William "What me Worry" Neuman on Venezuela versus Peru et al, NYT March 
7, 2013:

“It didn’t catch on,” said Alejandro Toledo, a former president of Peru. 
“The important thing is that Mexico has not followed his example, Chile 
has not followed his example, Peru has not followed his example, 
Colombia has not followed his example, Brazil has not followed his 
example. I’m talking about big countries with large, sustained economic 
growth.”

Venezuela had one of the lowest rates of economic growth in the region 
during the 14 years that Mr. Chávez held office, according to World Bank 
data. It has high inflation and chronic shortages of basic goods. It has 
one of the highest rates of violent crime, and it is riven by bitter 
political divisions.

“Those indicators were not lost on other parts of the hemisphere,” said 
Patrick Duddy, a former United States ambassador to Venezuela.

And while poverty went down significantly during Mr. Chávez’s years as 
president, other countries, like Brazil, Peru and Colombia, made 
progress in reducing poverty while following paths very different from 
that of Mr. Chávez.

---

NY Times Op-Ed March 20, 2013
The Kids Left Behind by the Boom
By MARIE ARANA

Lima, Peru

Henrry Ochochoque is a jovial 12-year-old with a report card full of A’s 
and hopes pointed straight to the moon. Last year, he moved from the 
squalid gold-mining town of La Rinconada, Peru — at nearly 17,000 feet 
above sea level, the highest human habitation in the world — to the 
bustling hive of Juliaca, roughly the size of Buffalo, where schools are 
better, a water spigot sits across the road and his widowed mother 
awaits a brighter future.

On a reporting trip last year, I’d heard his mother say she wanted to 
take the family down-mountain to safer ground. This year, I found them 
in a new home, not far from the shimmering waters of Lake Titicaca. For 
a child who once inhabited the ice and rock of an Andean promontory, 
with no clean water, no sanitation, in a mercury- and cyanide-laced 
mudhole riddled with whorehouses, raw sewage and AIDS, Henrry seemed to 
be on his way up.

But statistics tell us he is not. They say Henrry is too small for his 
age, and indeed he is: 4 foot 2, as tall as an average American 
8-year-old. Statistics also say he is undernourished, anemic, with a 
brain slowed by toxic chemicals and an education that will leave him 
drastically unprepared for the 21st century.

Even as Peru, newly classified by the World Bank as an 
“upper-middle-income economy,” races to prosperity, indigenous children 
like Henrry are being left behind. Why? Because, as in neighboring 
countries like Bolivia and Colombia, the growing economy has left a wide 
gap between haves and have-nots.

Make no mistake: Peru is booming. Largely spared by the global financial 
crisis, its economy grew by 9.8 percent in 2008, 6.3 percent last year. 
Peru is an enviable fount of gold, silver, copper, fish, agriculture. 
Its capital is alive with foreign investment. Its cuisine is among the 
most celebrated in the world. Visit Lima, and you see a city abuzz with 
shops, restaurants and a robust new middle class. Visit Cuzco or Machu 
Picchu, and you cannot help but note the five-star destinations.

But look around more, and you see two Perus: effervescent Lima, 9 and a 
half million strong, and the 20 million more who live outside it. While 
the poverty rate in Lima fell to 15.7 percent in 2011 from 44.8 percent 
in 2004, the rural Andes and Amazon languish in nearly feudal 
conditions. According to the World Bank, a citizen of Lima earns 21 
times more than a resident of the outback, where the rural poverty rate 
is a staggering 54 percent. To make matters worse, it is a starkly 
racial problem: the poor are the dark-skinned indigenous, the rich, 
getting richer, are mostly white.

This tale of two nations is all the more vexing if you happen to be 
Henrry’s age: 78 percent of Peru’s indigenous children live in poverty. 
A third of all rural children suffer chronic malnutrition. More than 70 
percent in the Puno region have anemia before age 3. A 2012 study found 
more than 75 percent of adults tested for mercury poisoning in the Madre 
de Dios region registered triple the danger levels; their children 
presumably were exposed to the same danger.

The irony is that those who inhabit poor regions live on the very ground 
that is fueling the Peruvian bonanza. Mining is the country’s most 
lucrative industry, and mining firms from Canada, Australia and the 
United States have been rushing to dig out precious metals. Children 
like Henrry are hardly better off for it. They start work as early as 5. 
If they attend school, they do so for only a few years and in Spanish — 
not Quechua or Aymara, the languages spoken at home. Caught in a cycle 
of ignorance, marginalized by nothing so much as geography, they live 
out the old 19th-century cliché that Peru is a beggar sitting on a bench 
of gold.

This makes for a tale not only sad but also dangerous. Peru’s most rabid 
insurrections took seed precisely in the rural highlands. Túpac Amaru 
II, an indigenous leader after whom a two-decade socialist insurgency 
was later named, rose up outside Cuzco in the 1700s; Rumi Maqui in Puno 
in 1915; the Shining Path in Ayacucho in the 1980s. Last year, the 
Aymara people raided the city of Puno to protest the incursion of 
foreign mines and the pollution of their sacred Lake Titicaca. Last 
month there were no fewer than 71 riots in the mineral-rich provinces of 
Ancash, Apurímac and Puno.

“It’s the only way we can get attention,” says León Isaac Quispe, a 
sociologist working for the poor. “We are the rump-end of the country. 
We have no support from government. Corruption is endemic.”

He added: “No one helps. No one educates. No one listens to us here 
without a march.”

For Henrry, despite his A’s and sunny optimism, the Peruvian boom may as 
well be on the moon.

Marie Arana, a journalist, an adviser to the librarian of Congress and 
the author, most recently, of “Bolívar: American Liberator,” is a guest 
columnist.

Gail Collins is off today.
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