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A New Assertiveness for Latin American Governments
The relationships between governments and investors - especially transnational corporations -are changing rapidly, and this is especially true in Latin America today. Last month, Bolivia, Venezuela, and Nicaragua surprised many international observers by announcing that they would withdraw from the World Bank's international arbitration body, the International Center for the Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID). The ICSID is a place where - under prior arrangement - foreign investors who have a dispute with a host government can submit their case to binding arbitration.
Bolivia's position is that ICSID is not an impartial arbitrator, and cannot be expected to act as one, so long as it is part of the World Bank. As was highlighted by the recent controversy that led to the resignation of World Bank head Paul Wolfowitz, the Bank may have 185 member countries, but it is really dominated by Washington. The saga continues as the Bush Administration once again has chosen a close neo-conservative associate of President Bush - former U.S. Trade Representative Robert Zoellick - to run the institution. The World Bank has long used its power - not only from its own lending of $23 billion annually, but also as part of a "creditor's cartel" led by the International Monetary Fund - to pressure governments to adopt policies favored by transnational corporations. These include privatizations and removing restrictions on foreign ownership, trade, and investment flows.
The Bolivian government also argues that there are other conflicts of interest involved in having the World Bank's arbitration panel rule on disputes between governments and foreign investors. Pablo Solón, Bolivia's Special Ambassador for Trade and Integration, cited the case of Aguas de Illimani, a subsidiary of the French international water giant Suez. It turned out that the International Finance Corporation, a part of the World Bank Group, was a shareholder in Aguas de Illimani. It is clear that the same institution should not be both arbitrator and a party to the dispute.
The ICSID process, like other such international arbitration panels, does not have the transparency, checks and balances, or openness of a real judicial system - like ours in the U.S., for example. It is shrouded in secrecy. And the World Bank's influence in selecting arbitrators makes it anything but neutral.
Bolivia maintains that their government, which was elected with a majority that was tired of seeing the country's natural resources drained to make foreign companies rich while their country remained the poorest in South America, needs to change the rules so that they are at less of a disadvantage relative to giant corporations. They have a good case. Since the government raised its royalty rates on hydrocarbons - with the government's share of the biggest gas fields going from 18 to 82 percent - it has increased its revenue by nearly 7 percent of GDP. This is a huge increase in revenue.
The IMF wrote in their country papers on Bolivia that the country would be hurting itself by raising the royalty rates. They were wrong, as were most of the experts in Washington and the US business press. In these circles it is taken as given that anything which pleases foreign investors is good for the host country, as it will attract foreign investment. Likewise, anything that foreign investors don't like is generally portrayed as a potential disaster.
In recent years it has not worked out that way, especially in Latin America. At the end of 2001 Argentina engaged in the largest sovereign debt default in history, and most economists and journalists predicted they would suffer terrible consequences for many years to come. But in fact the economy declined for only three months, and then went on to average nearly Chinese levels of growth for the last five years: 8.6 percent annually. Venezuela raised the royalties on foreign investors in the Orinoco basin from 1 percent to 30 percent, and on May first claimed a majority stake in all joint ventures with foreign companies. The big oil companies - Chevron, Exxon Mobil, British Petroleum, ConocoPhillips, and others accepted these changes and are still there, making plenty of money.
In fact, what is happening now in Latin America and other developing countries is an attempt to correct for the extremism that characterized economic policy changes in the 1980s and 90s. Aside from the macroeconomic failures that resulted from these changes, one result was to seriously shift the balance of power to favor foreign investors over governments. The advent and increasing use of "investor-to-state dispute resolution," with investors able to sue governments directly for actions that infringe upon their profits, is a recent development. About two-thirds of these lawsuits have come about in just the last five years. Similarly, there has been a proliferation of Bilateral Investment Treaties (BITS), now more than 2500, many of them containing provisions for ICSID to arbitrate disputes.
But there does not appear to be any relation between adopting these "investor-friendly" reforms and even the amount of foreign direct investment that a country receives, as even the World Bank's own research has concluded. For many years China has led all developing countries as a recipient of foreign direct investment. But the main option for foreign companies that have a dispute with the government has been local arbitration through the country's own China International Economic and Trade Arbitration Commission (CIETAC).
The new assertiveness of Latin American governments toward foreign investors has proven remarkably successful so far, winning them billions of dollars of new revenues and allowing some of the new democratic governments to deliver on their promises to help alleviate poverty. The conventional wisdom is that these changes are just a temporary result of high prices for oil and other minerals and commodities, and unusually low interest rates - all of which have given developing countries more alternatives and bargaining power. But it is much more likely that these changes are institutional and permanent.
Mark Weisbrot is co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington, D.C. His expertise includes Economic growth, trade, Social Security, Latin America, international financial institutions, and development.
© 2007 MarkWeisbrot



11 Comments so far
Show AllVIVA CHAVEZ!!!! AND HOW!!!!
Why, then, does Venezuala have double digit inflation, rising infant mortality rates, the highest crime rate in America (Rio de Janeiro fell to no. 2, after Caracas), and an economy which is predicated ENTIRELY on oil remaining above $50 a gallon? That does not sound like long term sucess to me.
Powerslave:
YOU again!
How much are you paid for your posts?
Venezuela's inflationary figure through the end of March was 5.9%--guess your "double digit" b.s. was a convenient way of ignoring that decimal point! (Source: today's Ultimas Noticias here in CARACAS.)
Your other sourceless bits of nonsense data are undoubtedly fraught with the same weasling.
How much of the money that you are being paid to post fascist crap on progressive sites are you willing to bet this poster that oil falls below 50 bucks a barrel?
It's clearly going to get close to 100 in the new few years--and if Cheney gets his way and bombs Iran, you and the rest of the gringo shills will be seeing 150 bucks a barrel.
It's heartening to see SOMEONE stand up to US hegemony.
The reason they are standing up is that they can. Though the price is unforgiveable, Bush has done a service in crippling the ability of the US to militarily keep it's foot on the throats of poor nations, especially those in south and central America. In crippling the empire and destroying Iraq, he has inadvertantly allowed democracy to sprout where he least wants it.
And that's a good thing.
POWERSLAVE, the answer is one you'd never admit, Venezuela, like the rest of Latin America has had systematic poverty for centuries. Chavez took over in 1998. How could you expect him to walk into a country where the top 1% owns over 80% of the wealth, the vast majority of the population is in extreme poverty, has no access to healthcare or education and the infrastructure is crumbling and solve it in 9 years? Ridiculous. You'd never expect such nonsense from a right wing country, but you hate Chavez, so being objective and logical doesn't matter. If you were objective, and not a blind propagandist (if you are anything other than rich you're nothing more than a useful idiot to those who are), you'd acknowledge this.
Investors ALWAYS complain when regular working people do well and if you don't believe this I'd suggest you educate yourself on how the bond market works. When regular people are making higher wages (ie they're getting a larger piece of the pie) they spend more, which raises prices for goods. Investors call this "goods inflation", the ultimate evil to them, and this cuts down on the earnings of bonds. Bond ownership is much, much more concentrated than stock ownership, so we're talking about the elite of the elite here. So there is a pressure from the bond market, and their propaganda arm at the Wall Street Journal, to cut down on goods inflation at all times, ie to make sure regular working people get as little of the share as possible. They can't come out and say this, they give bumper sticker logic so people like you can understand, but this is the case.
Regardless of all of that, what has gone UP in Venezuela? Political participation, happiness with the functioning of democracy, access to education and healthcare, etc. Every right wing country that has followed the advice of the IMF and like minded institutions are not reliant on one resource for revenues, like you say Venezuela is. That's because they are nothing more than funds of raw materials for the already developed economies, like the US, and have not developed an industrial base of their own. Their revenue basically comes from exporting all their resources, which country has ever developed doing so? Matter of fact, the only countries that have EVER developed have done so by ignoring IMF like guidelines. South Korea, Japan and China for instance in Asia have all developed with massive state involvement. The US was, and still is, the most protectionist country historically in the developed world, Europe developed with massive state development, Chile (the model country for people like yourself) has been reliant since it's free market reforms on its STATE copper company for export revenue and only pulled out of its depression (caused by the Chicago boys) by utilizing massive state involvement. So don't give us any of your nonsense free market idiocy. Again, if you aren't rich yourself, your rich masters thank you for your ignorance.
Viva Chavez!
Hey, I bet I'm the only one here with a "viva Chavez" T-shirt (not made in the U.S.A.)
In redneck, Florida where I reside I stopped by a little sandwich shop today, and the sky looked ominous, which precipitated a conversation beginning with the weather (Florida's lack of rain). Our Lake Okeechobee is at its lowest level since l935 and there are various scientists studying what the receded waters reveal. I made a joke that maybe they'll find Jimmy Hoffa's body there; and one of the people eating lunch said, "Yeah. He went SOUTH for the winter." In any case, this spirit of comraderie led one woman to make "clever conversation" by saying she heard Chavez admitted to being a communist, and now everyone in Venezuela who has more than one washing machine has to give it to the poor. Well, there I was, in an unexpected conversation with the Rush Limbaugh crowd. (Other threads have pointed out how we must talk to our neighbors, try to bring TRUTH to bear on their albeit conditioned/programmed beliefs. Here was a chance!) I said with an ominous polite tone of voice, that it was very important to be wary of where our news sources came from. I added that capitalism without government oversight--insofar as labor rights, environmental concerns, and basic balance--was essential. (I know she never heard that before.) A man sitting there said something affirmative about the labor part. Then she said that our nation's morals had slipped so far from when she was a child. I agreed that the media had gone too far (I do feel this way, the emphasis on cheap sex, crude violence, and might makes right IS too overwhelming as the dominant message of so much) and reminded her there had been "decency standards," which had gotten relaxed. I left before things got heated, but definitely planted a few seeds, and told them about commondreams! You never know! Earlier when I stopped at a print shop, I made a comment that I'd recently counted the number of garbage items thrown on the sides of the road that wind through state forest along the Suwannee. She said she felt the same way! I have to say, I was pretty surprised to find HUMANITY and some semblance of agreement with these people, as I feel their general beliefs are so opposed to my own. This is Bush territory... I live "with the enemy." Today I crossed some lines... maybe it did some good (?)
Why is foreign capital so precious ?
What about everything else that is really needed as labor, land, mineral resources, knowledge and the like ?
Leaders like Chaves in Venezuela can develop their countries without all the BS from foreign capital.
They have plenty of everything else, and that's all you need to be productive.
It is better to live in an independent country with justice and fairness for all than having to bow to the rich and powerful. Let alone having to accept their usury wrapped around in pseudo-scientific economic babble.
Venezuela today is giving HOPE and HAPPINESS to millions of dispossessed. How much is that worth ?
PRICELESS.
Moonvulture, if I was paid HALF as much as the Venezuela Information Office pays Weisbrot to write this propaganda, it would still be twice as much as he's worth.
Where do you get your 5.9% figure from? Your nether regions? Venezuelas finance minister, an unlikely source for right wing lies, predicts, as of March, ANNUAL inflation of 14% this year.
Inflation in May was 1.7%, up from 1.4% in April, and -0.7% in March, which was mostly prompted by a decrease in IVA. Venezuela is presently on track for 20% annual inflation. You really should get your facts straight. But, then again, what are facts but an inconvenient truth?
GRANT, you make a very valid point. Centuries of economic mismanagement cannot be fixed overnight. Ask Boris Yeltsin. The trouble is, Hugo has not had overnight, he has had ten years. Ten years when his country's only serious export has seen its price shoot into the stratosphere. DESPITE this, crime is worse than when he took over, inflation is worse, and infant mortality is worse. Moonvulture yaps about Mexico under Fox. Fox only had six years, and did not get the same benefit from oil prices because oil is not such a huge percentage of the Mexican economy as it is of Venezuelas. Yet, under Fox the capitalist, inflation is frequently below USA rates, extreme poverty has been lowered, and CREDIT has become available to Mexicans again. Credit that has turned the largest percentage of Mexicans in history into homeowners.
And Mexico under Fox and the PAN has done this while not intervening in elections in neighboring countries (Bolivia, Ecuador, Peru, Nicaragua), and without threatening to intervene militarily in Bolivia.
Grant, I was not aware that I had advocated countries following IMF guidelines. Did I? Can you please point out where? What I do advocate is freedom. Period.
powerslave:
I indicated very clearly the source of the 5.9% inflation figure. Don't try to shit me. You, on the otherhand, have never indicated the source for anything you have posted--and that's because you made it all up.
Mexico under the PAN is a disaster. There has been no growth in the economy since 2000--the last year of Zedillo (who just happens to be an economist--wonder if there's a correlation between economic growth/economist president and economic disaster/uneducated rancher).
The folks who are not rich who own homes in Mexico do so through the Infonavit and Fovisste social interest housing programs. Those are strictly government programs--for working class folks. The banks haven't loaned money for houses except once in a very long while since 1995--when the folks with mortgages walked away from the houses because interest rates went to 150% almost overnight when the peso crashed due to Salinas' end of sexenio holding it up with clothespins because he thought he would become president of the World Trade Organization.
Incidentally, Chavez has been in power for 8 years--not 10. Although it takes longer to make positive change than destroy a country, Bush has managed in 6 and a half years to put the US--and several other countries--in the toilet.
What you know about Latin America would fit nicely on the head of a pin. And there would still be plenty of space around it.