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The Democracy Center On-Line
Volume 54 - July 30, 2004
THE CURSE OF WEALTH UNDER THE GROUND
Dear Readers:
Once again the links between the place thatI live, Bolivia, and the
place where I am from, the United States, are bubbling to the surface.This
time the issue isenergy. It is ironic in a tragic way that so
many of the countries in the world that possess so much in natural wealth
end up being left so poor.That is not a coincidence and Bolivia
is a case in point. Oneof the most burning public questions
hereis if, how, and at what to price to export its natural gas, including
to my home state of California. This month Bolivians went to the polls
for the first time in their history to vote directly on an issue -- that
issue. Below isthe story.
Jim Shultz
The Democracy Center
THE CURSE OF WEALTH UNDER THE GROUND
Cochabamba, Bolivia When Bolivians went to the polls earlier this
month to vote on how to develop the nations vast oil and gas reserves,
they went with history on their minds.
Just outside the old colonial city of Potosi sits the mountain known as
cerro rico (hill of riches). Beginning in the mid-1500s
silver extracted from the hill, mostly by forced Indian labor, virtually
bankrolled the Spanish empire for three centuries. Today Bolivians
remember very well that their country sat atop one of the planets
greatest treasures of mineral wealth yet ended up the poorest country in
South America.
Last October, as President Gonzalo Sànchez de Lozada pressed ahead
with plans to export the nations gas through Chile and onward to the
US, the country erupted into a month-long series of road blockades and protests.
When the President sent out troops to quash the demonstrations, leaving
more than sixty people dead, a surge of public anger forced him to flee
to the US in exile.
As Bolivias Vice President, Carlos Mesa, stood before a special session
of Congress to be sworn in as the nations leader he pledged a commitment
to one of the protests key demands to put the gas issue before
the people directly, through the nations first-ever public referendum.
The history of possessing great mineral wealth and being left deeply poor
is not one unique to Bolivia. Countries rich in natural resources
are likely to have slower economic growth, greater poverty, higher debt,
less democracy, worse governance, and greater likelihood of civil war than
countries lacking resource wealth, said Svetlana Tsalik, director
of the Revenue Watch program at the Open Society Institute in New York.
Poor countries with wealth under their feet are cherished targets for exploitation
and abuse from abroad. In the eyes of many in Bolivia, the Spanish
conquistadors have been replaced by multinational petroleum corporations
such as Enron, Shell, British Petroleum and others who do business here.
Until the mid-1990s Bolivia was the owner of its petroleum resources, which
it developed in association with foreign corporations. Through a variety
of royalty and tax arrangements the government and the companies split the
earnings fifty-fifty. In 1995, amidst complaints of official corruption
and mismanagement and under pressure from the World Bank and IMF to do so,
Bolivia privatized its petroleum resources into the hands of foreign companies.
Those privatization deals also slashed the governments share of the
profits down from half to just eighteen percent.
Theoretically, privatization was to give the corporations a powerful incentive
to boost production and, while Bolivias portion of the profit pie
would be smaller, its total net earnings would increase theoretically.
However, even as production increased threefold, depleting a key nonrenewable
resource at an escalated rate, Bolivias earnings basically stayed
flat. Foreign companies, meanwhile, were reaping a financial bonanza.
The profits that the companies were making were extraordinary in comparison
to what the state was making, said Francesco Zaratti, President Mesas
specially appointed delegate in charge of the gas issue.
Bolivians found themselves losing not only as producers of petroleum but
as consumers as well. The foreign companies that control Bolivias
oil now sell a portion of it back to Bolivia to be refined as gasoline for
domestic use at a price not based on low local production costs but
by what those barrels can fetch on the world market. Today gasoline
in Bolivia sells for $1.60 per gallon, almost as high as in the US.
But here the minimum wage is $66 per month. We are paying the
same for gasoline as if we were buying it from the Persian Gulf, said
Roberto Fernàndez Teràn, an economist at the University of
San Simon in Cochabamba.
Against this backdrop Bolivians went to the polls on July 18th in the national
vote on what to do with its oil and gas resources. As social movements
around the country demanded re-nationalization and foreign companies and
the World Bank issued warnings against any steps back toward public ownership,
President Mesa set forth a ballot with five questions designed to win support
for a plan somewhere in the middle. The President also threatened
to resign if that plan was rejected, shorthand here for a step into political
turmoil.
Mesas plan passed overwhelmingly, but what the people actually voted
for is open to broad interpretation, especially on the question of getting
back the petroleum resources privatized away a decade ago. The most
important question among the five asked voters, Are you in agreement
with regaining ownership of the petroleum for the Bolivian state?
That one passed with the largest majority, ninety two percent.
Zaratti, the Presidents special delegate, said this mandate is limited
to trying to win back some form of ownership in contract negotiations in
the future and warned that the government cant take away the
property of the businesses. A full return to national ownership
and operation, he argues, is not a realistic option. Nonetheless,
many here interpret the vote for regaining ownership as exactly
that and are prepared to take the issue to the streets once again if needed.
We are preparing a large national mobilization to warn the government
to respect the will of the Bolivian people and the vote in the referendum,
announced Evo Morales, the socialist opposition leader who came in a close
second in Bolivias 2002 Presidential election. Morales and his
Movement to Socialism party were key supporters of the regaining ownership
question.
As in all poor countries with great natural wealth the questions facing
Bolivia still remain the same who will control those resources, what
share of the profits will go to the Bolivian people, and how will those
profits be invested. Whether those issues will ultimately be decided
in the political process or in the street remains to be seen. Last
Tuesday, just as the Bolivian government announced the final tally in the
vote, it also received delivery of a $700,000 tank that uses high-pressure
water guns for crowd control a gift of the US government.
______________________________________________________________________
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