My comment: Yesterday a colleague from Argentina told me that in
Uruguay, a neighbour country, a former guerrilla man was elected for
president. In fact, he will continue same policies than the current
president and most authorities will remain.

He showed me this vdeo on youtube. I like it. (Sort of translation
below)

http://www.youtube.com/user/frenteampliotv#p/a/u/0/vHKanxf_cVY

Its name is "With freedom I neither offend nor fear" (Con libertad no
ofendo ni temo).

Watch at native americans to form their squad
and darks to get their heart ready
and darks to get their heart ready

while from horn to horn (*)
one can hear this voice
"if my patria calls me, here I am ready"
"if my patria calls me, here I am ready"

(*) little horn at home

He told me that song is about their country independence liberator (I
do not remember his name, he must be like G. Washington for
Americans). I think that most Latinamericans have sort of regional
second patria that we (Asians) do not so much or maybe nothing at all.
So, he was really happy with that election results in Uruguay.

He told me that Uruguay are doing pretty good during this crisis, more
or less as much as most Latinamerican economies. He made me remember
this article.

If we believe that China is doing an economic miracle. Read this
article. I am happy to compete with Latinamericans to see which
country gives more welbeing to the needy and to rise our economies.
Does not matter which one wins, we both celebrate that victory anyway.

Peace and best wishes.

Xi

Latin America's economic rebels
Ecuador and Bolivia are achieving remarkable growth because they
reject conventional economic wisdom

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/cifamerica/2009/oct/27/bolivia-ecuador-economy

Among the conventional wisdom that we hear every day in the business
press is that developing countries should bend over backwards to
create a friendly climate for foreign corporations, follow orthodox
(neoliberal) macroeconomic policy advice and strive to achieve an
investment-grade sovereign credit rating so as to attract more foreign
capital.

Guess which country is expected to have the fastest economic growth in
the Americas this year? Bolivia. The country's first indigenous
president, Evo Morales, was elected in 2005 and took office in January
2006. Bolivia, the poorest country in South America, had been
operating under IMF agreements for 20 consecutive years, and its per-
capita income was lower than it had been 27 years earlier.

Evo sent the IMF packing just three months after he took office, and
then moved to re-nationalise the hydrocarbons industry (mostly natural
gas). Needless to say this did not sit well with the international
corporate community. Nor did Bolivia's decision in May 2007 to
withdraw from the World Bank's international arbitration panel, which
had a tendency to settle disputes in favour of international
corporations and against governments.

But Bolivia's re-nationalisation and increased royalties on
hydrocarbons has given the government billions of dollars of
additional revenue (Bolivia's entire GDP is only about $16.6bn, with a
population of 10 million people). These revenues have been useful for
a government that wants to promote development, and especially to
maintain growth during the downturn. Public investment increased from
6.3% of GDP in 2005 to 10.5% in 2009.

Bolivia's growth through the current world downturn is even more
remarkable in that it was hit hard by falling prices for its most
important exports – natural gas and minerals – and also by a loss of
important export preferences in the US market. The Bush administration
cut off Bolivia's trade preferences that were granted under the Andean
Trade Promotion and Drug Eradication Act, allegedly to punish Bolivia
for insufficient co-operation in the "war on drugs".

In reality, it was more complicated: Bolivia expelled the US
ambassador because of evidence that the US government was supporting
the opposition to the Morales government, and the ATPDA revocation
followed soon thereafter. In any case, the Obama administration has so
far not changed the Bush administration's policies toward Bolivia. But
Bolivia has proven that it can do quite well without Washington's co-
operation.

Ecuador's leftist president, Rafael Correa, is an economist who, well
before he was elected in December 2006, understood and wrote about the
limitations of neoliberal economic dogma. He took office in 2007 and
established an international tribunal to examine the legitimacy of the
country's debt. In November 2008 the commission found that part of the
debt was not legally contracted, and in December Correa announced that
the government would default on roughly $3.2bn of its international
debt.

He was vilified in the business press, but the default was successful.
Ecuador cleared a third of its foreign debt off its books by
defaulting and then buying the debt back at about 35 cents on the
dollar. The country's international credit rating remains low, but no
lower than it was before Correa's election, and it was even raised a
notch after the buyback was completed.

The Correa government also incurred foreign investors' wrath by
renegotiating its deals with foreign oil companies to capture a larger
share of revenue as oil prices rose. And Correa has bucked pressure
from Chevron and its powerful allies in Washington to drop his support
of a lawsuit against the company for alleged pollution of ground
waters, with damages that could exceed $27bn.

How has Ecuador done? Growth has averaged a healthy 4.5% over Correa's
first two years. And the government has made sure that it has trickled
down: healthcare spending as a percent of GDP has doubled, and social
spending in general has expanded considerably from 5.4% to 8.3% of GDP
in two years. This includes a doubling of the cash transfer programme
to poor households, a $474m increase in spending for housing, and
other programmes for low-income families.

Ecuador was hit hard by a 77% drop in the price of its oil exports
from June 2008 to February 2009, as well as a decline in remittances
from abroad. Nonetheless it has weathered the storm pretty well. Other
unorthodox policies, in addition to the debt default, have helped
Ecuador to stimulate its economy without running too low on reserves.

Ecuador's currency is the US dollar, so that rules out using exchange
rate policy and most monetary policy for counter-cyclical efforts in a
recession – a significant handicap. Instead, Ecuador was able to cut
deals with China for a billion-dollar advance payment for oil and
another $1bn loan.

The government also has begun requiring Ecuadorian banks to repatriate
some of their reserves held abroad, expected to bring back another
$1.2bn, and it has started repatriating $2.5bn in central bank
reserves held abroad in order to finance another large stimulus
package.

Ecuador's growth will probably come in at about 1% this year, which is
pretty good relative to most of the hemisphere. For example, Mexico,
at the other end of the spectrum, is projected to have a 7.5% decline
in GDP for 2009.

The standard reporting and even quasi-academic analysis of Bolivia and
Ecuador says they are victims of populist, socialist, "anti-American"
governments – aligned with Venezuela's Hugo Chávez and Cuba, of course
– and on the road to ruin. To be sure, both countries have many
challenges ahead, the most important of which will be to implement
economic strategies that can diversify and develop their economies
over the long run. But they have made a good start so far, by giving
the conventional wisdom of the economic and foreign policy
establishment – in Washington and Europe – the respect it has earned.

--

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