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Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace

Threats, Dirty Tricks, Fake Polls: Costa Rica Votes Under Duress on "Free Trade"

By Mark Weisbrot, AlterNet. Posted October 5, 2007.


Costa Rica's citizens will soon become the first to vote on a "free trade" agreement, and the corporatocracy is pulling out all the stops to see that they vote its way.
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No country has ever had a national referendum on a "free trade" agreement before - which is not surprising since most of these agreements wouldn't be approved by the citizenry. Bill Clinton couldn't even get a majority of his own party in Congress to vote for NAFTA in 1993, and it's been downhill for these types of agreements ever since.

So Costa Rica - the region's richest and most democratic country -- will be setting a precedent on Sunday with its referendum on CAFTA (the Central America Free Trade Agreement), which was negotiated in 2004. Costa Ricans might want to watch out for a repeat of presidential elections last year, where current President Oscar Arias squeezed out a narrow (1.1 percent) victory over progressive candidate Ottón Solís, who criticized CAFTA in his campaign. In that campaign, erroneous polls reported by the media showed Arias with a large lead of 11-19 percentage points. This led to a record low turnout at the polls. Costa Rica could very well have a different president, and a different trade policy, if not for the impact of this false polling.

The latest polls in Costa Rica give an advantage to the "yes" vote, but things have been moving rapidly towards "No" since an embarrassing high-level government memo was leaked a few weeks ago. The memo, as the Los Angeles Times described it, "outlined a campaign of dirty tricks intended to sway voters." This included telling mayors that their cities would "not get a penny from the government for the next three years" if they did not deliver a majority of voters for CAFTA. In the words of the memo, the government also needed to "stimulate fear" among the voters, including "fear of the loss of jobs."

The Bush Administration joined the campaign to "stimulate fear," with the U.S. Ambassador threatening that Costa Rica could lose some of it existing access to U.S. markets if the voters reject CAFTA. This led US Congresswoman Linda Sánchez to remind the Ambassador's boss, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, that such interference in Costa Rica's electoral politics violates US, Costa Rican, and international law. Senate Majority leader Harry Reid and House Majority leader Nancy Pelosi also weighed in with a letter stating clearly that Costa Rica's access to U.S. markets under the Caribbean Basin Initiative are not conditioned on acceptance of any trade agreement.

In fact, the threats from the US government, and repeated by the Costa Rican proponents of CAFTA, are empty. There is only a small portion of Costa Rica's trade preferences that Congress would have to renew next year. It is politically inconceivable that the Democratic majority in Congress - which voted against CAFTA when it was approved here - would move to punish Costa Rica for its voters having rejected the same agreement. Despite the intimidation, Costa Ricans brought a record 100,000 people (equivalent to seven million in the US) into the streets last weekend for a "No" vote. They have good reasons to reject CAFTA: they do not want their farmers wiped out by subsidized grains and other agricultural products from the U.S. They also have a strong environmental movement that vehemently objects to provisions in CAFTA - like NAFTA - that would give corporations new legal rights to challenge environmental laws. And Mexico's post-NAFTA economic performance - about a third of its pre-1980 growth - is less than inspiring.

Of course "free trade" is a marketing slogan rather than a description of the actual policy that is up for a vote. These agreements - including CAFTA -- increase some of the most costly barriers to international trade (such as in pharmaceuticals) while lowering others (e.g. for subsidized US agricultural exports).

A "No" vote in Costa Rica would deal another blow to the Bush Administration's foreign commercial policy, which has already suffered numerous defeats: including the collapse of their proposed "Free Trade Area of the Americas;" the stalled talks at the World Trade Organization (WTO); and the administration's loss of "fast track" authority to negotiate new agreements with minimal congressional input.

Costa Rica is one of the richest countries in Latin America, and has a well-developed democracy. That democracy will be put to a new test with this referendum.

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See more stories tagged with: cafta, "free trade"

Mark Weisbrot is co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, in Washington, DC.


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Bye-bye universal health coverage
Posted by: Urstrly on Oct 6, 2007 5:48 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And, as David Sirota points out in his excellent Alternet article on Beltway Democrats, a yes vote will force Costa Rica to dismantle its universal health plan and access to life-saving machines. Could it be that economies like Costa Rica are a threat to the myth so prevalent in the US that a nation can't afford to take care of its own and to ask that it do so is self-indulgent and counter to democracy? We should be grateful that Costa Rica thrives.

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» now who's being naive? Posted by: KaptainSpiffy
» RE: now who's being naive? Posted by: fermat
» DID TICOS KNOW THIS? Posted by: mdruss42
CAFTA is a threat to more than Painted Oxcarts!
Posted by: Zenobia on Oct 6, 2007 9:42 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am no expert on Costa Rica, but I did have the opportunity to visit this spring and talk extensively with locals. What I kept hearing is that the local organic farms were fighting hard to block encroaching US/US backed agribusiness, and the threat of more to come. Costa Rica is known for more than just painted oxcarts, as someone suggested above. They are a significant producer of bananas, pineapple, coconut, and coffee.

Costa Ricans also try to be environmentally sustainable. Clearly big agribusiness does not.

So the locals are rightly concerned that CAFTA will cause the demise of local farms, thereby corrupting local control of the economy. They are also concerned that CAFTA will undermine the country's tradition of sustainable agriculture, thereby degrading the environment and Costa Rica's delicate and famous biodiversity.

Another problem that "free trade" is causing, and CAFTA would exacerbate: Ticos are being out-priced from their own hometowns. The Pacific Coast has been ravaged by baby boomers buying condos, plus all the development that followed to feed, clothe, and entertain these expats and vacationers. The Atlantic Coast, while less commercial and less developed, is owned mostly by Americans and Europeans now. In both cases, prices have risen to match the economic level of the newcomers, while wages for Ticos have stayed pretty much the same. So the Ticos can't come NEAR affording housing where they grew up. Even buying toothpaste is harder than it used to be!

Seems to me this is what we did in Mexico, and things didn't turn out so well. I can also empathize because we have been fighting these battles in California--small local farmers struggling against big agribiz, housing prices that skyrocketed out of control because of neo-"liberal" economic strategies...

Again, I am not a scholar on Latin America, so don't take my words at face value without doing your own research. But this was the story on the ground. And in some ways, that might be worth MORE than what you hear in the press because it is unfiltered.

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» cafta BY THE NUMBERS..... Posted by: mdruss42
Yes to Disaster Capitalism ?
Posted by: mmckinl on Oct 6, 2007 4:41 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
That's what it amounts to ...

Read :

'Disaster Capitalism' ... Naomi Klein

'The Secret History of the American Empire' ... John Perkins

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Why yes or no rather than an alternative
Posted by: Sum Won on Oct 6, 2007 7:28 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Costa Rica is mostly a homogeneous and egalitarian society of four million. They disbanded their military in 1948 in favor of a social safety net modeled on aspects of Scandinavian socialism. With less industrial wealth they only could afford a Latinized version. Still they were able to provide all the basic services to the majority of the populace in a manner not achieved elsewhere in Latin America. Public services, the co-operative movement, community and family values resulted in a society that lived in a manner that the voluntary simplicity movement encourages us to follow. This was all they could afford but given the climate, natural beauty and relative self sufficiency in food products they were content and rated highly in the happiness index. Eco- warriors by default.

The impact of tourism, the media and new economic models have presented consumerism as a new option that most Costa Ricans find appealing. They are unaware of the wealth generated by their current system. The destruction of community, family and environment are not measured in GDP statistics.

Previously they abandoned the military, and recognizing the uniqueness of their environment they put a large portion of the country under protection. Today they are at a crossroads but the options presented suggest either a form of populism, primitivism and communism or industrialization, urbanization and the free-market.

The choice that they haven't been given or made aware of is how they could lead in a new direction rather than be subjected to the exploitation of left and right. With their existing base in health care and high technology they could leapfrog the industrial age and create a post industrial society based on sustainability and quality of life rather than consumerism and environmental degradation. If they excelled in organics, permaculture, environmental protection, medical sciences, public infrastructure, environmentally friendly products, alternative energy, holistic and other alternative lifestyles they would find themselves with the products the world will be desperately looking for within the next few decades.

If they choose not to pursue the sweat shop approach to wealth creation and a consumer class they are likely to be economically punished for rejecting "free trade". This will drive them into the arms of the populists and failed Marxist policies. Given the millions of Americans that want to see alternative economic models I only hope that in some manner they can support the efforts of little Costa Rica should it find itself looking for an alternative approach. A loud "we hear you" we support you" "we're with you" sends a message that needs to be heard by both politicians abroad and at home.

Then again the vote may be yes and another rape begins but in truth they will have asked for it.

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Costa Rica speaks
Posted by: fermat on Oct 7, 2007 4:13 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am not an expert in geopolitics either, but I am a Costa Rican and I understand my nation. We will NOT fall into idiotic populist ideas, regardless of the outcome of this referendum. Costa Rica has its own civic history and memory, and we do stuff our own way. The President of Costa Rica is a Nobel Prize of Peace, same as Mandela and M.Teresa. He is someone who is listened in the world when he speaks - on the field of the ideas. We Costa Ricans have a loud voice and we're using it. Don't confound us - we're not a big hat and a mustache down South of the US. BTW, America is a continent.

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» LOL Posted by: IPF
» RE: Costa Rica speaks Posted by: mdruss42
» RE: Costa Rica speaks Posted by: fermat
Too bad
Posted by: hurricane hugo on Oct 7, 2007 6:53 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
we can't do this here.

plur

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Jose Carlos Quirce, CR's special trade envoy in Washington, D.C., stumps for CAFTA.
Posted by: yellow on Oct 7, 2007 11:07 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Quirce points out that 40% of Costa Rica's exports go to the US while over half of all foreign direct investment (fdi) in Costa Rica originates from the US. Thus, he reasons, CAFTA is in Costa Rica's interest. The problem is that with the US economy slowing down and interest rates set to rise, the US will not be a market for Costa Rican manufactured goods except those few that is controlled by US fdi. US FDI in CAFTA countries has gradually increased over the past five years. According to the Trade Resources Center of the Business Roundtable, Costa Rica is the largest single recipient of US foreign direct investment accounting in 2003 for about 43% of the total or just over $1.8 billion. About one third of US exports to the CAFTA area is through US foreign affiliates while almost half of all imports from the area come from US affiliates in the CAFTA area!! in 2003. The key concern here is US Direct Foreign Investment that will do more for US domination of the Costa Rican economy and the export of US manufacturing jobs, such as low wage garment assembly, than an increase in genuine "job producing" trade expansion. National treatment for foreign investors in Costa Rica and other advantages for US corporations are part of the CAFTA agreement and will encourage more offshoring of US production to the CAFTA area already dominated by Costa Rica's hosting of a plurality of USFDI. This will not benefit US workers and will surely lead to sweat shops for Costa Rican workers. The agreement will only benefit large US corporations.

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Pretty poor writing and research. More anti-Bush slop
Posted by: IPF on Oct 7, 2007 11:18 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There are many inconsistencies in this article, and one has to wonder how much research the author actually did when preparing to write it. For instance -

Costa Rica is one of the richest countries in Latin America, and has a well-developed democracy. That democracy will be put to a new test with this referendum.

Actually, Costa Rica's GDP is close to $56 Billion, whereas Brazil's - $1.655 Trillion, Chile's - $202.7 Billion, Argentina's - $608.8 Billion, Mexico's - $1.149 Trillion, Colombia's $374.4 Billion, all dwarf what amounts to one of Latin America's smaller and poorer countries.

Not by accident either. Corruption is rampant and unequivocally misguided financial decisions have kept Costa Rica's economy in a yo-yo going from recession to boom to recession. High inflation and unemployment with a penchant for social overspending have meant the currency is frequently in a free fall.

Using incorrect data and fabricated stories is a good way to destroy your credibility - naught else.

Have a nice day.

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Nice soapbox stump...now please do some research
Posted by: aspeer on Oct 9, 2007 4:58 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The author has clearly never lived in Costa Rica, and I would venture to guess he has never visited. His vision of CAFTA as some form of nefarious sovereignty sapping, corporate homogenizing, brooklyn bridge scam being forced down the throat of Costa Ricans at the expense of the poor and disenfranchised with no discernible benefit for anyone but predatory foreign capitalists and their weaselly sycophantic Costa Rican allies is amusing, but offered without an ounce of factual support. Mr. Weisbrot is welcome to his opinion, but to voice it as a fact is a naked insult to all reasoning Costa Ricans, who to their credit thought long and hard before heading to the polls last Sunday and voted to approve CAFTA in a referendum that most agree was handled in an exemplary fashion.

If Mr Weisbrot looked a little more carefully, he may notice the following:
1. Costa Ricans pay some of the highest prices in the region for everything from beans to gasoline. These are largely the consequence of high tariffs on imports and local monopolies (state and private) for everything from milk to telecommunications. Those most affected by this are the poorest, and disenfranchised that Mr Weisbrot appears to be championing.
2. The number of poor Costa Ricans is growing alarmingly as the economy fails to grow fast enough to absorb a population boom fueled by a high birth rate and thousands of Nicaraguan immigrants.
3. The country is increasingly unable to provide basic services because it cannot afford to. Tax receipts barely cover debt servicing, corruption is rampant, and no money exists to pay for much needed investment in infrastructure and education. The welfare state the author coos about is creaking to an unseemly halt, a fact I invite Mr Weisbrot to come to Costa Rica and check for himself.

CAFTA is no panacea, it will not resolve all the above problems, but neither is Costa Rica the unsoiled socialist utopia Mr. Weisbrot makes it out to be. Far from it. Problems here are palpable and the need for a solution is urgent, with increased trade with the U.S. seen as one of several steps needed to address this. It is clear that the rich need to share a bigger burden, and tax reform is a priority, but it is also clear that additional sources of investment and export income are needed if sufficient jobs are to be created to put a stop to further social inequality; it is also evident that poor Costa Ricans pay too much for basic foodstuffs, and access to cheaper imports would help.

Costa Rica is a country with big problems, make no mistake about that. CAFTA is a carefully reasoned means to address these problems, approved based on a measure of debate and good sense by people who largely (what a shock) have Costa Rica's best interests in mind. It is not a sellout to a few corporate interests but rather a welcome mat to opportunity. There are polarized views, of course, and a lot of argument is likely to follow. Those extreme supporters of the yes vote that created the ill advised memo the author mentions should be censured, but so should the equally dangerous statements against CAFTA made by its opponents (the Catholic Church stated it was a mortal sin to support it, while the opposition invented all sorts of stories about closing down Social Security, disconnecting phones, etc, all of which were blatantly false propaganda, but which Mr Weisbrot somehow neglects to mention).

The bottom line is that the status quo is no longer an option for Costa Rica. Any vote against CAFTA is a vote in favor of postponing the inevitable. If people such as the author thought about this a little more before railing against concepts such as free trade and proposed workable solutions instead (as opposed to unworkable armchair musings), we may actually move a step closer to the greater social welfare we all seem to agree should be the main priority.

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Costa Rica and military
Posted by: davmills on Oct 11, 2007 6:29 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Though Costa Rica does not have an army, a Nicaraguan woman told me 12 years ago that they have a Guardia Civil, which might be the rough equivalent. If so, it must add to the state financial burden.
I'm only going by hearsay in this case. Perhaps an Alternet reader could clarify/inform/correct (for my benefit, at least) re any Costa Rican armed forces.

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