Mexico: Their Brand is Crisis
By Mark Weisbrot
This article was published in the following news outlets:
La Jornada (Mexico) - June 29, 2006
Texas en Línea - June 30, 2006
Mother Jones - June 30, 2006
Truthout - June 30, 2006
A brilliant documentary by Rachel Boynton, released
this year, chronicles the adventures of one of America’s most
influential public relations firms as it applies the most advanced
polling, advertising, and focus group techniques to the 2002
presidential elections in Bolivia. The company, Greenberg Quinlan
Rosner, has the daunting task of winning the election for Gonzalo
Sanchez de Lozada, a former president who speaks Spanish with an
American accent and is not well-liked.
The firm decides that the only way “Goni,” as he is
called, can succeed is to convince the voters that if his opponent
wins, the country will suffer a devastating economic meltdown. “Our
brand,” explains an operative of the firm, “is crisis” – thus giving
the film its title.
This has become the default strategy for incumbent
political parties in Latin America, as one government after another
faces opponents from the left. Next up is Mexico, where the ruling
National Action Party (PAN) faces a strong challenge from former Mexico
City major Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador of the Democratic Revolutionary
Party (PRD) on July 2. Lopez Obrador is a popular – some would say
populist – left-of-center leader whose main campaign slogan is “for the
good of everyone, the poor first.”
It’s pretty clear that Mexico needs to reconsider
its economic policies. Over the 25 years since 1980, income per person
in Mexico has grown by just 17 percent. To see how bad this is, one
need only look at the 20 years from 1960-1980, when the country’s per
capita income grew by 99 percent. If the Mexican economy had simply
continued to grow at its pre-1980 rate, average income in Mexico would
be at the level of Spain today. There would be far fewer Mexicans
looking to emigrate illegally to the United States.
Mexico’s pre-1980 growth was good but nothing
spectacular for a developing country – South Korea grew more than twice
as fast and Taiwan at nearly three times Mexico’s rate over the same
period. So the country’s past growth performance is a reasonable
benchmark by which to compare the unprecedented growth failure of the
last quarter-century. Many have hailed Mexico’s post NAFTA growth as a
success, but even this was only about a third of its pre-1980
performance.
However, most people do not understand what
economic growth is or why it is so important. For comparison, imagine a
discussion about baseball where hardly anyone understood batting
averages, and those who understood them did not distinguish between
good and bad averages, labeling a .175 average “outstanding.”
As a result, the focus of criticism is on Mexico’s
poverty, which is mainly a result of the growth failure. In 2004,
nearly half the country lived below the official poverty line of about
$4.00 per day.
Will a left government cause an economic crisis in
Mexico? It is worth recalling that the same was said about President
Lula da Silva when he ran for office on behalf of the leftist Workers’
Party in Brazil four years ago, but the crisis never materialized. It
is often maintained that this was because Lula did everything that the
financial markets wanted. But across the border in Argentina, President
Nestor Kirchner did what the financial markets didn’t want, and the
economy has been booming at about 9 percent annually for more than
three years.
Latin America’s left governments are doing pretty
well, regardless of whether Washington or anyone else approves of their
policies. Venezuela is tied with Argentina as the fastest-growing
economy in the hemisphere. And Evo Morales has only been president of
Bolivia for half a year, but the government’s increased revenues from
natural gas have helped to fund its reform program, and its
re-nationalization of the industry has not caused an economic or
political crisis.
Mexico will likely face problems as the big
imbalances in the U.S. economy – the housing bubble, trade deficit, and
unsustainably low long-term interest rates – are corrected. Our last
recession in 2001 cause a downturn in Mexico’s economy, and the next
one will probably do the same. But Mexico’s current economic policies,
which tend to sacrifice growth and employment in the fight against
inflation, may be the wrong recipe for recovery. Mexico may need a
Franklin D. Roosevelt at the helm in the next few years, rather than a
Herbert Hoover.
Mark Weisbrot is Co-Director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, in Washington, DC
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