http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article15993.htm

Historical Perspectives on Latin American and East Asian Regional Development

By Noam Chomsky

12/26/06 "Japan Focus" 
<http://www.japanfocus.org/products/details/2298> -- There was a 
meeting on the weekend of December 9-10 in Cochabamba in Bolivia of 
major South American leaders. It was a very important meeting. One 
index of its importance is that it was unreported, virtually 
unreported apart from the wire services. So every editor knew about 
it. Since I suspect you didn't read that wire service report, I'll 
read a few things from it to indicate why it was so important.

The South American leaders agreed to create a high-level commission 
to study the idea of forming a continent-wide community similar to 
the European Union. This is the presidents and envoys of major 
nations, and there was the two-day summit of what's called the South 
American Community of Nations, hosted by Evo Morales in Cochabamba, 
the president of Bolivia. The leaders agreed to form a study group to 
look at the possibility of creating a continent-wide union and even a 
South American parliament. The result, according to the AP report, 
left fiery Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, long an agitator for the 
region, taking a greater role on the world stage, pleased, but 
impatient. It goes on to say that the discussion over South American 
unity will continue later this month, when MERCOSUR, the South 
American trading bloc, has its regular meeting that will include 
leaders from Brazil, Argentina, Venezuela, Paraguay and Uruguay.

There is one -- has been one point of hostility in South America. 
That's Peru, Venezuela. But the article points out that Chavez and 
Peruvian President Alan Garcia took advantage of the summit to bury 
the hatchet, after having exchanged insults earlier in the year. And 
that is the only real conflict in South America at this time. So that 
seems to have been smoothed over.

The new Ecuadorian President Rafael Correa proposed a land and river 
trade route linking the Brazilian Amazon Rainforest to Ecuador's 
Pacific Coast, suggesting that for South America, it could be kind of 
like an alternative to the Panama Canal.

Chavez and Morales celebrated a new joint project, the gas separation 
plant in Bolivia's gas-rich region. It's a joint venture with 
Petrovesa (PDVSA, Petroleos de Venezuela, SA. Pronounced "pedevesa"), 
the Venezuelan oil company, and the Bolivian state energy company. 
And it continues. Venezuela is the only Latin American member of OPEC 
and has by far the largest proven oil reserves outside the Middle 
East, by some measures maybe even comparable to Saudi Arabia.

There were also contributions, constructive, interesting 
contributions by Lula da Silva, Brazil's president, Michelle Bachelet 
of Chile, and others. All of this is extremely important.

This is the first time since the Spanish conquests, 500 years, that 
there have been real moves toward integration in South America. The 
countries have been very separated from one another. And integration 
is going to be a prerequisite for authentic independence. There have 
been attempts at independence, but they've been crushed, often very 
violently, partly because of lack of regional support. Because there 
was very little regional cooperation, they could be picked off one by 
one.

That's what has happened since the 1960s. The Kennedy administration 
orchestrated a coup in Brazil. It was the first of a series of 
falling dominoes. Neo-Nazi-style national security states spread 
across the hemisphere. Chile was one of them. Then there were 
Reagan's terrorist wars in the 1980s, which devastated Central 
America and the Caribbean. It was the worst plague of repression in 
the history of Latin America since the original conquests.

But integration lays the basis for potential independence, and that's 
of extreme significance. Latin America's colonial history -- Spain, 
Europe, the United States -- not only divided countries from one 
another, it also left a sharp internal division within the countries, 
every one, between a very wealthy small elite and a huge mass of 
impoverished people. The correlation to race is fairly close. 
Typically, the rich elite was white, European, westernized; and the 
poor mass of the population was indigenous, Indian, black, 
intermingled, and so on. It's a fairly close correlation, and it 
continues right to the present.

The white, mostly white, elites -- who ran the countries -- were not 
integrated with, had very few relations with, the other countries of 
the region. They were Western-oriented. You can see that in all sorts 
of ways. That's where the capital was exported. That's where the 
second homes were, where the children went to university, where their 
cultural connections were. And they had very little responsibility in 
their own societies. So there's a very sharp division.

You can see the pattern in imports. Imports are overwhelmingly luxury 
goods. Development, such as it was, was mostly foreign. Latin America 
was much more open to foreign investment than, say, East Asia. It's 
part of the reason for their radically different paths of development 
in the last couple of decades.

And, of course, the elite elements were strongly sympathetic to the 
neoliberal programs of the last 25 years, which enriched them -- 
destroyed the countries, but enriched them. Latin America, more than 
any region in the world, outside of southern Africa, adhered 
rigorously to the so-called Washington Consensus, what's called 
outside the United States the neoliberal programs of roughly the past 
25 or 30 years. And where they were rigorously applied, almost 
without exception, they led to disaster. Very striking correlation. 
Sharp reduction in rates of growth, other macroeconomic indices, all 
the social effects that go along with that.

Actually, the comparison to East Asia is very striking. Latin America 
is potentially a much richer area. I mean, a century ago, it was 
taken for granted that Brazil would be what was called the "Colossus 
of the South," comparable to the Colossus of the North. Haiti, now 
one of the poorest countries in the world, was the richest colony in 
the world, a source of much of France's wealth, now devastated, first 
by France, then by the United States. And Venezuela -- enormous 
wealth -- was taken over by the United States around 1920, right at 
the beginning of the oil age, It had been a British dependency, but 
Woodrow Wilson kicked the British out, recognizing that control of 
oil was going to be important, and supported a vicious dictator. From 
that point, more or less, it goes on until the present. So the 
resources and the potential were always there. Very rich.

In contrast, East Asia had almost no resources, but they followed a 
different developmental path. In Latin America, imports were luxury 
goods for the rich. In East Asia, they were capital goods for 
development. They had state-coordinated development programs. They 
disregarded the Washington Consensus almost totally. Capital 
controls, controls on export of capital, pretty egalitarian societies 
-- authoritarian, sometimes, pretty harsh -- but educational 
programs, health programs, and so on. In fact, they followed pretty 
much the developmental paths of the currently wealthy countries, 
which are radically different from the rules that are being imposed 
on the South.

And that goes way back in history. You go back to the 17th century, 
when the commercial and industrial centers of the world were China 
and India. Life expectancy in Japan was greater than in Europe. 
Europe was kind of a barbarian outpost, but it had advantages, mainly 
in savagery. It conquered the world, imposed something like the 
neoliberal rules on the conquered regions, and for itself, adopted 
very high protectionism, a lot of state intervention and so on. So 
Europe developed.

The United States, as a typical case, had the highest tariffs in the 
world, most protectionist country in the world during the period of 
its great development. In fact, as late as 1950, when the United 
States literally had half the world's wealth, its tariffs were higher 
than the Latin American countries today, which are being ordered to 
reduce them.

Massive state intervention in the economy. Economists don't talk 
about it much, but the current economy in the United States relies 
very heavily on the state sector. That's where you get your computers 
and the internet and your airplane traffic and transit of goods, 
container ships and so on, almost entirely comes out of the state 
sector, including pharmaceuticals, management techniques, and so on. 
I won't go on into that, but it's a strong correlation right through 
history. Those are the methods of development.

The neoliberal methods created the third world, and in the past 30 
years, they have led to disasters in Latin America and southern 
Africa, the places that most rigorously adhered to them. But there 
was growth and development in East Asia, which disregarded them, 
following instead pretty much the model of the currently rich 
countries.

Well, there's a chance that that will begin to change. There are 
finally efforts inside South America -- unfortunately not in Central 
America, which has just been pretty much devastated by the terror of 
the '80s particularly. But in South America, from Venezuela to 
Argentina, it's, I think, the most exciting place in the world. After 
500 years, there's a beginning of efforts to overcome these 
overwhelming problems. The integration that's taking place is one 
example.

There are efforts of the Indian population. The indigenous population 
is, for the first time in hundreds of years, in some countries really 
beginning to take a very active role in their own affairs. In 
Bolivia, they succeeded in taking over the country, controlling their 
resources. It's also leading to significant democratization, real 
democracy, in which the population participates. So it takes a 
Bolivia -- it's the poorest country in South America (Haiti is poorer 
in the hemisphere). It had a real democratic election last year, of a 
kind that you can't imagine in the United States, or in Europe, for 
that matter. There was mass popular participation, and people knew 
what the issues were. The issues were crystal clear and very 
important. And people didn't just participate on election day. These 
are the things they had been struggling about for years. Actually, 
Cochabamba is a symbol of it.

This is a lightly edited and excerpted version of Noam Chomsky's 
December 15, 2006 talk to a Boston meeting of Mass Global Action 
following a recent trip to Chile and Peru.

Noam Chomsky's most recent book is Perilous Power : The Middle East 
and U.S. Foreign Policy: Dialogues on Terror, Democracy, War and 
Justice.


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