Sunday, February 16, 2020

Mayor, it is a sin not to have fun in Carnival



The annual carnival in Rio de Janeiro starts on 21 February and thousands of Samba dancers are already practicing their dance steps feverishly to the specially composed theme songs for this year. Besides the official parade at the purpose-built Sambadrome starts, there are the usual street parties which have already got the Cariocas (residents of Rio city) getting into the mode of celebration with beer and caipirinha. 



But there is one important dignitary of the city who not only refuses to join the party but is also opposed to the joyful carnival activities. It is the Mayor of Rio City Marcelo Crivella. 


Yes.. The Mayor of the city which gets over a billion dollars of income from the Carnival tourism season every year. During his term as Mayor in the last four years, Crivella never attended the Sambadrome’s parade. He has refused to participate in the traditional ceremony in which the Mayor hands over key of the city to King Momo of Carnival. He has cut the traditional city budget for samba schools. He is putting out all kinds of bureaucratic obstacles to make the life of samba schools and associations which hold carnival parades more difficult.

The reason for Crivella’s antipathy to Carnival is the fact that he is a “holy” evangelical priest of the Universal Church of the Kingdom of God who considers Carnival as “unholy”. He prefers his own evangelical song, “I am crazy for Jesus”. He organized on 15 February a mega evangelical event in the city to show the strength of his supporters vis-à-vis, the samba revelers. He even got President Bolsonaro, a supporter of evangelicals, to address the event. In May 2016, Bolsonaro was baptized in the Jordan River in Israel by Pastor Everaldo, a prominent leader of the Assembly of God. Bolsonaro has promised to take the country to “Jewish-Christian tradition” and place “God above all”. 

Crivella’s position is not an isolated case. It is a reflection of the change being done to Brazilian culture by the Evangelicals who have converted almost one fourth of the population of Brazil, the largest Catholic country in the world. The entrepreneurial evangelical bishops  have succeeded in marketing their Prosperity Theology. In return for the divine help, the followers are made to contribute (tithe) a part of their income to the Industry of Faith of the pastors some of whom have become multimillionaires and charismatic pop-stars. Edir Macedo, the uncle of Crivella is the richest pastor with a wealth of more than a billion dollars and private jet costing 45 million dollars. His Universal Church of the Kingdom of God has over five million members and 13,000 temples across Brazil, as well as presence in several other countries, including the United States. This church owns the second-largest TV station in Brazil, Rede Record, as well as newspapers and radio stations across 27 states. Macedo has been accused of money laundering and other illegal activities for which he spent a few days in jail. The Evangelicals use the entertainment industry to spread their message across Brazil. There are 128 Evangelical record labels and more than 600 radio stations dedicated exclusively to gospel programming.

These evangelical churches are politically active and advise their members to vote for evangelical candidates and sympathisers with the slogan “Brother votes for Brother”. The Biblical caucus in the Congress is said to be near 200 (out of the total of 513) proactive on issues such as abortion and same-sex marriage.

It is important to note that Catholic priests in poverty stricken areas had worked for the poor and against the oppression of the military dictatorship during the days of  “Liberation theology” in the past. In contrast, Bolsonaro, the patron of evangelicals and their “Prosperity Theology” praises the military dictatorship and is cutting the budget for the welfare of the poor. 

So the Samba schools are counter attacking the evangelical mayor and the pro-evangelical president with their critical theme songs and floats. 

                      
                   the write up of the float says “Mayor, it’s a sin not to to have fun in Carnival'


The Mangueira Samba school  is going to have a float of Favela (slum) Jesus with a black face, Indian blood and the body of a woman and the son of an unemployed carpenter and Mary of Sorrows Brazil. The song says “Favela, get the vision/ There’s no future without sharing/ And no Messiah with a gun in his hand,” an allusion to President Jair Bolsonaro’s promises of loosening gun control legislation and of reducing punishment for police who kill suspected criminals. Bolsonaro’s middle name is Messias.

The poor people of favelas and poor Jesus are thus caught in the cultural clash between Carnival loving Cariocas and the Carnival hating Evangelical priests. While Carnival helps the poor to forget their miseries temporarily and celebrate life for a few weeks during the parades, the Evangelical Church promises entry to paradise for their followers. 

During my recent visit to Brazil, I saw for myself the cultural changes. Some taxi drivers have stopped listening to samba music and instead play evangelical music. Many of them voted for Bolsonaro and told me that they would vote again for him. They did not see any future for Lula nor did they share my admiration for Lula. A young Brazilian girl, sitting next to me in the flight from Sao Paulo to Curitiba shocked me when she told me that she has chosen to be a religious worker and was not interested in any career in IT or business. 

So watch out Galera… The Triple C spirit (Copacabana, Caipirinha and Carnival) which defined the cheerful and colourful Cariocas are in for changes…

The Cariocas are caught between the Carnival lovers who say it is sin not to have fun and the evangelicals who consider fun as sin


Thursday, February 13, 2020

Smoking Snake of Brazil



Smoking snake.. Sounds funny? It was the emblem used by the Brazilian Expeditionary Force (Fuerza Expedicionaria de Brazil-FEB) which participated in the liberation of Italy in the Second World War.



When he heard that Brazil was joining the Allies in the war, Hitler had made a contemptuous remark “ If snakes could smoke, Brazilians wouldl also fight in the battlefield”. In response to this insulting taunt, the FEB decided to use the smoking snake as their emblem.

The Brazilian snake had managed to smoke out Germans in the battlefield in Italy, as a revenge against Hitler’s insulting remark. The FEB defeated and captured as prisoners of war a large contingent of 20573 German soldiers and Italian Fascists including 2 Generals, 892 officers, 5000 vehicles and 4000 horses. This is extraordinary since the Brazilian contingent itself was almost equivalent to the number captured as prisoners. 

I found this and some other interesting information from reading the book, “The campaign of the Brazilian Expeditionary Force for the liberation of Italy” written by my Brazilian amigo Durval de Noronha Goyos Jr, head of the law firm Noronha Advogados. 

Noronha is a prolific writer, besides running law offices in UK, US, Argentina and China, besides the major cities in Brazil. He has written dozens of books and hundreds of articles on international law and related issues. He is at present the President of the Brazilian Writers Union. He has given many lectures around the world including in India.

Here are some highlights from his book

-In the beginning of World War II, the Brazilian government kept up relations with both sides and tried to take advantage from Germany as well as US which were the largest trading partners of Brazil at that time. In 1935, Brazil had signed preferential trade agreements with both partners. 

-Brazil sourced military hardware from Germany and some from Italy, when US refused to supply weapons to Brazil. Later, under the US’s Lend Lease Agreement, Brazil got 200 million dollars of arms and ammunition.

- In 1937 Getulio Vargas did a coup, dissolved Congress, closed political parties and established a New State (Novo Estado) with a new constituition drafted by his Fascist advisors. The Novo Estado put the rights of the society as paramount. The individuals had only duties and no rights. The only differences with the German and Italian Fascism were that (a) the Brazilian dictator did not have political parties like the Nazi and Fascist parties of Germany and Italy and (b) Brazil did not pursue racist policies. Vargas had in fact banned  the Brazilian Fascist party Acao Integralista. But the party tried in 1938 a counter coup which was suppressed successfully. The leaders of the party escaped to Italy with the help of the Italian ambassador.

- Hitler and Mussolini liked the fascist regime of Brazil which had large numbers of Germans( about 800,000) and Italian immigrants ( about 4 million). At that time there were about 400 Italian schools  and over 1000 German schools in Brazil. Sao Paulo state alone had 360 Italian newspapers. The German and Italian governments started to influence their communities in Brazil with propaganda and material help. 

-Brazil had a large Japanese population of around 650,000 in 1940. Between 1924 and 1941 about 130,000 Japanese had immigrated to Brazil under a governmental agreement. The recruitment of the immigrants was done by a Japanese state company Kaigai Kogyo Kabushiki Kaisha (KKKK). The Brazilian government closed Japanese newspapers and banned public use of the language during the war.

- The German government dreamed of an Antarctic Germany through separation of the three southern states of Brazil, where the German descendants had settled. Hitler had eyes on Brazil and had said,” we shall build a New Germany in Brazil”. He had contempt for the “absurd South American democracies ruled by mestizos”. 

- After seeing the possibility of danger from immigrants supported by Nazi Germany, the Vargas government banned public use of foreign languages, closed down all foreign newspapers and nationalized the schools. 

-The Brazilian government put under detention about 5000 descendants of Axis powers out of their total population of about 6 million. This is much small compared to the 110,000 descendants of Axis powers detained by US which had put pressure on Brazil to do the same. But the Brazilian government resisted it.

-After the war broke out, Vargas broke relations with the Axis powers and joined the Allies. - During the war, Brazil could not use its four submarines since they were made in Italy and faced the danger of being mistaken as submarines of Italy. Thirty four Brazilian warships and merchant vessels were sunk by German and Italian submarines.The Brazilian navy managed to sink 9 German U Boats.

FEB, created in August 1943 and sent to Italy, consisted of 25334 persons including 20 women who were nurses. FEB suffered death of 467 and around 2700 wounded.

- FEB was racially integrated unlike the US forces which were segregated according to races. The black US soldiers were excluded from honour guards and were given inferior equipments. The Afro-American newspaper of Baltimore published a photo of the racially integrated Brazilian contingent with the headline “Blacks and whites fight together for Brazil, why not for the US?”.

Noronha's book has a detailed account of the evolution of fascism in Europe and in Brazil and the similarities and contrasts between the continental and tropical varieties.



Tuesday, February 11, 2020

Gods of Maya


"Gods of Maya" was the topic of lecture by Alejandro Garay, a Guatemalan archaeologist at the National Museum, New Delhi today morning.

This was one of the best Latin American lectures in India and an eye opener on Mayan culture.
Garay made an impressive, structured, clear and eloquent presentation on the gods of Maya, the Mayan culture, art and crafts. Garay has come prepared with good amount of knowledge of India. He explained the myths with research findings from archaeology, monuments, carvings and sculptures. 

Highlights of the lecture:

The god of maize (corn) is the most important god of Mayans. According to the Mayan myths, god created human beings to prepare food for them and thats the reason many rituals involve offerings of food to gods.





Mayan Calendar is based on the evolution of human being from conception to delivery (9 months) and not on the stars or planets. According to them, the world was created in 3114 BC.

The classical period in which Mayan culture flourished was between 300 and 1000 AD.

Mayas had developed the most complex system of writing in the Americas. It was developed around 300 AD and has 800 signs and is pictorial like the Japanese letters. The Mayans used ink for writing.

The Mayans have also had zero as number like the Indians. Their numerals are the easiest to learn, as seen in the image below. one dot for 1, two, three and four dots for 2,3 and 4. Five is written as a horizontal line.. for 6.7,8 and 9 it is the line with the number of dots above. For 10, it is two horizontal lines.. and for 15 three lines. For 11-14 and 16-19 lines plus dots. so easy a system..


The Mayans believed that everything including wood and stone had spirit in them. There are carvings (like animations) with images of stones speaking to the human beings.

There was a large appreciative audience of students of art, archaeology and culture, who asked intelligent questions.
Garay is the first ever Latin American archaelogist to be invited by ICCR to India. He is visiting Nalanda, Humpi, Jaipur, Agra and Hydedarabad too..
I advised Garay to do a comparative study of Indian and Mayan gods. I told him about the Tamil book " South American Tamils" in which the author has claimed that Mayas, Aztecs and Olmeds are Tamils who went from Tamilnadu and got lost there..

I suggested to the National Museum Institute to organise a seminar on the similiarities between Indian and the Latin American Inca, Aztec and Mayan Indian cultures..

Thursday, December 12, 2019

End of Latin America’s Decade (2010-19) of Disappointment


Latin American GDP growth rate in 2019 is estimated to be a meagre 0.1 %, according to the 12 December annual report of the UN Commission for Latin America and Caribbean (ECLAC). The growth has gone down from 1% in 2018.

The decade of 2010-19 has seen an average growth of just 1.87%. The region started off with an impressive 6.2% in 2010 but thereafter slowed down and went into negative growth in 2015 and 2016. 

In 2019, Brazil grew by 1%, Mexico by 0 % , Colombia 3.2% , Chile 0.8%, Peru 2.3% and Central America 2.4%.

Four countries suffered GDP contraction: Venezuela by 25.5%, Argentina by 3%, Nicaragua by 5.3% and Ecuador 1.2%. 

Venezuela’s cumulative GDP contraction since 2014 is an astonishing 87.9%. The country has been bleeding with GDP contraction every year since 2014. Argentina has had economic contraction five out of the last ten years.

Fall in domestic demand, investment, commodity prices and demand as well as political uncertainties are the reasons for the slow growth. The unfavourable external trade and economic situation has also contributed to the region’s slow down. 

Total exports of the region are estimated to have declined slightly to 1.05 trillion dollars in 2019 from 1.07 trillion in 2018. The imports have also gone down to 1.03 trillion from 1.05 trillion dollars.

Argentina is back to its favourite external debt crisis. The country has to negotiate debt restructuring with IMF which has given 57 billion dollars as well as with private creditors and bondholders.

The only good news is that the average inflation of the region (excluding Venezuela and Argentina) would be a historic low of 2.4% in 2019. Inflation of Venezuela in 2019 is estimated at 39114 % and Argentina - 50 % .


Forecast for 2020

In 2020, the regional growth is forecast to increase to 1.4% . Brazil is expected to grow by 1.7%, Mexico by 1.3%, Colombia by 3.5%, Peru by 3.2%, Chile by 1% and Central America 2.6%.

Venezuela, Argentina and Nicaragua will suffer further GDP contraction of 14%, 1.3% and 1.4% respectively. 

Political situation

Unlike the first decade of the twenty first century which saw unprecedented political stability, the second decade has seen crisis and uncertainty. Both Left and Right have suffered electoral setbacks. Left has been beaten in the elections in Brazil, Uruguay and Peru while the right has been brought down in Argentina and Mexico. The region has witnessed mass protests against inequality, corruption and unpopular policies. In recent months Colombia, Chile, Peru and Ecuador have been convulsed by mass protests.

The masses, who have been empowered by democracy, have started assertively exercising their power by voting in those who promise pro-people policies, voting out those who fail to deliver and forcing governments to change unpopular policies.   This is the clear message for the current and future rulers in the region that they need to be more responsible and accountable. The presidents cannot take their full terms for granted if they fail to fulfil their promises. This power of the masses is a clear signal and positive trend of the strengthening of the democracies in the twenty first century. This should bring about better governance in the region in the future. 

Both the Left and the Right have learnt that neither pure socialism nor uncontrolled Free Market have the complete solutions for the problems faced by the region. What the region needs is the Brasilia Consensus of pragmatic and balanced mix of pro-poor programmes and business-friendly policies. So the Left and the Right should go beyond their ideological boundaries and show flexibility, moderation and pragmatism in their governance and development policies. 

Brazil’s political situation is getting better. The ultra right wing Bolsonaro has been tempered and forced to change his prejudiced policies against China, Argentina and Climate Change Accords in recent months. The Tropical Trump Bolsonaro is now disillusioned with the unfriendly policy announcements of his idol Trump. So he is likely to become more realistic and responsible in his world view.

The maverick Mexican President is pursuing his agenda for social equality in his own eccentric way but he is unable to boost economic growth or control the crime and violence of the drug cartels. He has no interest or agenda in foreign policy and has refused to make any foreign trips.

The just-elected President of Argentina Alberto Fernandez is expected to reduce poverty and be a moderate in foreign policy. 

Chile, Colombia, Peru and Ecuador have got wake up calls for the need to focus on social inequalities.

The only countries which face continuation of political crisis are Venezuela, Bolivia and Nicaragua.

With the lessons learnt in this Decade of Disappointment, one hopes that Latin America will become politically more stable with higher Inclusive economic growth in the coming decade.




Tuesday, December 03, 2019

Transitioning of Latin America in the twenty first century


Latin America is in media headlines these days for mass protests, political instability and economic crisis. In the past, these were explained in terms of the traditional ideological polarisations and economic cycles of boom and bust. But the current protests have gone beyond ideologies and people have risen against both Leftist as well as Rightist governments. There have been agitations in economically distressed countries (Venezuela) as well as in rich countries such as Chile. The voters have changed the governments from Left to Right in Brazil and Uruguay but in the reverse in Argentina and Mexico in the last two years. These protests and changes are part of the process of transition of the region into the twenty first century which is promising a new future.  



In the last four decades, the region has undergone a paradigm shift and profound transformation. The political power has shifted from the military barracks to oligarchic mansions and now to the streets. The masses, who have been empowered by the democracies, have started exercising their power assertively by bringing down governments which do not fulfil the promises, or become too corrupt or gone astray. In the first decade, public protests brought down governments in Ecuador, Peru and Bolivia before completion of their term. The anti-corruption protests lead to jailing of corrupt leaders in Brazil, Peru and Guatemala. In the case of Chile, Ecuador, Peru and Brazil the governments bowed to the demands of protestors and agreed to change their policies such as increase in transport costs and cut in fuel subsidies. Only in the cases of Venezuela and Nicaragua people are unable to change the regimes which are hanging on to power through unconstitutional and authoritarian manoeuvres. 

The main drivers of the political discontent is the raising expectations of the citizens and the high inequality and social divide between the rich and poor in the region. Latin America has the highest disparity in income in the world. The masses, who had no other option but to suffer this situation silently in the past, now feel free to express their frustration and anger with protests. The only exception is Cuba which continues to be a dictatorship and does not allow protests. The Cuban government wants to open up their economy and society slowly at a controlled pace, as being done in China.  

Military dictatorships in the region came to an end in the eighties. There are no more military dictatorships in the region in the new century. Although the military intervened to remove presidents in Honduras and Bolivia in 2009 and 2019 respectively, they avoided taking over power and let the civilians run the governments. By 1990, the power had shifted decisively from the barracks to the civilians, who were mostly traditional oligarchs. These were from the established ruling class and some of them had collaborated with dictatorships and benefitted from them. 

In the eighties, the rulers of the nascent democracies were forced to adopt neoliberalistic Washington Consensus policies which included privatization and trade and market opening. The implementation of the Washington Consensus policies worsened poverty and inequality. Poverty rate increased from 40.5% in 1980 to 48.3% in 1990. Regional growth stagnated at an average of 1.3% from 1981 to 1990, and per capita income declined. The average inflation of the region increased from 159 percent in 1985 to 1,189 percent in 1990. The region was struck by a debt crisis in 1982 with the accumulated debt since the mid-1970s. The economies of many countries were shaken to their very foundations. Not surprisingly, the Latin Americans called the eighties as the Lost Decade. 

The people reacted to this Lost Decade by voting Leftists to power in the first decade of the twenty first century. Many of those elected as presidents were former activists against dictatorship, leftist guerillas, trade unionists and leaders from the working class and those excluded from political power in the past. Lula was the most emblematic of this new crop of leaders from the bottom of the society. He was a lathe worker and had worked his way up as a trade unionist and founded the Workers Party. President Evo Morales of Bolivia was from  the native Indian community which was kept outside political and economic power for five hundred years by the descendants of European colonisers. He is from a poor coca leaf growing peasant family and started his political career as a coca leaf growers trade union. President Mujica of Uruguay had suffered imprisonment for about fourteen years during the military dictatorship for his guerilla activities. President Fernando Lugo of Paraguay was a simple catholic bishop who had worked with poor communities and had no political experience. President Michelle Bachelet of Chile had been in exile and her father was assassinated by Pinochet dictatorship. Naturally, these leaders sympathized with the poor and marginalized and gave priority to poverty alleviation and empowerment of the masses. 

Growth Decade

The beginning of the twenty first century saw unprecedented political stability, economic growth, Inclusive Development, prosperity, regional integration and collective strength. The climax was in 2010 when the region showed an impressive 6.3% GDP growth. This is even more significant, coming in the aftermath of the global financial crisis. The region was, of course, helped by the high prices and demand for commodities, especially from China. External debt as percentage of GDP came down from 40% in 2000 to 17.4% in 2008. Brazil and Argentina had paid off their IMF debts ahead of schedule. The region had succeeded in taming inflation and bringing it under control within single digit. Over forty million people in the region were lifted from poverty, thanks to the pro-poor policies of the governments of most countries in the region. Poverty rate was brought down from 44% in 2002 to 32.1% in 2010. Leftist governments swept to power in Brazil, Argentina, Venezuela, Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador, Uruguay and Paraguay. It was called as a Pink Tide. 

President Lula had found the ideal formula for development with a pragmatic and balanced blend of pro-poor and business-friendly policies. The business, which started flourishing, paid more taxes which was ploughed back for social welfare expenditure. This new model was called as Lulaism or “Brasilia consensus”. This was hailed as the perfect indigenous model for governance and development of Latin America which faces enormous poverty and other developmental issues. 

Latin America had started acquiring collective strength by regional and subregional integration through Mercosur (Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay), Unasur (Union of South American States) and CELAC (Community of Latin American and Caribbean states).  The region, lead by Brazil, Argentina and Venezuela stood up to the US domination by defeating the US proposal for a Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA) at the Mar del Plata Summit of the Americas in 2005. President Bush stood isolated at the summit and had to accept the new equation with the assertive Latin America, which the US had considered as its backyard in the last century.

It was heady times. The first decade was celebrated as the Decade of Growth or Golden Decade. The President of Inter American Development Bank Luis Moreno published in 2011 a book with the title “ The Decade of Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC): A real opportunity”. He says in the book “ I have maintained, both publicly and privately, that the 2010s should be considered the Decade of Latin America and the Caribbean. By the Decade of Latin America and the Caribbean I mean that in the coming years the region’s recent gains will be locked in and the average citizen will be more prosperous than ever before in the history of the hemisphere. A new day is dawning for the economic and social outlook of the LAC  region. Although it must be said that this promising perspective is not a certainty, it represents a unique opportunity for the region.”

Decade of Deception

But unfortunately, the second decade has belied the expectations as a Decade of Deception with political crisis and economic problems resurfacing in some countries. There were costly political mistakes by some such as President Dilma Rouseff of Brazil and President Evo Morales of Bolivia. Corruption scandals shook Brazil and some other countries discrediting established political parties and leaders. The regimes in Venezuela and Nicaragua have made a mockery of socialism by perpetuating their unconstitutional hold on power by vitiating the rules and spirit of democracy. The commodity boom was over. Countries which enjoyed high export revenue did not prepare themselves for the cyclical downturn. Economic growth has come down and poverty has gone up. Budget for poverty alleviation and public service have been cut as part of austerity measures. While the poor and the middle class got hit by the economic downturn, the rich and the business people had done well thanks to the manipulation of policies in their favour. It is this situation which has angered the citizens to hit the streets with protests against the excess of rulers, corruption and unfair policies. 

Chile
The protests which started against the increase in metro fares in 2019 had escalated with more substantial demands for revision of the Pinochet-era constituition with its market-driven model (imposed and implemented by the Chicago Boys who were students of Milton Friedman) that led to the privatisation of pensions, healthcare and education as well as basic services like water. Prices of consumer products and cost of services are kept high by corporate cartels. The companies pay less taxes and the government spends less on education and health care. The centre-right billionaire President Pinera, after initial mishandling of the protests, had  agreed to consider demands of the citizens such as increase in minimum wages and topping of pension benefits.  The major political parties signed an “ Agreement for social peace and a new constituition” This will be the first time in the history of Chile that all citizens will be given a voice in the drafting of their own future. A time table has been agreed to hold a referendum in 2020. Already, many municipalities and community groups have started convening thousands of local assemblies to address the grievances and seek possible solutions. 
President Pinera was complacent on the assumption that Chile is the most prosperous and politically stable South American country. He did not realise the suffering of the poor and middle class for whom education, health care and utilities have become too expensive under the private sector lead economy with the least contribution from the government.
It should be noted that both the Chilean people and the political leaders have shown remarkable maturity in the region. In the last four elections, Left was elected twice and Right was chosen twice alternately. The election campaign and the transfer of power have taken place smoothly and the campaign rhetoric has been moderate. 



Bolivia 

Evo Morales was elected as the first ever native Indian President of Bolivia in 2006. Despite forming 60% of the population, the indigenous were kept away from political and economic power for the last five hundred years by the minority white elite who are less than 15% of the country. So it was a historic turning point in Bolivia. The fourteen years of the Morales government was an unprecedented long period of political stability in Bolivia which had seen many coups in the past. He empowered the native Indians who started taking part in the political and economic activities. With his socialist agenda, Morales was the most successful in Latin America in poverty reduction. He built schools, hospitals and infrastructure in the indigenous areas. Although he uses radical leftist rhetoric, Morales had managed the economy prudently and pragmatically. The GDP of Bolivia has grown an average of five percent during his long 14 years of rule.Morales lead a simple and austere life without any personal ostentation. He was free from corruption and did not acquire personal wealth or indulge in any luxuries. 

After having been in power for such a long period, Morales should have stood down in the 2019 elections, as mandated by the term limit imposed by his own new constituition. This would have safeguarded his great legacy of achievements as the first indigenous president who transformed the country. But power went to his head and Morales started believing that he was indispensable. He did not groom a successor. He held a referendum in 2016 seeking approval for another term. This was rejected by the people. But he went to the constituitional court and got from friendly judges a verdict approving his reelection, on the spurious ground of his personal human rights. 

Morales made his worst mistake by indulging in manipulation of the results of the October2019 elections. The live counting and telecast was shut down abrupty and mysteriously for almost 24 hours, when the margin between Morales and his nearest rival Carlos Mesa was narrowing. The next day, counting was resumed and it was announced that Morales won with more than ten percent difference in votes. When the opposition and external election observers questioned, Morales agreed to an audit and later to holding a new election. But it was too late. Seeing the best opportunity to bring down Morales, the opposition resorted to protests and clashed with his supporters. The military and police took the side of the protestors and turned against him. Fearing for his personal safety, he took the offer of Mexico for asylum and left the country. 

Many Leftist leaders and countries have expressed moral support for Morales and described his exit as the result of a coup and right wing conspiracy against the Left. It is true that the military had asked him to step down. But this was done at the very last stage when Morales had already dug his own grave. Morales had been making deliberate mistakes one after another since the failure of his Referendum in 2016 to unlawfully extend his term and undermine democracy. This is unpardonable and he has paid the price.

The country will now hopefully move on with new elections as agreed between the interim government and the opposition from Morales’ party.
    
Brazil

Brazil enjoyed a golden period in the period 2003-11 under president Lula. Brazil's global profile reached unprecedented new heights during the Presidency of Lula who pursued proactive and visionary foreign policies. During Lula's term, the economy had high growth and at the same time poverty and inequality were reduced with successful Inclusive Development policies. 

President Lula took initiatives in the formation of regional groups such as UNASUR and CELACbesides strengthening Mercosur. Brazil was an active player, mover and shaker in UN and multilateral fora. There was a new confidence and optimism with which Brazil sought its place among the global powers.

After Lula’s presidency, Brazil faced a series of crises. President Dilma Rouseff was impeached in 2016 by a combination of Congressional and Judicial coup in 2014. The Car Wash and other massive corruption scams brought the masses to the streets in 2014. The scandals discredited political and business leaders many of whom including Lula were sent to jail. The rightist fringe politician Bolsonaro was the beneficiary of the wave of public anger which carried him to fill the vaccum and get elected as president in 2018. He does not have a large political party nor any positive political agenda for development.

President Bolsonaro has shaken the confidence of the world in Brazil with his extremist, polarising and disruptive right wing discourses. He is an anti-globalist and considers climate change as a Marxist Cultural Plot. He is a fierce anti-socialist both within and outside Brazil. He wants to align the foreign policy of Brazil to that of US and seeks closer links with right wing leaders of Israel, Hungary, Poland and Italy. Ernesto Araujo, Bolsonaro’s foreign minister  and a career diplomat, is even more obscurantist and anachronistic. It is hoped that Brazil will become a normal country again after the aberration of the Bolsonaro regime. 

Argentina turns back to Left
After twelve years of Leftist rule, centre-right Mauricio Macri was elected as President in 2014. He removed socialistic controls, opened up the market and became the posterboy of Free Market. But the economy became worse at the end of his four year term. Inflation reached over fifty percent and the currency suffered severe depreciation. Poverty and inequality went up. Macri had to resort to IMF which gave the largest credit of 57 billion dollars. Because of the failure of his neoliberalistic policies, he was voted out in the October 2019 elections and the Leftist Peronist party has come back to power. 

Mexico chooses a maverick Leftist
In the 2018 elections, Mexico elected a radical Leftist Lopez Obrador as President for the first time. The country was under a one-party dictatorship of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) for 77 years and a two-term reign of the centre-right National Action Party (PAN) from 2000 to 2012 followed by PRI in 2013-18. 

President Obrador is an unconventional politician. He has refused presidential privlleges such as living in the Presidential mansion and travelling in the Presidential jet. He travels in economy class in commercial airlines.  As president, he has not travelled outside the country saying that he does not believe in governmental tourism. He is fully absorbed in dealing with domestic issues and has no time for foreign policy. He is a fiery anti-establishment crusader, fighting against the corruption of the ‘power mafia’ of the political and business oligarchy. He is an ardent leftist with an agenda for the uplift of the poor, emancipation of the indigenous people and the reduction of inequality in society. 

Obrador, is however, unable to control the violent crime of the drug cartels who are holding the whole country to ransom. He believes in tackling the fundamental developmental problem, the underlying cause for crime. 

Uruguay 

Centre-Right National Party candidate Lacalle Pou has won the presidential elections in Uruguay in the second round in November 2019. The country was ruled by centre-left coalition Broad Front in the past fifteen years. It was a period of political tranquility and inclusive economic growth. The left had pursued progressive and pragmatic policies. They did not indulge in excesses nor were they tainted in any corruption scandal. 
President Pou is not likely to make any drastic changes in policies or pursue any extremist rightist agenda. He will follow the Uruguayan tradition of balanced and mature policies.
The election result should be seen as anti-incumbent verdict. The Uruguayan voters did the right thing by giving opportunity to the other side after having been ruled by one side for three terms. When one president, party or coalition stays in power for too long, they become complacent or get corrupted by power. It is essential to change governments periodically for democracy to remain healthy and vibrant. 

Venezuelan crisis

President Chavez came to power in 1998 as an outsider candidate against the corrupt two party political system which had kept millions of Venezuelans as poor despite the huge oil revenue of the country. The oligarchs mounted a coup against him in 2002 and removed him from power. However, some military officers rescued Chavez and brought him back as president after two days. The coup angered Chavez who started taking revenge by systematic destruction of the opposition and the industry and business which supported the coup. His successor President Maduro continues the destructive path of Chavez. By rigging elections, Maduro get himself reelected in 2018. But the US, EU and some Latin American countries have recognised Juan Guaido, the president of the Assembly as the legitimate interim president of the country. Under President Maduro, the economy has completely collapsed with the world’s highest inflation of 200,000 %, shortage of essential food and medicines, long queues in front of supermarkets, massive devaluation of the currency and rampant crime and corruption. The economic crisis has got worse after the US sanctions against oil exports. Over three million Venezuelan refugees have sought asylum in neighbouring countries to escape the crisis. There have been lot of protests against the unpopular government but these have failed to change the regime or their policies. The country is in a hopeless mess with more uncertainty and misery in the coming years. 


Nicaragua
The Sandinista revolution was the the second most admirable after the Cuban Revolution in Latin America. The Sandinistas had undergone enormous sacrifices to liberate the country from Somoza dictatorship and survive the brutal contra war of US. But now the noble Sandinista revolution has been taken over as a family enterprise by President Daniel Ortega. He has perpetuated his rule indefinitely by bending the constituition. He has been President since 2007. His wife calls the shots as vice president and his son has emerged as a power broker. 
Mass protests erupted when the Ortega government removed some pension benefits and other welfare measures in 2018. However, Ortega has managed to contain the situation by agreeing to the demands of the protestors and some political manouvres.
It is interesting that Ortega, a Marxist, refuses to recognize the Communist China and still has diplomatic relations with Taiwan, which pays for the relationship.

Mass protests in other countries
There were massive demonstrations in Ecuador when the government removed the fuel subsidies in 2019. The protests in the Ecuadorian capital Quito became so violent that the government had to abandon the capital and move to Guayaquil, in the coast for some days. 
In Peru, there were protests against some actions of the Congress which was pitted against President Martin Vizcarra, who dissolved the Congress and has announced elections. The political uncertainty is likely to continue in the near future.
The Colombians took to the streets in November 2019 to express their dissatisfaction in general. The protestors included students, trade unions, teachers and indigenous groups who have called for full implementation of the peace agreement and ending of military abuses and killing of indigenous leaders among other demands.
  
Challenges of the region

Violent crime, drug trafficking and racial discrimination are some of the deep rooted problems in the region. Some parts of Latin America continue to have serious security and law and order issues. Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras, the Northern Triangle of violence, have the highest rates of murder in the world. The notorious Mara and other gangs hold the governments and people to ransom with their extreme violence. This is the main reason for the illegal emigration of people from these countries to US which has provoked and fuelled the anti-immigration policies of President Trump.

Mexico is the worst sufferer from the drug cartels which have been indulging in brutal violence and crime with impunity. The main urban centres of Brazil such as Rio and Sao Paulo continue to face crime and violence from the drug traffickers and freelance criminals.  

It needs to be stressed here that the US war on drugs is a complete failure. It has mislead public opinion by blaming the producers of drugs. But the truth is that drug is a consumer driven business. As long as millions of US consumers are willing to pay billions of dollars to continue their consumption, drug trafficking will never end. Out of the 100 dollars generated in the drug business only about 20% goes to the producers and traffickers while the rest of 80% stays within the US. While the US accuses Mexico and Latin America of supplying illegal drugs, the US government turns a blind eye to illegal transfer of narco dollars into Latin America from US and more importantly the smuggling of US guns to the region which kill thousands of Latin Americans. 

It is heartening to note that Medellin, Cali and Bogota which were the capitals of Narcos such as Pablo Escobar, have now become peaceful and transformed themselves into vibrant centres of business and innovation. The Peace Agreement with the FARC guerillas has given a fresh start to Colombia. The guerillas had control over almost half the total territory of Colombia during the height of their power. The liberated areas are now being explored for hydrocarbons and minerals and are being developed with new infrastructure and agriculture.

The people of African origin numbering around 80 million in Brazil are the poorest with the least representation in economic and political power. It is true of the people of African origin in Colombia and Venezuela too. The native Indian population of about 40 million in the Andean region and in Mexico and Central America are also marginalized to the bottom of the society.  

Corruption
The Car Wash corruption scandal shook the foundation of Brazil. All the major political parties and many large public and private sector companies were found to have instituitionalised bribery system. There were massive anti-corruption protests across the country. Over two hundred top political leaders (including the iconic Lula), business tycoons and senior corporate executives were sentenced to jail. 

The Odebrecht (the largest construction company of Brazil and the largest in Latin America too) corruption scandal went beyond Brazil after the company admitted to bribing political leaders in many countries of the region including Peru, Colombia, Venezuela, Mexico, Argentina and Paraguay. President of Peru Pablo Kuczynski, resigned after allegation of his accepting Odebrecht bribe. He is under house arrest. Three other ex-Presidents of Peru were accused, of which one committed suicide and the other two are in jail. The opposition leader Keiko Fujimori was also caught in the bribery charge and was in prison for some time.

In Guatemala, a sitting President Otto Perez Molina and senior officials of his government including the Vice president were sent to jail on corruption charges in 2015, following anti-corruption agitations. Many other ex-presidents in Central America have also been convicted on corruption charges.

The mass protests against corruption is indeed a stern warning and deterrent to those in power in the region.

Economy

Latin America is a large Middle Income market of 600 million people with a combined GDP of 6 trillion US dollars and per capita income of about 10,000 dollars. Demographically it is a vibrant region with average age of the population at 32 years.

Latin America’s GDP is projected to grow by 0.1 % in 2019, according to the ECLAC report of November 2019. This meagre growth will close the miserable second decade with an average annual growth of just 1.4% in the last nine years. Fall in export revenue, investment and domestic consumption as well as the decrease in Chinese demand and low commodity prices are the main reasons for this poor performance.

After the peak growth of 6.2% in 2010, the GDP growth rate has come down in the last nine years and ran into negative growths in 2015 and 2016. 


The good news is that the GDP growth rate is projected to increase to 1.4 % in 2020 and the growth could be sustained in the coming years. 
However, Venezuela will continue to suffer acute economic pain with the estimated GDP contraction of 25% in 2019 and 14% in 2020 after having suffered a cumulative GDP contraction of over fifty percent since 2014 to 2018. Argentina too will face challenges in the coming years to repay its huge external debt, control inflation and get out of poverty. 

Positive news

While there are many ongoing transitional problems, one should not fail to give credit to some positive features of the region. Costa Rica has set an example to the world with a military-free society. It was the first country in the modern history of the world to abolish armed forces in 1948. Costa Rica boasts that they spend their money on teachers and schools instead of guns and barracks. This is extraordinary, considering the fact that Costa Rica is in the middle of the volatile Central America which had gone through many violent conflicts including a traumatic civil war in the eighties. Rather than passive peaceful isolation, the country’s President Arias took the initiative to stop the regional conflict by brokering a peace agreement for which he was awarded the Nobel peace prize. Costa Rica runs a Peace University to disseminate peaceful means of resolution of conflicts in the world.

Costa Rica is pioneer in environmental protection and clean energy. It was one of the first in the world which combined its ministries of energy and the environment back in the 1970s. The country generates an impressive 99 per cent of its energy from renewable sources. It is working proactively towards its goal of becoming Carbon Neutral and stopping the use of fossil fuels such as petrol and diesel in the next decade.

Brazil’s Bolsa Familia conditional cash transfer and other pro-poor schemes during Lula’s presidency became a role model for the world. 

Uruguay has become the first country in the world to legalise production, distribution, sale and consumption of marijuana. This has drastically cut drug trafficking and related crime. This is a lesson for the region and especially for US which has been pursuing a failed War on Drugs and continue to suffer from drug addiction.  

Conclusion

Power has irreversibly shifted from the barracks and oligarchic mansions to the streets in the last four decades. The masses, who have been empowered by democracy, have started assertively exercising their power by voting in those who promise pro-people policies, voting out those who fail to deliver and forcing governments to change unpopular policies.   This is the clear message for the current and future rulers in the region that they need to be more responsible and accountable. The presidents cannot take their full terms for granted if they fail to fulfil their promises. This power of the masses is a clear signal and positive trend of the strengthening of the democracies in the twenty first century. This should bring about better governance in the region in the future. 

Both the Left and the Right have learnt that neither pure socialism nor uncontrolled Free market have the complete solutions for the problems faced by the region. What the region needs is the Brasilia Consesus of pragmatic and balanced mix of pro-poor programmes and business-friendly policies. So the Left and the Right should go beyond their ideological boundaries and show flexibility, moderation and pragmatism in their governance and development policies. 

With the lessons learnt in the last four decades, Latin America is expected to become politically more stable, economically more prosperous and socially more harmonious in the coming decades.