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The
Return of the Idiot

By Alvaro Vargas Llosa
Throughout the 20th century, Latin America’s populist
leaders waved Marxist banners, railed against foreign imperialists,
and
promised to deliver their people from poverty. One after another,
their ideologically driven policies proved to be sluggish and
shortsighted. Their failures led to a temporary retreat of the
strongman. But now, a new generation of self-styled revolutionaries
is trying to revive the misguided methods of their predecessors.
Ten
years ago, Colombian writer Plinio Apuleyo Mendoza, Cuban writer
Carlos Alberto Montaner, and I wrote Guide to the Perfect
Latin American Idiot, a book criticizing opinion and political
leaders who clung to ill-conceived political myths despite
evidence to the contrary. The “Idiot” species,
we suggested, bore responsibility for Latin America’s
underdevelopment. Its beliefs—revolution, economic nationalism,
hatred of the United States, faith in the government as an
agent of social justice, a passion for strongman rule over
the rule of law—derived, in our opinion, from an inferiority
complex. In the late 1990s, it seemed as if the Idiot were
finally retreating. But the retreat was short lived. Today,
the species is back in force in the form of populist heads
of state who are reenacting the failed policies of the past,
opinion leaders from around the world who are lending new credence
to them, and supporters who are giving new life to ideas that
seemed extinct.
Because of the inexorable passing of time, today’s young
Latin American Idiots prefer Shakira’s pop ballads to Pérez
Prado’s mambos and no longer sing leftist anthems like “The
Internationale” or “Until Always Comandante.” But
they are still descendants of rural migrants, middle class, and
deeply resentful of the frivolous lives of the wealthy displayed
in the glossy magazines they discreetly leaf through on street
corners. State-run universities provide them with a class-based
view of society that argues that wealth is something that needs
to be retaken from those who have stolen it. For these young
Idiots, Latin America’s condition is the result of Spanish
and Portuguese colonialism, followed by U.S. imperialism. These
basic beliefs provide a safety valve for their grievances against
a society that offers scant opportunity for social mobility.
Freud might say they have deficient egos that are unable to mediate
between their instincts and their idea of morality. Instead,
they suppress the notion that predation and vindictiveness are
wrong and rationalize their aggressiveness with elementary notions
of Marxism.
Latin American
Idiots have traditionally identified themselves with caudillos,
those larger-than-life authoritarian figures
who have dominated the region’s politics, ranting against
foreign influence and republican institutions. Two leaders in
particular inspire today’s Idiot: President Hugo Chávez
of Venezuela and President Evo Morales of Bolivia. Chávez
is seen as the perfect successor to Cuba’s Fidel Castro
(whom the Idiot also admires): He came to power through the ballot
box, which exonerates him from the need to justify armed struggle,
and he has abundant oil, which means he can put his money where
his mouth is when it comes to championing social causes. The
Idiot also credits Chávez with the most progressive policy
of all—putting the military, that paradigm of oligarchic
rule, to work on social programs.
For his part,
Bolivia’s Evo Morales has indigenista appeal.
In the eyes of the Idiot, the former coca farmer is the reincarnation
of Túpac Katari, an 18th-century Aymara rebel who, before
his execution by Spanish colonial authorities, vowed, “I
shall return and I shall be millions.” They believe Morales
when he professes to speak for the indigenous masses, from southern
Mexico to the Andes, who seek redress of the exploitation inflicted
on them by 300 years of colonial rule and 200 more of oligarchic
republican rule.
The Idiot’s
worldview, in turn, finds an echo among distinguished intellectuals
in Europe and the United States. These pontificators
assuage their troubled consciences by espousing exotic causes
in developing nations. Their opinions attract fans among First-World
youngsters for whom globalization phobia provides the perfect
opportunity to find spiritual satisfaction in the populist jeremiad
of the Latin American Idiot against the wicked West.
There’s nothing original about First-World intellectuals’ projecting
their utopias onto Latin America. Christopher Columbus stumbled
on the shores of the Americas at a time when Renaissance utopian
ideas were in vogue; from the very beginning, conquistadors described
the lands as nothing short of paradisiacal. The myth of the Good
Savage—the idea that the natives of the New World embodied
a pristine goodness untarnished by the evils of civilization—impregnated
the European mind. The tendency to use the Americas as an escape
valve for frustration with the insufferable comfort and cornucopia
of Western civilization continued for centuries. By the 1960s
and 70s, when Latin America was riddled with Marxist terrorist
organizations, these violent groups enjoyed massive support in
Europe and the United States among people who never would have
accepted Castro-style totalitarian rule at home.
The current
revival of the Latin American Idiot has precipitated the return
of his counterparts: the patronizing American and
European Idiots. Once again, important academics and writers
are projecting their idealism, guilty consciences, or grievances
against their own societies onto the Latin American scene, lending
their names to nefarious populist causes. Nobel Prizewinners,
including British playwright Harold Pinter, Portuguese novelist
José Saramago, and American economist Joseph Stiglitz;
American linguists such as Noam Chomsky and sociologists like
James Petras; European journalists like Ignacio Ramonet and some
foreign correspondents for outlets such as Le Nouvel Observateur
in France, Die Zeit in Germany, and the Washington Post in the
United States, are once again propagating absurdities that shape
the opinions of millions of readers and sanctify the Latin American
Idiot. This intellectual lapse would be quite innocuous if it
didn’t have consequences. But, to the extent that it legitimizes
the type of government that is actually at the heart of Latin
America’s political and economic underdevelopment, it constitutes
a form of intellectual treason.
A
FOREIGN AFFAIR
The most
notable example today of the symbiosis between certain Western
intellectuals and Latin American caudillos is the love
affair between American and European Idiots and Hugo Chávez.
The Venezuelan leader, despite his nationalist tendencies, has
no qualms about citing foreigners in his speeches in order to
strengthen his positions. Just witness Chávez’s
speech at the United Nations last September in which he praised
Chomsky’s Hegemony or Survival: America’s Quest for
Global Dominance.
Likewise,
in presentations at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
Chomsky has pointed to Venezuela as an example for
the developing world, touting social policies that have achieved
success in education and medical assistance and rescued the dignity
of Venezuelans. He has also expressed admiration for the fact
that “Venezuela successfully challenged the United States,
and this country doesn’t like challenges, much less so
if they are successful.”
But in actuality,
Venezuela’s social programs have, with
help from the Cuban intelligence services, become vehicles for
political regimentation and social dependence on the government.
Furthermore, their effectiveness is suspect. The Centro de Documentación
y Análisis Social de la Federación Venezolana de
Maestros, a teachers’ union think tank, reported in 2006
that 80 percent of Venezuela’s households have difficulty
covering the cost of food—the same proportion as when Chávez
came to power in 1999, and when the price of oil was one third
the price it is today. As for the dignity of the people, the
real story is that there have been 10,000 homicides per year
in Venezuela since Chávez became president, giving the
country the highest per-capita murder rate in the world.
Another nation
that certain American opinion leaders have a soft spot for
is Cuba. In 2003, Fidel Castro’s regime executed
three young refugees for hijacking a boat and trying to escape
from the island. Castro also sent 75 democratic activists to
prison for lending banned books. In response, James Petras, a
longtime sociology professor at the State University of New York’s
Binghamton University, wrote an article titled “The Responsibility
of the Intellectuals: Cuba, the U.S. and Human Rights.” In
his essay, which was reprinted by various left-wing publications
around the world, he defended Havana by arguing that the victims
had been in the service of the United States government.
Noted Castro
sympathizer Ignacio Ramonet, the editor of Le Monde Diplomatique,
a French newspaper that champions every unsavory
cause coming out of the Third World, maintains that globalization
has made Latin America poorer in recent years. In fact, poverty
has been modestly reduced in the past five years. Globalization
has given Latin American governments so much revenue from the
sale of commodities and from the taxes paid by foreign investors
that they have handed out cash subsidies to the poor—hardly
a solution to poverty in the long term.
Two decades
out of date, Harold Pinter delivered a flabbergasting account
of the Nicaraguan Sandinista government in his 2005 Nobel
lecture. Perhaps thinking that a vindicatory look at the populists
of the past might help the populists of today, he said that the
Sandinistas had “set out to establish a stable, decent,
pluralistic society,” and that there was “no record
of torture” or of “systematic or official military
brutality” under Daniel Ortega’s government in the
1980s. One wonders, then, why the Sandinistas were thrown out
of power by the people of Nicaragua in the 1990 elections. Or
why the voters kept them out of power for nearly two decades—until
Ortega became a political transvestite, declaring himself a supporter
of the market economy. As for the denial of Sandinista atrocities,
Pinter would do well to remember the 1981 massacre of Miskito
Indians on Nicaragua’s Atlantic coast. Under the guise
of a literacy campaign, the Sandinistas, with the help of their
Cuban cadres, tried to indoctrinate the Miskitos with Marxist
ideology. But the independent-minded Indians refused to accept
Sandinista control. Accusing them of supporting opposition groups
based in Honduras, Ortega’s men killed as many as 50 Miskitos,
imprisoned hundreds, and forcibly relocated many more. The Nobel
laureate should also remember that his hero Ortega became a capitalist
millionaire thanks to the distribution of government assets and
confiscated property that the Sandinista leaders split among
themselves after losing the 1990 elections.
The current
enthusiasm with Latin American populism extends to correspondents
for major news outlets. Take, for instance,
some stories filed by the Washington Post’s Juan Forero.
He is more balanced and informed than the luminaries mentioned
above, but, from time to time, he betrays an uncanny enthusiasm
for populism of the kind that is sweeping the region. In a recent
article on Chávez’s foreign largesse, he and coauthor
Peter S. Goodman paint a generally positive picture of the way
in which Chávez is helping some countries rid themselves
of the strictures imposed by U.S.-backed multilateral agencies
by providing them with enough cash to pay off their debts. Supporters
of this policy were quoted favorably and no mention was made
of the fact that Venezuela’s oil money belongs to the Venezuelan
people, not to foreign governments or entities allied with Chávez,
or that those subsidies have political strings attached. Note
Argentine President Néstor Kirchner’s attack against
the United States and his praise of Chávez during a recent
visit to the Venezuelan city of Puerto Ordaz, in return for Chávez’s
commitment to back yet another bond issue on Argentina’s
behalf.
THE PROBLEM WITH POPULISM
Foreign observers are missing an essential point: Latin American
populism has nothing to do with social justice. It began as
a reaction against the oligarchic state of the 19th century in
the form of mass movements led by caudillos who blamed rich
nations
for Latin America’s plight. These movements based their
legitimacy on voluntarism, protectionism, and massive wealth
redistribution. The result, throughout the 20th century, was
bloated government, stifling bureaucracy, the subservience
of judicial institutions to political authority, and parasitic
economies.
Populists share basic characteristics: the voluntarism of the
caudillo as a substitute for the law; the impugning of the oligarchy
and its replacement with another type of oligarchy; the denunciation
of imperialism (with the enemy always being the United States);
the projection of the class struggle between the rich and the
poor onto the stage of international relations; the idolatry
of the state as a redeeming force for the poor; authoritarianism
under the guise of state security; and “clientelismo,” a
form of patronage by which government jobs—as opposed to
wealth creation—are the conduit of social mobility and
the way to maintain a “captive vote” in the elections.
The legacy of these policies is clear: Nearly half the population
of Latin America is poor, with more than 1 in 5 living on $2
or less per day. And 1 to 2 million migrants flock to the United
States and Europe every year in search of a better life.
Even in Latin America, part of the left is making its transition
away from Idiocy—similar to the kind of mental transition
that the European left, from Spain to Scandinavia, went through
a few decades ago when it grudgingly embraced liberal democracy
and a market economy. In Latin America, one can speak of a “vegetarian
left” and a “carnivorous left.” The vegetarian
left is represented by leaders such as Brazilian President Luiz
Inácio “Lula” da Silva, Uruguayan President
Tabaré Vázquez, and Costa Rican President Oscar
Arias. Despite the occasional meaty rhetoric, these leaders have
avoided the mistakes of the old left, such as raucous confrontations
with the developed world and monetary and fiscal profligacy.
They have settled into social-democratic conformity and are proving
unwilling to engage in major reform—which is why Brazil’s
gross domestic product (GDP) growth is not expected to top 3.6
percent this year—but they signify a positive development
in the struggle for modernizing the left.
By contrast, the “carnivorous” left is represented
by Fidel Castro, Hugo Chávez, Evo Morales, and Ecuador’s
President Rafael Correa. They cling to a Marxist view of society
and a Cold War mentality that separates North from South, and
they seek to exploit ethnic tensions, particularly in the Andean
region. The oil windfall obtained by Hugo Chávez is funding
a great deal of this effort.
The gastronomy of Argentina’s Kirchner is ambiguous; he
is situated somewhere between the carnivores and the vegetarians.
He has inflated the currency, established price controls, and
either nationalized or created government-owned enterprises in
major sectors of the economy, but he has avoided revolutionary
extremes and paid his country’s debts to the International
Monetary Fund, albeit with the help of Venezuelan credit. Kirchner’s
ambiguous position has been helpful to Chávez, who has
filled the power vacuum in the South American Common Market to
project his influence on the region.
Oddly, many European and American “vegetarians” support
the “carnivores” in Latin America. For instance,
Joseph Stiglitz has defended various nationalization programs
in Morales’s Bolivia and Chávez’s Venezuela.
In an interview with Caracol Radio in Colombia, Stiglitz said
that nationalizations should not cause alarm because “public
firms can be very successful, like the Social Security pension
system in the United States.” Stiglitz has not called for
nationalizing major private or publicly traded companies in his
own country (the Social Security system was created from scratch),
and he seems unaware that, south of the Rio Grande, nationalizations
are at the heart of the disastrous populist experiences of the
past.
Stiglitz also ignores the fact that in Latin America, there
is no real separation between the state’s institutions
and the administration in charge, so government companies quickly
become conduits for political patronage and corruption. Venezuela’s
main telecommunications company has been a success story since
it was privatized in the early 1990s; the telecommunications
market has experienced an increase of about 25 percent in the
past three years alone. By contrast, the government-owned oil
giant has seen its output systematically decline. Venezuela today
produces about a million fewer barrels of oil than it did in
the early years of this decade. In Mexico, where oil is also
in government hands, the Cantarell project, representing almost
two thirds of national production, will lose half its output
in the next couple of years because of undercapitalization.
Does it really matter that the American and European intelligentsia
quench their thirst for the exotic by promoting Latin American
Idiots? The unequivocal answer is yes. A cultural struggle is
under way in Latin America—between those who want to place
the region in the global firmament and see it emerge as a major
contributor to the Western culture to which its destiny has been
attached for five centuries, and those who cannot reconcile themselves
to the idea and resist it. Despite some progress in recent years,
this tension is holding back Latin America’s development
in comparison to other regions of the world—such as East
Asia, the Iberian Peninsula, or Central Europe—that not
long ago were examples of backwardness. Latin America’s
annual GDP growth has averaged 2.8 percent in the past three
decades—against Southeast Asia’s 5.5 percent, or
the world average of 3.6 percent.
This sluggish performance explains why about 45 percent of the
population is still poor and why, after a quarter century of
democratic rule, regional surveys betray a profound dissatisfaction
with democratic institutions and traditional parties. Until the
Latin American Idiot is confined to the archives—something
that will be difficult to achieve while so many condescending
spirits in the developed world continue to lend him support—that
will not change.
If you win a
Nobel, you get a free trip to Scandinavia, a shiny gold medal,
some cash, and, most important, a shot at intellectual
immortality. But becoming a laureate doesn’t make you immune
to stupidity, especially when it comes to Latin America.
Harold Pinter, Nobel Prize in Literature, 2005
Ignoble Quote: “The United States finally brought down
the Sandinista government … The casinos moved back into
the country. Free health and free education were over. Big business
returned with a vengeance.” —Nobel Prize acceptance
speech, Stockholm, Dec. 7, 2005
Reality Check: Harold, hate to break it to you, but it was actually
the Nicaraguan voters—not the United States government—who
kicked the Sandinistas out.
Joseph Stiglitz, Nobel Prize in Economics, 2001
Ignoble Quote: “Chile has had impressive success over
the past 15 years. . . . [It] imposed capital controls. It only
privatized part of its copper mines, and the privatized mines
arguably did not perform better than the nationalized ones, though
the profits were sent abroad, while the profits of the nationalized
mines could be used in the nation’s efforts to develop.”
— International Herald Tribune, Feb. 14, 2007
Reality Check:
If the policies Stiglitz cites—capital
controls, nationalized mines, and government intervention in
allocating the profits generated by commodity exports—explain
Chile’s success, why isn’t any other Latin American
country with the same policies nearly as successful?
Günter
Grass, Nobel Prize in Literature, 1999
Ignoble Quote: “Cubans were less likely to notice the
absence of liberal rights . . . [because they gained] . . . self
respect after the revolution.”— Dissent, Fall 1993
Reality Check:
How would you feel, Günter, about trading
your bourgeois liberal rights, including the right to publish,
for a bit of Cuban dignity?
Rigoberta
Menchú, Nobel Peace Prize, 1992
Ignoble Quote: “For common people such as myself, there
is no difference between testimony, biography, and autobiography
. . . I was a survivor . . . who had to convince the world to
look at the atrocities committed in my homeland.”— Press
conference, United Nations, Feb. 11, 1999
Reality Check:
Menchú was defending herself against charges
that she had fabricated parts of her autobiography—making
herself sound more downtrodden than she was—when she wrote
about her life as an ethnic Quiche Maya in Guatemala. Why lie
when there are plenty of harsh-but-true stories to be told? — AVL
Read
more:
In Guide to the Perfect Latin American Idiot (Lanham: Madison
Books, 2000), Plinio Apuleyo Mendoza, Carlos Alberto Montaner,
and Alvaro Vargas Llosa describe the original misguided populists
of Latin America. Vargas Llosa is also the author of Liberty
for Latin America: How to Undo Five Hundred Years of State
Oppression (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2005).
The seminal text on how intellectuals in Europe and the United
States view Latin America is Carlos Rangel’s The Latin
Americans: Their Love-Hate Relationship with the United States
(New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1977). Economist Javier
Santiso argues that pragmatism outweighs ideology in the region
today in his book Latin America’s Political Economy of
the Possible: Beyond Good Revolutionaries and Free-Marketeers
(Cambridge: The MIT Press, 2006).
FOREIGN POLICY’s recent coverage of Latin America includes
a debate between Ignacio Ramonet and Carlos Alberto Montaner
in “Was Fidel Good for Cuba?” (January/February 2007)
and “Hugo Boss” (January/February 2006), by Javier
Corrales, who takes a look at how Venezuela’s Hugo Chávez
amassed power under the guise of democracy.
Alvaro
Vargas Llosa is director of the Center on Global
Prosperity at the Independent Institute.
Petroleumworld not necessarily share these views.
Editor's
Note: This article was first published by Foreign Policy Magazine,
May/June 2007. Petroleumworld reprint this article in the
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