The Problems of Latin America
and the Caribbean
VII Social Summit for the Latin American and Caribbean Unity
By Noam Chomsky
04/10/08
- -- (Caracas
9-24-08) During the past decade, Latin
America
has become the most exciting region of the world. The
dynamic has very largely flowed from right where you are
meeting, in Caracas, with the election of a leftist
president dedicated to using Venezuela's rich resources for
the benefit of the population rather than for wealth and
privilege at home and abroad, and to promote the regional
integration that is so desperately needed as a prerequisite
for independence, for democracy, and for meaningful
development. The initiatives taken in
Venezuela
have had a significant impact throughout the subcontinent,
what has now come to be called "the pink tide." The impact
is revealed within the individual countries, most recently
Paraguay, and in the
regional institutions that are in the process of
formation. Among these are the Banco del Sur, an initiative
that was endorsed here in Caracas
a year ago by Nobel laureate in economics Joseph Stiglitz;
and the ALBA, the Bolivarian Alternative for Latin America
and the Caribbean, which
might prove to be a true
dawn
if its initial promise can be realized.
The
ALBA is often described as an alternative to the
US-sponsored "Free Trade Area of the
Americas," though the terms
are misleading. It should be understood to be an independent
development, not an alternative. And, furthermore, the
so-called "free trade agreements" have only a limited
relation to free trade, or even to trade in any serious
sense of that term; and they are certainly not agreements,
at least if people are part of their countries. A more
accurate term would be "investor-rights arrangements,"
designed by multinational corporations and banks and the
powerful states that cater to their interests, established
mostly in secret, without public participation or
awareness. That is why the
US executive regularly
calls for "fast-track authority" for these agreements -
essentially, Kremlin-style authority.
Another
regional organization that is beginning to take shape is
UNASUR, the Union of South American Nations. This
continental bloc, modeled on the European Union, aims to
establish a South American parliament in
Cochabamba, a fitting site for the
UNASUR parliament. Cochabamba
was not well known internationally before the water wars of
2000. But in that year events in
Cochabamba
became an inspiration for people throughout the world who
are concerned with freedom and justice, as a result of the
courageous and successful struggle against privatization of
water, which awakened international solidarity and was a
fine and encouraging demonstration of what can be achieved
by committed activism.
The
aftermath has been even more remarkable. Inspired in part by
developments in Venezuela, Bolivia has forged an impressive
path to true democratization in the hemisphere, with
large-scale popular initiatives and meaningful participation
of the organized majority of the population in establishing
a government and shaping its programs on issues of great
importance and popular concern, an ideal that is rarely
approached elsewhere, surely not in the Colossus of the
North, despite much inflated rhetoric by doctrinal managers.
Much
the same had been true 15 years earlier in
Haiti, the only country in the
hemisphere that surpasses
Bolivia in poverty - and like
Bolivia, was the source of much of the
wealth of Europe, later the
United States. In 1990,
Haiti's first free election
took place. It was taken for granted in the West that the
US
candidate, a former World Bank official who monopolized
resources, would easily win. No one was paying attention to
the extensive grass-roots organizing in the slums and hills,
which swept into power the populist priest Jean-Bertrand
Aristide. Washington
turned at once to undermining the feared and hated
democratic government. It took only a few months for a
US-backed military coup to reverse this stunning victory for
democracy, and to place in power a regime that terrorized
the population with the direct support of the
US government, first under president
Bush I, then
Clinton. Washington finally permitted
the elected president to return, but only on the condition
that he adhere to harsh neoliberal rules that were
guaranteed to crush what remained of the economy, as they
did. And in 2004, the traditional torturers of
Haiti,
France and the
US, joined to remove the
elected president from office once again, launching a new
regime of terror, though the people remain unvanquished, and
the popular struggle continues despite extreme adversity.
All of
this is familiar in Latin America, not least in
Bolivia, the scene of
today's most intense and dangerous confrontation between
popular democracy and traditional US-backed
elites. Archaeologists are now discovering that before the
European conquest, Bolivia had a wealthy, sophisticated and
complex society - to quote their words, "one of the largest,
strangest, and most ecologically rich artificial
environments on the face of the planet, with causeways and
canals, spacious and formal towns and considerable wealth,"
creating a landscape that was "one of humankind's greatest
works of art, a masterpiece." And of course
Bolivia's vast mineral wealth enriched
Spain and indirectly northern
Europe, contributing massively to its economic
and cultural development, including the industrial and
scientific revolutions. Then followed a bitter history of
imperial savagery with the crucial connivance of rapacious
domestic elites, factors that are very much alive today.
Sixty years
ago, US planners regarded
Bolivia and
Guatemala as the greatest
threats to its domination of the hemisphere. In both cases,
Washington
succeeded in overthrowing the popular governments, but in
different ways. In Guatemala, Washington resorted to the
standard technique of violence, installing one of the
world's most brutal and vicious regimes, which extended its
criminality to virtual genocide in the highlands during
Reagan's murderous terrorist wars of the 1980s - and we
might bear in mind that these horrendous atrocities were
carried out under the guise of a "war on terror," a war that
was
re-declared
by George Bush in September 2001, not
declared,
a revealing distinction when we recall the implementation of
Reagan's "war on terror" and its grim human consequences.
In
Guatemala, the Eisenhower
administration overcame the threat of democracy and
independent development by violence. In
Bolivia, it achieved much the same
results by exploiting Bolivia's
economic dependence on the US,
particularly for processing
Bolivia's tin
exports. Latin America scholar Stephen Zunes points out that
"At a critical point in the nation's effort to become more
self-sufficient [in the early 1950s], the
U.S. government forced
Bolivia to use its scarce
capital not for its own development, but to compensate the
former mine owners and repay its foreign debts."
The
economic policies forced on
Bolivia
in those years were a precursor of the structural adjustment
programs imposed on the continent thirty years later, under
the terms of the neoliberal "Washington
consensus," which has generally had disastrous effects
wherever its strictures have been observed. By now, the
victims of neoliberal market fundamentalism are coming to
include the rich countries, where the curse of financial
liberalization is bringing about the worst financial crisis
since the Great Depression of the 1930s and leading to
massive state intervention in a desperate effort to rescue
collapsing financial institutions.
We
should note that this is a regular feature of contemporary
state capitalism, though the scale today is unprecedented. A
study by two well-known international economists 15 years
ago found that at least twenty companies in the top Fortune
100 would not have survived if they had not been saved by
their respective governments, and that many of the rest
gained substantially by demanding that governments
"socialise their losses." Such government intervention "has
been the rule rather than the exception over the past two
centuries," they conclude from a detailed analysis. [Ruigrok
and von Tulder]
We might also
take note of the striking similarity between the structural
adjustment programs imposed on the weak by the International
Monetary Fund, and the huge financial bailout that is on the
front pages today in the North. The
US
executive-director of the IMF, adopt ing an image from the
Mafia, described the institution as "the credit community's
enforcer." Under the rules of the Western-run international
economy, investors make loans to third world tyrannies, and
since the loans carry considerable risk, make enormous
profits. Suppose the borrower defaults. In a capitalist
economy, the lenders would incur the loss. But
really existing
capitalism
functions quite differently. If the
borrowers cannot pay the debts, then the IMF steps in to
guarantee that lenders and investors are protected. The debt
is transferred to the poor population of the debtor country,
who never borrowed the money in the first place and gained
little if anything from it. That is called "structural
adjustment." And taxpayers in the rich country, who also
gained nothing from the loans, sustain the IMF through their
taxes. These doctrines do not derive from economic theory;
they merely reflect the distribution of decision-making
power.
The
designers of the international economy sternly demand that
the poor accept market discipline, but they ensure that they
themselves are protected from its ravages, a useful
arrangement that goes back to the origins of modern
industrial capitalism, and played a large role in dividing
the world into rich and poor societies, the first and third
worlds.
This wonderful
anti-market system designed by self-proclaimed market
enthusiasts is now being implemented in the
United States, to deal with
the very ominous crisis of financial markets. In general,
markets have well-known inefficiencies. One is that
transactions do not take into account the effect on others
who are not party to the transaction. These so-called
"externalities" can be huge. That is particularly so in the
case of financial institutions. Their task is to take risks,
and if well-managed, to ensure that potential losses to
themselves
will be covered. To
themselves. Under
capitalist rules, it is not their business to consider the
cost to others if their practices lead to financial crisis,
as they regularly do. In economists' terms, risk is
underpriced, because systemic risk is not priced into
decisions. That leads to repeated crisis, naturally. At that
point, we turn to the IMF solution. The costs are
transferred to the public, which had nothing to do with the
risky choices but is now compelled to pay the costs - in the
US, perhaps mounting to
about $1 trillion right now. And of course the public has
no voice in determining these outcomes, any more than poor
peasants have a voice in being subjected to cruel structural
adjustment programs.
A basic
principle of modern state capitalism is that cost and risk
are socialized, while profit is privatized. That principle
extends far beyond financial institutions. Much the same is
true for the entire advanced economy, which relies
extensively on the dynamic state sector for innovation, for
basic research and development, for procurement when
purchasers are unavailable, for direct bail-outs, and in
numerous other ways. These mechanisms are the domestic
counterpart of imperial and neocolonial hegemony, formalized
in World Trade Organization rules and the misleadingly named
"free trade agreements."
Financial liberalization has effects well beyond the
economy. It has long been understood that it is a powerful
weapon against democracy Free capital movement creates what
some international economists have called a "virtual
parliament" of investors and lenders, who can closely
monitor government programs and "vote" against them if they
are considered irrational: for the benefit of people, rather
than concentrated private power. They can "vote" by capital
flight, attacks on currencies, and other devices offered by
financial liberalization. That is one reason why the Bretton
Woods system established by the
US and
UK
after World War II instituted capital controls and regulated
currencies. The Great Depression and the war had aroused
powerful radical democratic currents, taking many forms,
from the anti-fascist resistance to working class
organization. These pressures made it necessary to permit
social democratic policies. The Bretton Woods system was
designed in part to create a space for government action
responding to public will - for some measure of democracy,
that is. John Maynard Keynes, the British negotiator,
considered the most important achievement of Bretton Woods
to be establishment of the right of governments to restrict
capital movement. In dramatic contrast, in the neoliberal
phase after the breakdown of the Bretton Woods system, the
US Treasury now regards free capital mobility as a
"fundamental right," unlike such alleged "rights" as those
guaranteed by the Universal Declaration of Human Rights:
health, education, decent employment, security, and other
rights that the Reagan and Bush administrations have
dismissed as "letters to Santa Claus," "preposterous," mere
"myths."
In
earlier years the public had not been much of a problem. The
reasons are reviewed by Barry Eichengreen in his standard
scholarly history of the international monetary system. He
explains that in the 19th century, governments
had not yet been "politicized by universal male suffrage and
the rise of trade unionism and parliamentary labor parties."
Therefore the severe costs imposed by the virtual parliament
could be transferred to the general population. But with the
radicalization of the general public during the Great
Depression and the anti-fascist war, that luxury was no
longer available to private power and wealth. Hence in the
Bretton Woods system, "limits on capital mobility
substituted for limits on democracy as a source of
insulation from market pressures." It is only necessary to
add the obvious corollary: with the dismantling of the
system from the 1970s, functioning democracy is
restricted. It has therefore become necessary to control and
marginalize the public in some fashion, processes that are
particularly evident in the more business-run societies like
the
United States. The
management of electoral extravaganzas by the Public
Relations industry is one illustration.
The
primary victims of military terror and economic
strangulation are the poor and weak, within the rich
countries themselves and far more brutally in the South. But
times are changing. In
Venezuela, in
Bolivia, and elsewhere
there are promising efforts to bring about desperately
needed structural and institutional changes. And not
surprisingly, these efforts to promote democracy, social
justice, and cultural rights are facing harsh challenges
from the traditional rulers, at home and internationally.
For the
first time in half a millennium, South
America
is beginning to take its fate into its own hands. There have
been attempts before, but they have been crushed by outside
force, as in the cases I just mentioned and other hideous
ones too numerous and too familiar to review. But there are
now significant departures from a long and shameful
history. The departures are symbolized by the UNASUR crisis
summit in Santiago
just a few days ago. At the summit, the presidents of the
South American countries issued a strong statement of
support for the elected Morales government, which as you
know is under attack by the traditional rulers: privileged
Europeanized elites who bitterly oppose Bolivian democracy
and social justice and, routinely, enjoy the firm backing of
the master of the hemisphere. The South American leaders
gathering at the UNASUR summit in Santiago declared
"their full and firm support for the constitutional
government of President Evo Morales, whose mandate was
ratified by a big majority" -- referring, of course, to
his overwhelming victory in the recent referendum. Morales
thanked UNASUR for its support, observing that "For the
first time in South America's history, the countries of our
region are deciding how to resolve our problems, without the
presence of the
United States."
A
matter of no slight significance.
The
significance of the UNASUR support for democracy in
Bolivia is underscored by the fact that
the leading media in the
US
refused to report it, though editors and correspondents
surely knew all about it. Ample information was available to
them on wire services.
That
has been a familiar pattern. To cite just one of many
examples, the
Cochabamba
declaration of South American leaders in December 2006,
calling for moves towards integration on the model of the
European Union, was barred from the Free Press in the
traditional ruler of the hemisphere. There are many other
cases, all illustrating the same fear among the political
class and economic centers in the
US that the hemisphere is
slipping from their control.
Current
developments in South America
are of historic significance for the continent and its
people. It is well understood in
Washington
that these developments threaten not only its domination of
the hemisphere, but also its global dominance. Control of
Latin America was the earliest goal of
US foreign policy, tracing
back to the earliest days of the Republic. The
United States
is, I suppose, the only country that was founded as a
"nascent empire," in George Washington's words. The most
libertarian of the Founding Fathers, Thomas Jefferson,
predicted that the newly liberated colonies would drive the
indigenous population "with the beasts of the forests into
the Stony
Mountains," and the country will ultimately
be "free of blot or mixture," red or black (with the return
of slaves to Africa after
eventual ending of slavery). And furthermore, it "will be
the nest, from which all
America, North and South,
is to be peopled," displacing not only the red men but the
Latin population of the South.
These
aspirations were not achieved, but control of
Latin America
remains a central policy goal, partly for resources and
markets, but also for broader ideological and geostrategic
reasons. If the US
cannot control Latin America,
it cannot expect "to achieve a successful order elsewhere in
the world," Nixon's National Security Council concluded in
1971 while considering the paramount importance of
destroying Chilean democracy. Historian David Schmitz
observes that Allende "threatened American global interests
by challenging the whole ideological basis of American Cold
War policy. It was the threat of a successful socialist
state in
Chile
that could provide a model for other nations that caused
concern and led to American opposition," in fact direct
participation in establishing and maintaining the terrorist
dictatorship. Henry Kissinger warned that success for
democratic socialism in Chile
might have reverberations as far as southern Europe - not
because Chilean hordes would descend on
Madrid and
Rome, but because success might
inspire popular movements to achieve their goals by means of
parliamentary democracy, which is upheld as an abstract
value in the West, but with crucial reservations.
Even
mainstream scholarship recognizes that
Washington
has supported democracy if and only if it contributes to
strategic and economic interests, a policy that continues
without change through all administrations, to the present.
These
pervasive concerns are the rational form of the domino
theory, sometimes more accurately called "the threat of a
good example." For such reasons, even the tiniest departure
from strict obedience is regarded as an existential threat
that calls for a harsh response: peasant organizing in
remote communities of northern
Laos, fishing cooperatives in
Grenada, and so on
throughout the world. It is necessary to ensure that the
"virus" of successful independent development does not
"spread contagion" elsewhere, in the terminology of the
highest level planners.
Such
concerns have motivated US
military intervention, terrorism, and economic warfare
throughout the post-World War II era, in
Latin America
and throughout much of the world. These are leading features
of the Cold War. The superpower confrontation regularly
provided pretexts, mostly fraudulent, much as the junior
partner in world control appealed to the threat of the West
when it crushed popular uprisings in its much narrower
Eastern European domains.
But
times are changing. In Latin America,
the source is primarily in moves towards integration, which
has several dimensions. One dimension of integration is
regional: moves to strengthen ties among the South American
countries of the kind I mentioned. These are now just
beginning to reach to Central America, which was so utterly
devastated by Reagan's terror wars that it had mostly stayed
on the sidelines since, but is now beginning to move. Of
particular significance are recent developments in
Honduras, the classic "banana republic"
and Washington's
major base for its terrorist wars in the region in the
1980s. Washington's
Ambassador to
Honduras, John Negroponte,
was one of the leading terrorist commanders of the period,
and accordingly was appointed head of counter-terrorist
operations by the Bush administration, a choice eliciting no
comment. But here too times are changing. President Zelaya
declared that US
aid does not "make us vassals" or give
Washington the right to humiliate the nation,
and has improved ties with
Venezuela, joining
Petrocaribe, and in July, joining the Alba as well.
Regional integration of the kind that has been slowly
proceeding for several years is a crucial prerequisite for
independence, making it more difficult for the master of the
hemisphere to pick off countries one by one. For that reason
it is causing considerable distress in
Washington, and is either ignored or
regularly distorted in the media and other elite commentary.
A
second form of integration is global: the establishment of
South-South relations, and the diversification of markets
and investment, with
China
a growing and particularly significant participant in
hemispheric affairs. Again, these developments undercut
Washington's ability to control what Secretary of War Henry
Stimson called "our little region over here" at the end of
World War II, when he was explaining that other regional
systems must be dismantled, while our own must be
strengthened.
The third and in many ways most vital form of integration is
internal. Latin America
is notorious for its extreme concentration of wealth and
power, and the lack of responsibility of privileged elites
for the welfare of the nation. It is instructive to compare
Latin America with East Asia. Half
a century ago,
South Korea was at the
level of a poor African country. Today it is an industrial
powerhouse. And much the same is true throughout
East Asia. The contrast to Latin America is
dramatic, particularly so because Latin
America
has far superior natural advantages. The reasons for the
dramatic contrast are not hard to identify. For 30 years
Latin America has rigorously observed the rules of the
Washington consensus, while
East Asia
has largely ignored them. Latin American elites separated
themselves from the fate of their countries, while their
East Asian counterparts were compelled to assume
responsibilities. One measure is capital flight: in Latin
America, it is on the scale of the crushing debt, while in
South Korea
it was so carefully controlled that it could bring the death
penalty. More generally, East Asia adopted the modes of
development that had enabled the wealthy countries to reach
their current state, while Latin
America adhered to the market principles that
were imposed on the colonies and largely created the third
world, blocking development.
Furthermore, needless to say, development of the East Asian
style is hardly a model to which Latin
America, or any other region, should aspire. The
serious problems of developing truly democratic societies,
based on popular control of all social, economic, political
and cultural institutions, and overturning structures of
hierarchy and domination in all aspects of life, are barely
even on the horizon, posing formidable and essential tasks
for the future.
These
are huge problems within Latin America. They
are beginning to be addressed, though haltingly, with many
internal difficulties. And they are, of course, arousing
bitter antagonism on the part of traditional sectors of
power and privilege, again backed by the traditional master
of "our little region over here." The struggle is
particularly intense and significant right now in
Bolivia, but in fact is
constant in one or another form throughout the hemisphere.
The
problems of Latin America and the
Caribbean
have global roots, and have to be addressed by regional and
global solidarity along with internal struggle. The growth
of the social forums, first in South
America, now elsewhere, has been one of the most
encouraging steps forward in recent years. These
developments may bear the seeds of the first authentic
international, heralding an era of true globalization -
international integration in the interests of people, not
investors and other concentrations of power. You are right
at the heart of these dramatic developments, an exciting
opportunity, a difficult challenge, a responsibility of
historic proportions.