The neopopulists of today spew rhetoric reminiscent of their
forebears: socialist, anti-trade and, in some cases, stridently anti-American.
Yet they eschew the inward-facing nationalistic policies so prevalent in the
’30s and ’40s. Generally, neopopulists have sponsored no sweeping
nationalizations, expropriation of foreign economic interests or repudiations of
debt. Indeed, once in power, they have frustrated supporters bent on
aggressively advancing economic nationalism and redistribution. For example,
Brazil’s Lula has carefully crafted policies geared toward macroeconomic
stability and the maintenance of established neoliberal economic models. Even
Bolivia’s Morales has placed experienced businessmen and neoliberal policymakers
in his cabinet. Neoliberal reform began in Augusto Pinochet’s authoritarian
Chile in the 1970s and then swept across much of newly democratic Latin America
in the late 1980s and 1990s. The sale of government-owned companies attracted
investors from around the world. Today, Spain’s Telefonica plays an important
role in telecommunications markets in the region. HSBC, Banco Santander,
BankBoston and Citibank, among other foreign banks, are now prominent.
Realists on the Balconies Countless other companies thrive with the backing of foreign
investment. Likewise, domestic firms benefit from the new business environment,
a fact that ties the hands of new populist governments in many ways. Although
critics point out that much of the region’s population has not benefited from
economic liberalization, stronger ties to international product markets have, in
fact, created new business and employment opportunities and new export interests
in much of Latin America. Admittedly, the rate of Latin American privatizations has
slowed dramatically from its peak in the 1990s. Yet there has been little
movement by populists to undo the efforts of neoliberal reformers, who opened
Latin American markets to imports and capital flows, and successfully privatized
many government-owned companies. | PRESENT-DAY perceptions of the benefits and costs of radical populist policies might shift a good deal when the current global commodities cycle hits an inflection point. | The neopopulists are also acutely aware that the original
populists came to sorry ends. Their radical economic policies were not
sustainable. Per—n, Latin America’s most celebrated populist leader, was undone
in 1955, not just by the country’s military, but also by the shortcomings of his
economic policies. Today, with vigorous competition in the region’s democratic
political systems, economic viability is crucial to political survival.Openness has accelerated the transfer of technology from abroad
and has raised productivity, competitiveness and profits. Corporate governance
is improving in many countries, as are government finances, so that firms and
states alike are able to secure credit at a lower cost. Foreign investors in
Latin America have demanded less of a risk premium of late. The political
theater of neopopulism thus stands alongside remarkable economic conditions, at
least for the time being. Brazil is in its third year of superlative stock
market performance. Rates of return (in dollars) for 2005 on the stock markets
in Argentina, Colombia, Peru and especially Venezuela were well into double
digits. Inflation is relatively tame under the new populists, especially by
historical standards. Fiscal discipline is thus far strong. Argentina and Brazil
have settled their accounts with the IMF. Despite such promising signs, relationships between the Bush
administration and the leftist-populist leaders of the region have been tense.
There is some frustration throughout Latin America, not with the U.S. role in
the region, but rather a lack of U.S. engagement. In the post-9/11 world, Latin
America has simply not figured prominently in U.S. foreign policy. Other than
the verbal sparring between Venezuela’s Chavez and Washington, the most
contentious issue between the governments of the region and the U.S. has been
international trade. Indeed, many observers believe that trade policy is the one
area where the neopopulists have most visibly pursued their goals. Trade is a
thorny question in most of Latin America, and the populist-led countries of
South America have actively opposed the creation of the Free Trade Area of the
Americas. But this anti-trade bias may be more superficial than real. Brazil’s
obstructionism in global trade talks has been motivated more by its goal of
seeing the U.S. and European governments reduce their agricultural subsidies
than by any sort of a blind opposition to trade. In any case, disputes over
trade have not created any stinging backlash against American-owned firms, nor
even U.S. products exported to Latin America. Indeed, exports are crucial to the region’s economic success.
Strong export earnings helped speed Argentina’s recovery from default and
recession. Soaring stock markets, low levels of country risk in debt markets,
higher business profits, expanding GDP and rising employment throughout the
region have been driven in good part by exports to Asia. This context has made it easier for populists to put (and keep) their fiscal
and macroeconomic houses in order. A prudent measure on the part of the region’s
governments would be to remedy underlying problems of a more microeconomic
nature, so that economic expansion might prove more sustainable and more robust.
But they have made little or no progress toward removing institutional obstacles
to growth: strengthening their property rights–the shortcomings of which now
undermine local capital markets and investment; improving woefully inadequate
public education; reducing crime and violence; and addressing the sad toll
inflicted by bloated bureaucracy. If and when economic times turn tough, more
radical economic policies might hold greater political appeal. And if
neopopulist rhetoric becomes economic policy, and the new populism starts to
more closely resemble the old populism of Vargas, Cárdenas and Peron, foreign
investors will need to look elsewhere. Photography © David Mercado/Reuters/Corbis. William Summerhill, a UCLA professor, specializes in Latin
American economics.
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