Alvaro
Vargas Llosa :
Lula's obstacle
LIMA, Peru -- Were it not for a dizzying succession
of corruption scandals, Brazilian President Luiz Inacio
Lula da Silva would have been easily re-elected recently.
As usually happens when left-wing leaders adopt center-right
policies in government, the space was too small for
those attacking him either from the nostalgic left or
the frustrated right.
But
corruption, a symptom of an institutional problem that
Lula failed to address in his first term, forced the
president into a runoff election later this month against
the center-right former governor of Sao Paulo state,
Geraldo Alckmin.
Lula
is still the favorite in the second round. He has preserved
most of his own political following because the more
radical options from the left -- led by Heloisa Helena,
a Workers Party dissident -- scare many people. And
he has attracted part of the conservative vote because
some middle-class Brazilians see in his government a
better guarantee of social "containment'' than
the center-right alliance of the Brazilian Social Democratic
Party and the Liberal Front Party can offer. Since Helena's
voters are more likely to support Lula than Alckmin,
the president is expected to narrowly win re-election.
The governing Workers Party won only four governorships,
out of 27.
Sao
Paulo, the giant state that is also the industrial heart
of the country, is solidly in the hands of the opposition.
In the outgoing Chamber of Deputies, Lula and his allies
were 10 votes short of a majority. Now, thanks to the
corruption scandals, his position will be much weaker.
In Brazil's labyrinthine political system, where governors
have great power over legislators because they control
local tax collection and Congress is endemically fragmented,
this will translate into immobility and acrimony in
the next several years.
It's
bad news for whoever wins in the second round. Brazil
urgently needs changes: The economy is plodding on when
compared with many other "emerging'' countries,
and poverty has declined barely 1 percent since 2002.
The suffocating state system is fostering corruption.
Last
year, the economy grew 2.6 percent; this year's growth
will not exceed 3 percent. According to the Institute
for Applied Economic Research, there are almost 54 million
poor Brazilians, half of whom are indigent.
Lula's
"Family Budget'' program -- part of the "Zero
Hunger'' aid scheme -- gives $24 a month to more than
11 million families, provided they send their children
to school and have them vaccinated. Were it not for
this non-productive aid, the government could not boast
of having lifted 6 million Brazilians out of poverty.
Clearly, this is a minor achievement in comparison with
the accomplishments of China, India and South Africa
-- Brazil's "emerging'' counterparts.
Because
Brazil's political system makes it devilishly difficult
to make decisions and its state system greatly limits
the creation of wealth (some companies must pay as many
as 61 different taxes), corruption has proliferated
spectacularly. A deputy allied with Lula disclosed that
in
2005
he had received bribes for his votes in Congress, as
had other legislators. It was the tip of an interminable
skein. The country uncovered a systematic scheme involving
the purchase of legislative votes, the illegal bankrolling
of parties, and entrepreneurial bribery that blanketed
much of the so-called political class. Lula mounted
a comeback after looking politically finished, thanks
partly to the fact that Congress -- and his compatriots
-- pardoned him. But the origin of the problem remains,
eroding the people's confidence in their institutions.
In
Latin America as a whole, Lula should have represented
a boost to the modernization of the left, but because
his government maintains a foreign policy out of tune
with his management of domestic affairs, the opposite
has happened. Former President Fernando Henrique Cardoso
told me that Lula's "rhetorical and contradictory
leadership'' has helped demagogic leaders gain space.
The loose alliance his government (to a great degree
under the guidance of his adviser Marco Aurelio Garcia)
has forged with Hugo Chavez has reinforced the Venezuelan's
position. Brazil has pledged to support Venezuela in
its quest for a seat on the U.N. Security Council and
is backing the grandiose Venezuelan project to run an
8,000-kilometer natural gas pipeline through Amazonia.
Lula's
bet on keeping the Mercosur trading bloc away from any
increased commercial ties with the United States or
other prosperous regions shows the degree to which his
foreign policy clings to the old Latin American habits,
even if Lula eschews the demagogical stridencies of
his Bolivarian neighbor. Lula's probable re-election
a month from now guarantees that for the next few years,
Latin America will lurch about on half its cylinders.
Alvaro Vargas Llosa,
journalist, author of "Liberty for Latin America,''
is the director of the Center on Global Prosperity at
the Independent Institute. Petroleumworld
not necessarily share these views.
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News 10/11/06
Copyright©2006
Alvaro Vargas Llosa. All rights reserved
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