Ecuador's Rebellious Presidential Candidate May Have a Point
by Mark Weisbrot
October 27, 2006, Los Angeles Times
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The presidential election in Ecuador is attracting more
international attention than would normally be directed at this country
of 13 million people, the majority of whom are poor. The reason? Rafael
Correa, who came in second in the first round of balloting this month
and has a good chance of winning the runoff on Nov. 26.
Correa, an economist, would make Ecuador the next country to join the
"pink tide" of leftist governments that have swept the region over the
last eight years. His opponent — Alvaro Noboa, a billionaire banana
magnate and the richest person in Ecuador — strongly backs U.S.
policies for the country and the region.
Correa clearly has official Washington worried. He has denounced the
International Monetary Fund and the World Bank and their economic
policy prescriptions, vowed to scrap a proposed "free-trade" agreement
with the United States and proposed getting rid of a U.S. military base
in the country. He has called for collecting more taxes on foreign
corporations — including in Ecuador's important oil sector — and has
not ruled out defaulting on the nation's foreign public debt.
Most reports in the U.S. have viewed Correa's candidacy in ideological
terms — he is depicted as "anti-American" or an "ally of President Hugo
Chavez" of Venezuela — and this "us versus them" framework will likely
predominate in the weeks ahead. But opposing Washington's policies for
his country is not anti-American, and Correa has no alliances with
anyone. And if we look at this election from a Southern Hemisphere
vantage point, Correa's arguments make a lot of sense.
IMF and World Bank economic policies, for example, have fared badly
in Ecuador. From 1980 to 2000, the country's income per person fell by
14% — about equal to Africa's disastrous performance during this
period. Ecuador was under IMF agreements for most of the years between
1983 and 1995 and accordingly adopted many of its recommended reforms
and policies. And the World Bank, since Paul Wolfowitz took over, cut
off a promised loan in an effort to make Ecuador use most of its
windfall oil revenue to pay off debt rather than for social spending.
So Correa has good reason to see the "Washington consensus" policies of
these institutions as a terrible failure, and many economists and
political leaders in Latin America agree.
In fairness,
the country has done better under the most recent IMF accords of 2000
to 2004, with the country pulling out of a severe economic crisis and
restoring reasonable economic growth while bringing inflation down from
96.1% in 2000 to 3.2% today. Correa has said that he would maintain the
most significant reform of this period: the adoption of the U.S. dollar
as the country's currency — a change that he and many other economists
initially opposed. Correa, who received his doctorate in economics from
the University of Illinois in Urbana, is pragmatic despite his
rhetoric.
As for the proposed "free-trade" agreement with the U.S., it has
provoked demonstrations that shut down much of the country for nearly
two weeks in March. Indigenous groups that led the protests wanted to
protect farmers from subsidized U.S. exports. They also astutely
pointed out that it did not make economic sense to make sacrifices for
increased access to the U.S. market when that market was likely to
shrink in the near future as the U.S. trade gap inevitably narrows.
Correa's threat of hard bargaining with international creditors is not
as risky as it may seem. Ecuador is barely eligible to borrow, at even
very high interest rates, on international markets (because of a 1999
default on its foreign debt). Further, the country is running a trade
surplus and therefore may not need much international borrowing in the
near future. And the government of Venezuela, which has loaned $2.5
billion to Argentina and hundreds of millions to Bolivia, has
previously offered credit to Ecuador.
Ecuador doesn't necessarily need the blessing of the Bush
administration or the financial institutions that it controls, or even
the international financial markets, especially if the conditions that
they require would prevent the government from taking steps to
alleviate the crushing poverty that afflicts the majority of its
people. That is Correa's first priority, and as he said of his own
program, "The only thing radical about me is the reality of my country."
Mark Weisbrot is Co-Director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, in Washington, DC.
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