
Marinkovic,
the powerful
head of the
Civic
Committee
whose
parents
migrated to
Bolivia from
Croatia in
the 1950s,
is the
largest
landowner in
the country
with 300,000
hectares,
much of it
obtained for
pennies or
fraudulent
maneuvers
under past
dictatorial
and
oligarchic
governments.
(9) He also
has
considerable
business
investments,
including
IOL S.A.,
one of
Bolivia’s
largest soy
and
sunflower
processing
plants. A
political
ideologue of
the autonomy
movement,
Marinkovic
funds and
sits on the
board of the
think tank
Fundacion
Libertad y
Democracia
that has
ties to the
Heritage and
Cato
Foundations.
(10)
The Cruceño
Youth Union
(UJC), a
junior men’s
organization
affiliated
with the
Civic
Committee,
is the
strong arm
of the Civic
Committee,
often acting
as shock
troops for
the autonomy
movement.
During the
plebiscite
in May its
members,
mainly in
their teens
and early
twenties,
roamed the
streets of
the city of
Santa Cruz
and
surrounding
towns
violently
attacking
and
repressing
any
opposition
to the
referendum
by local
indigenous
movements
and
MAS-allied
forces. Not
wanting to
provoke a
violent
confrontation,
Evo Morales
did not
deploy the
army or use
the local
police,
leaving the
urban areas
under the
effective
control of
the UJC when
the voting
took place.
The other
less densely
inhabited
provinces in
the east
that make up
what is
called the
Media
Luna—Pando,
Beni and
Tarija--have
held
referendums
calling for
autonomy
under
similar
conditions.
On the
national
level, the
major
political
party of the
right,
Podemos (We
Can) tied up
the efforts
of a
popularly
elected
Constituent
Assembly to
draft a new
constitution
for over a
year and it
is now
maneuvering
with other
political
forces in La
Paz to block
a national
referendum
to enact the
constitution.
Simultaneously,
the right
wing lead by
the Civic
Committee is
sewing
economic
instability,
seeking to
destabilize
the Morales
government
much like
the
CIA-backed
opposition
did in Chile
against
Salvador
Allende in
the early
1970s. As in
Chile the
business
elites and
allied
truckers
engage in
“strikes,”
withholding
or refusing
to ship
produce to
the urban
markets
while
selling
commodities
in the black
market at
high prices
that cause
alarm among
the poor.
The national
Confederation
of Private
Businesses
of Bolivia
is calling
for a
national
producers’
shutdown if
the
government
“does not
change its
economic
policies.”
(11)
The social
movements
allied with
the
government
are
mobilizing
against the
right wing.
In the Media
Luna a union
coalition of
indigenous
peoples and
peasants has
campaigned
against
voting in
the autonomy
referendums
and taken on
the bands of
the UJC as
they try to
intimidate
and
terrorize
people. In
the Andean
highlands,
the social
movements
have
descended on
La Paz in
demonstrations
backing the
government,
including a
large
mobilization
on June 10
that stormed
the American
embassy
because of
its support
for the
right wing,
particularly
over the US
refusal to
extradite a
past
president
who ordered
the shooting
of
demonstrators
in the
streets in
2003.
Because of
this growing
unrest, the
country is
awash with
rumors of a
coup, and
Morales went
to a summit
in Caracas
in mid-June
with Hugo
Chavez,
Daniel
Ortega of
Nicaragua
and Carlos
Lage, vice
president of
Cuba, to
discuss how
to defend
his
government.
The ability
of the
agrarian
interests of
Bolivia to
take the
country to
the brink of
civil war is
reflective
of the
powerful
agrarian
bourgeoisies
that have
arisen in
many
countries of
the third
world in
tandem with
global
agribusiness.
When
national
governments
attempt to
control the
steep
increase in
food prices,
or popular
movements
agitate for
agrarian
reform and
food
sovereignty,
they
encounter
powerful
internal
agro-industrial
interests,
in effect a
fifth column
nurtured and
developed by
the
multinational
corporations
in
conjunction
with the
World Bank
and the IMF.
This new
configuration
of power is
particularly
manifest in
South
America. In
Argentina
when
President
Christina
Fernandez de
Kirchner
tried to
levy an
export tax
on soybeans,
the large
growers
orchestrated
a rebellion
that has
tied up the
country’s
exports and
food
marketing
system for
over three
months. In
neighboring
Brazil, the
agrarian
bourgeoisie
is perhaps
the
strongest
and most
entrenched
in the
Global
South. Over
the years it
has fought a
running war
with the
Landless
Movement,
violently
repressing
the efforts
of the poor
to
peacefully
occupy and
till idle
lands. In
October last
year at the
genetically
modified
seed
experimental
station of
Syngenta
(the world’s
largest
agrichemical
corporation)
five
peaceful
demonstrators
were shot
and one
killed: The
NT Security
company that
carried out
the attack
has close
ties to the
Rural
Society, a
right wing
growers
association
known for
repeated
acts of
violence
against the
Landless
Movement.
(12)
Some argue
that that we
are
witnessing
the rise of
“petro-fascism”
as
multinational
corporations
and nation
states
struggle for
control of
the
life-blood
of the
global
economy.
(13) Now
with the
efforts of
the
multinational
agribusiness
corporations
and the
agrarian
bourgeoisies
to control
the very
sustenance
of human
life we may
be facing an
even more
violent
period of
repression,
conflict and
upheaval.
Roger
Burbach is
director of
the Center
for the
Study of the
Americas (CENSA)
based in
Berkeley,
CA. He has
written
extensively
on Latin
America and
US foreign
policy. His
first book,
co-authored
with
Patricia
Flynn, was
“Agribusiness
in the
Americas.”
See
www.globalalternatives.org
for CENSA
activities
and
publications.
Special
thanks to
Isabella
Kenfield for
her
editorial
assistance.
End Notes
1. Ximena
Soruco (Coordinador)
Wilfredo
Plata and
Gustavo
Medeiros,
Los Barones
del Oriente:
El Poder en
Santa Cruz
Ayer y Hoy,
Fundacion
Tierra,
Observatorio
de la
Revolución
Agraria en
Bolivia, La
Paz,
Bolivia, pp.
206-12.
www.ftierra.org
2. For a
description
of how the
IMF and the
World Bank
imposed
these
structural
adjustment
programs on
other
countries in
the Global
South, see
Walden
Bello,
“Manufacturing
a Food
Crisis,” The
Nation, June
2, 2008.
3. Cristóbal
Kay and
Miguel
Urioste,
“Bolivia's
Unfinished
Agrarian
Reform:
Rural
Poverty and
Development
Policies,
ISS/UNDP
Land,
Poverty and
Public
Action,
Policy Paper
No. 3,
Institute of
Social
Studies, The
Hague,
Netherlands
and United
Nations
Development
Program, New
York, NY,
October,
2005, p.
11-13.
4. Forrest
Hylton and
Sinclair
Thomson,
Revolutionary
Horizons:
Popular
Struggle in
Bolivia,
Verso Press,
London,
2007, pp.
85-6.
5. Miguel
Urioste, “El
Banco
Mundial
Promovio los
Moncultivos
en Bolivia
Durante 15
Anos,
Fundacion
Tierra, May,
2008,
http://ftierra.org/sitio/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=159&Itemid=118
6. Marcos
Nordren
Ballivian,
“El Precio
de los
Alimientos,”
Foros del
Banco
Tematico,
June 11,
2008.
http://www.bancotematico.org/smf/index.php?topic=68.0
)
7. Kay and
Urisote, p.
15.
8. Bret
Gustafson,
“Spectacles
of Autonomy
and Crisis:
Or, What
Bulls and
Beauty
Queens have
to do with
Regionalism
in Eastern
Bolivia,”
Journal of
Latin
American
Anthropology,
Vol. 11, No.
2, 2006, p.
363.
9. BolPress,
“Movilización
para
Aplastar la
Conspiración
Oligárquico-Imperialista
en Bolivia,”
Unidad de
Promoción
Indigena y
Campesina,
Boletin N.
45, 20 de
Mayo, 2008,
http://www.bolpress.com/art.php?Cod=2008050812
10. Bret
Gustafson,
“By Means
Legal and
Otherwise:
The Bolivian
Right
Regroups,”
NACLA Report
on the
Americas,
January/February,
2008, p. 25.
http://nacla.org/naclareport
11. La
Prensa, “La
CEPB Amenaza
con Paro y
el Gobierno
Percibe
Complot,” La
Paz, June
21, 2008.
12. Isabella
Kenfeld and
Roger
Burbach,
“Corporate
Murder in
Brazil:
Landless
Rural Worker
Shot by
Security
Company
Hired by
Multinational
Syngenta,”
Strategic
Studies,
Global
Alternatives,
October,
2007.
http://globalalternatives.org/node/80
13. See
Michael T.
Klare,
“Behold the
Rise of
Energy-Based
Fascism,”
Tomdispatch.com,
January 20,
2007,
http://www.alternet.org/story/46838
