Ecuador's Election Shows Why Left Continues Winning in Hard Times

by: Mark Weisbrot  |  The Guardian UK

Ecuador's Election Shows Why Left Continues Winning in Hard Times
Ecuador's President Rafael Correa celebrates in Quito, the nation's capital. (Photo: Reuters)

Washington's foreign policy establishment has been proven wrong. Latin America is more stable and democratic than ever.

    A few months ago I ran into an economist who was formerly head of the Bolivian Central Bank in the La Paz airport. He had been reading Roubini, the New York University economist whom the media has nicknamed "Dr. Doom", and was predicting a very gloomy economic future for the hemisphere, the region, and especially his own country.

    I didn't agree about Bolivia, which has more international reserves relative to its economy than China. But it was striking to see the same thing in all the countries that I visited: opposition economists and political leaders everywhere reminded me of communists in the 1930s, praying for the collapse of the capitalist system - in this case, somewhat ironically, so that they could rid themselves of the left governments that the voters had chosen in Bolivia, Venezuela, Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay, Ecuador and elsewhere.

    In all of these countries the vast majority of the mass media, to varying degrees, shares the opposition's agenda and in many cases appears willing to present an overly pessimistic or even catastrophic scenario in order to help advance the cause.

    But despite the worsening of the world and regional economy, the left keeps winning in Latin America. The latest left victory was that of President Rafael Correa of Ecuador, an economist who was first elected at the end of 2006 and was re-elected last Sunday under a new constitution. This gives the charismatic 46 year-old four more years, and he can be re-elected once more for another term.

    There are a number of reasons that most Ecuadorians might stick with their president, despite what they hear on the TV news. Some 1.3 million of Ecuador's poor households (in a country of 14 million) now get a stipend of $30 a month, which is a significant improvement. Social spending as a share of the economy has increased by more than 50 percent in Correa's two years in office. Last year the government also invested heavily in public works, with capital spending more than doubling.

    Correa has delivered on other promises that were important to his constituents, not least of which was a referendum allowing for a constituent assembly to draft a new constitution, which voters approved by a nearly two-thirds majority. It is seen as one of the most progressive constitutions in the world, with advances in the rights of indigenous people, civil unions for gay couples, and a novel provision of rights for nature. The latter would apparently allow for lawsuits on the basis of damage to an ecosystem.

    Many thought Correa was joking when he said during his presidential campaign that he would be willing to keep the U.S. military base at Manta if Washington would allow Ecuadorian troops to be stationed in Florida. But he wasn't, and the base is scheduled to close later this year. He also resisted pressure from the U.S. Congress and others in a multi-billion dollar lawsuit that Ecuadorian courts will decide, in which Chevron is accused of dumping billions of gallons of toxic oil waste that polluted rivers and streams. And in an unprecedented move last November, Correa stopped payment on $4 billion of foreign debt when an independent Public Debt Audit Commission, long demanded by civil society organizations in Ecuador, determined that this debt was illegally and illegitimately contracted.

    In the United States, these policies have mostly been dismissed as "populism" or worse. A New York Times editorial in November 2007 entitled "Authoritarians in the Andes" summed up the foreign policy establishment view that Correa, Bolivia's President Evo Morales, and President Hugo Chávez of Venezuela were "increasingly interested in grabbing power for themselves." For Correa and Morales, wrote the Times editorial board, "their confrontational approach is also threatening to rend Bolivia and Ecuador's fragile social and political stability."

    The Times (and Washington's foreign policy establishment) have proven to be wrong, as Ecuador and Bolivia are now more politically stable than they have been for decades. (Ecuador has had nine presidents over the last fifteen years). They are also more democratic than they have ever been.

    In fact, most of Latin America is going through a democratic transition that is likely to prove every bit as important as the one that brought an end to the dictatorships that plagued many countries through the first four decades of the post-World War II era. Ironically, the region's economic performance was vastly better in the era of the dictatorships, because the governments of that era generally had more effective economic policies than the formally democratic but neoliberal governments that replaced them.

    A few years ago there were fears, backed by polling data, that people would become nostalgic for the days of real (not imagined) authoritarian governments because of the much greater improvements in living standards during that era. Instead, they chose to vote for left governments who extended democracy from politics to economic and social policy.

    The left governments have mostly succeeded where their neoliberal predecessors failed. Partly they have benefited from an acceleration in world economic growth during most of the last five years. But they have also changed their economic policies in ways that increased economic growth. Argentina's economy grew more than 60 percent in six years and Venezuela's by 95 percent. These are enormous growth rates even taking into account these countries' prior recessions, and allowed for large reductions in poverty. Left governments have also taken greater control over their natural resources (Ecuador, Bolivia, Venezuela) and delivered on their promises to share the income from these resources with the poor.

    This is the way democracy is supposed to work: people voted for change and got quite a bit of what they voted for, with reasonable expectations of more to come. We should not be surprised if most Latin American voters stick with the left through hard times. Who else is going to defend their interests?

    --------

    Mark Weisbrot is co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, in Washington, DC. He is co-author, with Dean Baker, of "Social Security: The Phony Crisis," and has written numerous research papers on economic policy. He is also president of Just Foreign Policy.

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In the most recent national

In the most recent national election on April 26th, the press and the US Embassy were predicting widespread political unrest. None occurred. Consider also that, at a time when racist mainstream Americans in the US are pointing fingers and cursing about the "threat" of Latin American immigrants, Ecuador allows US and other people who have lived in the country at least 5 years to participate in the plebiscite. Xenophobia and racism seem to be clouding vision and perspective in the US.


Americans have been

Americans have been brainwashed by the right-wing media machine to fear anything to the left of Hitler because they know their political agenda is not good for average working folks, and socialism -- which has so often been wrongly equated with communism in this country -- equalizes the glaringly unfair financial disparities between the corporate elites who take the profits and the main street labor that produces the profits.


Perhaps one of the reasons

Perhaps one of the reasons Americans are so easily "brainwashed" is that our circumstances are so totally insular that, culturally, we have no frame of reference when it comes to what the media say. Are we really the greatest country in the world? Are our people really the greatest innovators? The best at finance and economics? The most creative? What's true about us when we're measured against other countries? If they've never been anywhere else long enough to know how things work in other places, how can our people know what's true about this country?


had not Mexico's national

had not Mexico's national election been stolen, Lopez Obrador would now be president, and newss from our southern neighbor would be as encouraging and inspirational as that from Ecuador, Bolivia, and Venezuela. So close to the United States, so far from God. And the beaten-down peasant mentality lives on in 30% of the people of the USA, but less and less... poco a poco, paso por paso...


It appears that our intense

It appears that our intense interest in the Middle East has allowed for true democracy to grow and flourish in Latin America. How wonderful to hear about growing economies and and improved living standards instead of death squads and severe poverty persons. I hope our government is paying attention now.


Very encouraging article,

Very encouraging article, the report from the NYT is no surprise, they have been demonizing the SA left leaning governments for years. Now if we could only adopt the methods here in the US, this is the country that needs a genuine democracy. What we still have, according to Noam Chomsky, is a one party system with a left and right wing. What could we really become if we had a progressive administration? Our corporatist state, government of the corporations, by the corporations and for the corporations, does not serve our needs, only their greed.


Ditto to Marc Darn's comment

Ditto to Marc Darn's comment on Mexico. I have to laugh every time I see the US press refer to Venezuela's Hugo Chavez as a "dictator." Demagogue maybe, but he's been elected and re-elected in elections certified cleaner than ours, and is immensely popular among the voters. The VZ press mostly hates him of course, yet they continue to operate, despite having conspired to oust him in an illegal coup -- what "dictator" allows that? Perhaps we are truly seeing the emergence of a non-aligned Latin America, making policy in the interests of its own people rather than in the interest of U.S.-owned corporations and politicians.


" Many thought Correa was

" Many thought Correa was joking when he said during his presidential campaign that he would be willing to keep the U.S. military base at Manta if Washington would allow Ecuadorian troops to be stationed in Florida. But he wasn't, and the base is scheduled to close later this year. " I hope other countries hear this. Only stand up to a bully and he might run.


The key to the limited

The key to the limited leftist success in LA is their willingness to nationalize economic rents which come from monopoly of natural resources, including land itself, and utility monopolies (public concesions of sovereign monopoly power). To the degree that any government may channel such rents for public investment, their economies will become sustainable and more egalitarian in the distribution of wealth. Where the leftists fail, is in their limited application of this principle and their willingness to continue taxing producers in a way which punishes private industry. The charge of dictatorship is real, because the leftist ideology is evangelical in nature and they are willing to impose unjust measures on their oppositors in a misguided attempt to right the wrongs of the previous right-wing policies. The underlying issue is that of the land/resource/natural monoply rents. Neither the left nor the right understand the importance of the capturing land rents and untaxing production as the basis of sustainable economic justice. The left tries to dictate economic justice, haplessly killing the economic goose that lays the golden egg. In the short-term, in the shadow of past right-wing excesses, the left's policies may appear positive, but ultimately, the pendulum will swing the other way due to the cost of lost freedom, burocratic corruption, and failed populist policies in general. And then the cycle will repeat itself. But still, the left's fundamental, if confused understanding of the existence of common property of the public domain is a step toward a more sane economic policy, which really needs to distinguish between communally created values (sustainably taxable "economic rent") and privately created values (salary and capital interest). Search "henry george" for more info.