O que é este blog?

Este blog trata basicamente de ideias, se possível inteligentes, para pessoas inteligentes. Ele também se ocupa de ideias aplicadas à política, em especial à política econômica. Ele constitui uma tentativa de manter um pensamento crítico e independente sobre livros, sobre questões culturais em geral, focando numa discussão bem informada sobre temas de relações internacionais e de política externa do Brasil. Para meus livros e ensaios ver o website: www.pralmeida.org. Para a maior parte de meus textos, ver minha página na plataforma Academia.edu, link: https://itamaraty.academia.edu/PauloRobertodeAlmeida.

Mostrando postagens com marcador Mexico. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador Mexico. Mostrar todas as postagens

terça-feira, 4 de dezembro de 2018

Can Mexico Be Saved? - Denise Dresser (Economist)

Can Mexico Be Saved?
The Peril and Promise of López Obrador
ByDenise Dresser
The Economist, December 3, 2018

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
DENISE DRESSER is Professor of Political Science at the Autonomous Technological Institute of Mexico.
Read more by Denise Dresser @DeniseDresserG

In 2012, Mexico’s future looked promising. The election of a dashing young president, Enrique Peña Nieto, imbued the country with a new sense of energy and purpose. Back in power after a 12-year hiatus, the Institutional Revolutionary Party, or PRI, had promised to reinvent itself and shun the corrupt authoritarianism it had practiced during the seven decades it ruled Mexico. As the country seemed to reach a consensus on long-delayed structural reforms, the international press heralded “the Mexican moment.”According to the cover of Timemagazine, Peña Nieto was “saving Mexico” by opening up the energy sector to foreign investment, combating monopolies, changing archaic labor laws, and leaving nationalism and crony capitalism in the past.
Just six years later, however, a historic electionswept the PRI from power and delivered a landslide victory to its nemesis, the antiestablishment leader Andrés Manuel López Obrador, and his party, the National Regeneration Movement (MORENA). The election was a sharp rebuketo Peña Nieto, his agenda, and the political and economic system that has been in place since the country transitioned to democracy in 2000. Despite the early promise of Peña Nieto’s modernizing reforms, by 2018, eight in ten voters disapproved of the PRI. The election catalyzed popular anger over frustrated economic expectations, rampant corruption, and a homicide ratethat has made Mexico one of the most violent countries in the Western Hemisphere.
But the vote was about more than merely punishing the PRI for its failings. López Obrador won because he was perceived as an authentic opposition leader: an insurgent politician who for years—including during two previous runs for the presidency—had railed against rapacious elites and a democratic transition gone awry. This time, however, his message in defense of “the people” resonated with wider segments of the Mexican electorate because the ills he diagnosed had become increasingly evident during the Peña Nieto administration.
López Obrador’s promise to shake up the status quo appealed to a restive populationeager for regime change. What it will mean in practice, however, remains unclear. So far, the president-elect’s policy positions have been vague, and his team is unknown and untested. Addressing Mexico’s toxic mix of truncated democracyand crony capitalism will require substantive reform. Many citizens hope that López Obrador will make Mexico’s government and economy genuinely inclusive. Others fear that he will push the country backward by resurrecting dominant-party rule, increasing presidential power, and stoking nationalism. A polarized Mexico is now caught between two forces: anger at those who have governed so badly and fear of those who have just been elected.

UNFULFILLED PROMISES
For decades, Mexico has been plagued by the same set of problems. From 1929 to 2000, single-party rule normalized corruption and stunted the development of Mexican institutions. Even now, the country’s economy produces profound inequality, with wealth concentrated in the hands of a few elites. Power operates through patronage and bribery. There are no adequate checks and balances to hold leaders to account. At the same time, the proliferation of drug-related crime has made violence routine.
Throughout the 1990s, political elites and party leaders focused on changing the rules of electoral competition in Mexico. These efforts culminated in Vicente Fox’s victory in the country’s 2000 presidential election. Fox, a member of the National Action Party (PAN), was the first opposition candidate to defeat the PRI. His victory ended single-party rule and marked the country’s official transition to electoral democracy.
Many believed that the PRI’s defeat would transform the prevailing political and economic system, but that did not prove to be the case. The vices associated with authoritarian rule persisted, including corruption and a lack of transparency and accountability. After Fox’s victory, the Mexican political system became a strange hybrid of authoritarianism and democracy: a system that promoted power sharing among party leaders but did little to guarantee the representation of ordinary citizens.
From 2000 to 2012, the PAN’s approach to governing closely resembled that of the party it had replaced. Patronage, vote buying, and corruption continued. As a result, citizens began to lose faith in the system altogether. According to a government survey from 2011, only four percent of the population had a favorable impression of political parties, and only ten percent believed that legislators governed on behalf of their constituents.
The democratic transition also failed to improve the country’s security situation—in fact, before long it got worse. In 2006, President Felipe Calderón launched a “war on drugs,” deploying the Mexican military to fight powerful drug cartels and end drug-related violence. Instead of solving these problems, the policy, which is still in place, has turned Mexico into a country of graveyards, where mothers sift through dirt to find the remains of their children. In states where the military has conducted operations, the violence has actually increased, as cartels fight both government forces and one another over territory and move on to other illicit activities, such as extortion and kidnapping. Where the armed forces have replaced civilian police officers, ordinary crime has skyrocketed. The army is not trained to carry out police duties, and its incursions to fight the cartels have often produced an escalation in human rights violations.
In the last decade, Mexico has seen over 250,000 homicides and over 34,000 disappearances. More than 140 mayors and candidates for office have been assassinated. And whole swaths of the country, including parts of the states of Guerrero, Michoacán, Morelos, and Tamaulipas, are now controlled by organized crime. Meanwhile, corruption and incompetence in the police forces, the courts, and the military have continued unabated.

PENASTROIKA AND ITS DISCONTENTS
The deteriorating security situation and the PAN’s failure to turn Mexico into a functioning democracy opened the door for a PRI comeback. Peña Nieto promised to help his struggling country join the ranks of the developed world. Immediately after assuming office in 2012, he forged the Pact for Mexico, a legislative accord among the country’s main political parties that approved structural reforms on issues such as energy, labor, tax policy, telecommunications, and education.
The pact was initially celebrated as a political achievement. But although many of the reforms looked good on paper, their design and execution were deeply flawed. Peña Nieto’s proposals conflicted with the vested interests of the same powers that had enabled his ascent to the presidency: the gerontocracy that controlled the labor unions, the monopolists that dominated the Mexican economy, the government-controlled media, and the powerful television duopoly that carefully manufactured his image. These forces were willing to support a light version of the proposed reforms, but they opposed more substantive changes that threatened to undercut their power. As a result, when the reforms reached Congress, where secondary legislation was designed to put them into effect, a legislative branch captured by special interests introduced new rules that diluted the possibility of a deeper impact. Peña Nieto’s cronies defended their privileged positions with the tacit consent of a government that seemed more interested in marketing the approval of the reforms than in making them succeed.
Although not all the reforms failed—energy reform, for example, spurred foreign investment, and telecommunications reform lowered cell phone rates for consumers—their modest achievements pale in comparison to what was promised. Peña Nieto assured Mexicans that he would raise economic growth to six percent per year. Instead, growth has averaged only 1.3 percent per year. Meanwhile, inequality and wealth concentration are on the rise. According to the economist Gerardo Esquivel, ten percent of the Mexican population now controls more than 64 percent of the country’s wealth. In 2002, the fortunes of Mexico’s top 16 multimillionaires represented two percent of GDP; by 2014, that share had risen to nine percent. And the four richest people in Mexico all made their fortunes in sectors regulated or controlled by the government. Mexico now occupies seventh place in The Economist’s index of crony capitalist countries, behind Russia, Malaysia, Ukraine, Singapore, Hong Kong, and the Philippines.
Mexican society is shaped like a pyramid: at the top are a handful of rent seekers, who manipulate the system to increase their personal wealth rather than invest in the economy or support innovation. At the base, meanwhile, are the 52 million Mexicans who live below the poverty line—21 million of whom survive on less than $2 a day. According to a 2015 Oxfam report, only one in five Mexicans can be considered not poor or vulnerable to poverty. Successive reformist governments have failed to address the persistence of manipulated, highly concentrated markets. Growth is not possible when the state cannot ensure equality, regulate monopolies, or guarantee the transparency of economic transactions. Under Peña Nieto and his predecessors, pervasive cronyism crippled reformist efforts. Even good intentions delivered bad results.

IT'S THE CORRUPTION, STUPID
In Mexico, paradoxically, more democracy has meant more corruption. The democratic transition did not stop the transfer of public wealth into private pockets; instead, it exacerbated and normalized that historical practice. Although democratic theory suggests that pluralism and political competition help combat corruption, Mexico demonstrates that in the absence of the rule of law, they actually incite further rapacity.
In Mexico’s fledgling democracy, corruption has spread from the executive branch to the legislature, the judiciary, state and local governments, and even the media. As the legislative branch has gained more power over how money is spent, illegal appropriations for political use have multiplied. Decentralizing the federal budget to the states has opened up new opportunities for local leaders to do business with public funds. Instead of providing checks and balances against corruption, the federal and local legislatures have been the beneficiaries of government largess. The same is true of the 32 governors who receive large amounts of federal funds, which they use at their own discretion.
According to the nongovernmental organization México ¿Cómo Vamos? (Mexico, How Are We Doing?), corruption eats up nine percent of Mexico’s GDP. It deters foreign investment, hampers economic growth, and limits the benefits of the North American Free Trade Agreement. The World Economic Forum says that corruption is the main factor that makes it hard to do business in Mexico.
During the Peña Nieto administration, however, corruption, which had long been considered normal, was increasingly denounced as it became more public and less constrained. According to the nongovernmental organization Mexicanos Contra la Corrupción y la Impunidad (Mexicans Against Corruption and Impunity), corruption has reached alarming levels in the last six years. Mexico is currently ranked 135 out of 180 countries on Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index; 90 percent of Mexican citizens believe that corruption is one of the country’s primary problems. This concern is not unwarranted. During the Peña Nieto administration, the governor of Veracruz, Javier Duarte, allegedly embezzled millions of dollars of public funds, and more than a dozen other governors and former governors, many of whom Peña Nieto praised as examples of the new PRI, are now under investigation or hiding from the authorities. The president’s own family has been implicated: in 2014, the so-called Casa Blanca scandal revealed that the president’s wife had purchased a $7 million house from a favored government contractor.
Under Peña Nieto and his predecessors, pervasive cronyism crippled reformist efforts.
Peña Nieto attempted to avoid responsibility for these scandals by arguing that corruption was a cultural issue. Instead of reforming bad rules or designing better laws, he blamed amoral citizens. But corruption is the product of incentives, not habits; it’s about what authorities sanction, not what society condones. And under Peña Nieto, Mexican authorities were willing to tolerate a staggering level of official wrongdoing. Consider, for example, the massive scandal involving the Brazilian construction company Odebrecht, which has admitted paying more than $800 million in bribes to government officials in various countries. The case has shaken up politics throughout the region, bringing down presidents and prominent members of the political elite. But in Mexico, not a single politician or contractor has been indicted, owing to pressure on law enforcement authorities from high-level officials who fear that a real investigation would be damaging to the PRI. What the Mexican media have dubbed “a pact of impunity” protects the political class regardless of party or ideology, undermining public trust in government institutions.
The starkest example of official impunity is the case of the 43 studentsfrom Ayotzinapa Rural Teachers’ College who disappeared in 2014 and whose fate remains unknown. After massive protests erupted over the incident, Peña Nieto’s government brought in a panel of independent international experts to review the case. But when the experts began to cast doubt on the government’s handling of the investigation, authorities made it impossible for them to carry out their work and ultimately forced them out of the country.

ENTER AMLO
During the 2018 election, López Obrador became the candidate of choice for the majority of voters, who were frustrated with the current state of affairs. Decades of corruption and the failures of the Peña Nieto government allowed López Obrador to cast himself as the redeemer of a fundamentally flawed system.
The election results were a crushing defeat for the PRI, which did not win a single governorship out of the nine in contention or any of the 300 federal electoral districts. The party even lost in Atlacomulco, Peña Nieto’s hometown. The PRI will become the fifth-largest party in Congress after being dominant for 89 years.
For López Obrador, the results were a triumph. MORENA earned 53 percent of the vote, versus the PRI’s 16 percent, and it received 30 million votes, significantly more than the 15 million that Fox obtained in 2000. López Obrador’s party and its coalition allies will have an absolute majority in Congress, with over 300 seats out of 500, and a majority in the Senate. After 24 years of divided rule, López Obrador will enjoy a unified government, which will have the capacity to pass laws and approve the budget with little opposition.
López Obrador’s victory can be explained by both what happened during the race and what failed to happen over the last 30 years. There is no question that his opponents ran disastrous campaigns. Ricardo Anaya, the candidate of a center-right–center-left alliance that had been forged among the PAN, the Party of the Democratic Revolution, and the Citizens’ Movement, was viewed as smart but robotic—someone who connected more easily with Silicon Valley executives than with his disgruntled fellow citizens. And he was never credible as a transformative opposition leader, given the 12 years of PAN rule that came before. Meanwhile, the PRI candidate, José Antonio Meade, bore the brunt of Peña Nieto’s unpopularity and the tarnished PRI brand.
López Obrador, on the other hand, assembled a team of moderates who tempered his strident tendencies and explained his policies in a way that made them seem more acceptable and less radical. MORENA transitioned from purism to pragmatism and created a broad, multiclass, and ideologically vague coalition that was capable of drawing in both conservative evangelicals and progressive civic activists. U.S. President Donald Trump’s demonization of Mexico also helped López Obrador, whose brand of nationalism resonated among those who felt offended by Trump’s tirades and Peña Nieto’s mild response to them. López Obrador also won support by defending the oil industry in the face of energy reforms that many viewed as benefiting only foreign investors and their domestic allies.
But something more profound lies at the root of this political reconfiguration. López Obrador’s message and personality have been the same since he became an opposition leader in 2006. But what seemed radical in 2006 feels necessary in 2018. What once provoked fear now engenders hope. The majority of the electorate supported López Obrador because his bleak diagnosis corresponded with the violence, corruption, and insecurity that ordinary Mexicans experience every day.
Members of Mexico’s traditional ruling class did not understand that lambasting López Obrador as a populist would not prevent him from reaching the presidency; they should have instead addressed the grievances he exploited. But they did little to make the economic system more inclusive or the political system more representative. López Obrador’s ascent is the predictable consequence of failed modernization. Greedy, antidemocratic elites should have seen it coming.

THE ROAD AHEAD
Despite his landslide victory, López Obrador remains a polarizing figure. His critics view him as a divider and a class warrior; his supporters cherish him as an unwavering champion of democracy and social justice. For some, he is a wolf in sheep’s clothing; for others, he represents a radical and long-desired break with the old regime.
López Obrador’s victory will almost certainly alter the party system and the existing economic model. But the specific nature of that change is difficult to predict. When it comes to policy, López Obrador has been erratic and often contradictory. As mayor of Mexico City from 2000 to 2006, he was a pragmatic leader, and his team today mostly consists of moderates. Now, however, there will be pressure from his base to disavow many of the reforms implemented during the Peña Nieto administration. López Obrador has said that he will support the North American Free Trade agreement, but he has also hinted that protectionist measures might be necessary to invigorate the domestic market and promote food security. Ultimately, he is a social leader drawn to grand narratives, not to the specifics of public policy. It will be up to his inexperienced cabinet to maintain the delicate balance between the changes that Mexicans demand and the macroeconomic stability that investors expect.
In his victory speech, López Obrador espoused the language of reconciliation, declaring that he would seek a peaceful and orderly transition and that he would not “govern arbitrarily.” But there is no question that he will have a great deal of discretionary power. Along with the smaller parties in his electoral coalition, he may even have enough votes to modify the constitution.
Although the PRI and the PAN retained a small presence in the legislature and still control a number of governorships, the opposition has been decimated, and it could become even smaller as members flee to join MORENA. López Obrador’s party is on its way to becoming a new version of the old PRI: a hegemonic party that crowds out competition by uniting disparate political factions under a pragmatic umbrella. Patronage and corruption held the PRI together, and MORENA has not signaled that it will break with those practices; in fact, it is well positioned to emulate and embrace them. López Obrador has not broken ties with union leaders associated with government graft or acted against members of his own party accused of using public funds for personal gain.
For those worried about Mexico’s dysfunctional democracy, there are some troubling signs. López Obrador has promised to return power to the people by submitting key policy issues to public referendums. This practice could push the country toward majoritarian extremism, in which democracy is seen as a constant confrontation between the popular will and those who oppose it, rather than as an inclusive system of negotiation and compromise. During the campaign, López Obrador portrayed institutions such as the Supreme Court and the National Institute for Transparency, Access to Information, and Personal Data Protection as obstacles, vilified the media outlets that criticized him, and suggested that his personal moral rectitude meant that he should be granted broader discretionary powers than his predecessors.
But much of what he has promised, including an end to corruption and violence, will require significant modifications to Mexico’s institutions, which were created in an era of single-party rule. Unless the government promotes an agenda focused on transparency, accountability, institutional remodeling, and the protection of individual rights, Mexico will simply replace one unaccountable party with another. Some of López Obrador’s critics have warned that he might turn Mexico into another Venezuela, where the authoritarian leader Nicolás Madurohas dismantled democratic institutions and bankrupted the state, pushing society to the brink of collapse. The real risk for Mexico, however, is not that it will become another Venezuela; it is that it will simply remain the same old Mexico.
To prevent this outcome, López Obrador would be well advised to take a new approach when he assumes office on December 1. The centerpiece of this agenda should be the establishment of an autonomous attorney general’s office with the authority to investigate and prosecute corruption at the highest levels. In addition, he should push for the passage of legislation, currently stalled in Congress, that would make the national anticorruption system fully functional. He will also need to name an anticorruption czar and guarantee that the position has teeth. Finally, López Obrador should rethink the war on drugsby gradually returning the military to the barracks and, at a minimum, legalizing marijuana for medicinal and recreation.
Mexico will experience truly transformative change only if its new leaders focus on strengthening the rule of law. The biggest mistake López Obrador can make would be to delegitimize democracy by relying on referendums and centralizing power in his own office. Much of the positive change that Mexico has experienced since 2000 was the result of pressure from below, fomented by an increasingly vibrant and demanding civil society. The country’s future does not depend on one man or one movement. Mexico needs a broad, pro-democracy coalition that addresses the root cause of its polarized politics: the absence of institutions that are capable of providing transparency, accountability, and systemic checks and balances. The Mexican people need to put pressure on López Obrador to make good on his bold promises. The Mexican novelist Juan Rulfo once wrote, “It had been so long since I lifted my face that I forgot about the sky.” If Mexicans do not look upward and demand more, those who govern won’t do so, either.

quinta-feira, 27 de fevereiro de 2014

Traficantes "Robin Hood"?: a inversao de valores em certos paises...

Não há, repito: NÃO HÁ, nenhuma diferença, de qualidade, entre esse traficante mexicano e certos quadrilheiros de alto coturno, mafiosos, sendo saudados como "heróis do povo" em outro país da região.
Paulo Roberto de Almeida 

Centenas de pessoas exigem libertação de “El Chapo” Guzmán no México

Culiacán (México), 27 fev (EFE).- Centenas de pessoas marcharam nesta quarta-feira nas cidades de Culiacán e Guamúchil, no estado de Sinaloa, noroeste do México, para pedir a libertação do traficante de drogas Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán, detido por militares no sábado passado em Mazatlán.
Vestidos de branco, os manifestantes, a maioria jovens, percorreram as ruas de Culiacán, a capital do estado, acompanhados por bandas de música que interpretavam temas dedicados ao líder do Cartel de Sinaloa e mostrando cartazes pedindo sua liberdade, um julgamento justo e sua não extradição. As mobilizações foram convocadas através das redes sociais e por folhetos anônimos para pedir a libertação de “El Chapo”, e pedia que os participantes usassem roupas brancas. EFE

terça-feira, 11 de fevereiro de 2014

Alianca do Pacifico avanca agressivamente para o livre comercio; enquanto outros...

Parece que as comparações são inevitáveis, com certos "foot-draggers" (ou seja, os indecisos) do outro lado do continente.
Os desafios existem, inclusive o de aprofundar o déficit comercial, temporariamente, como preço a pagar pelo aumento geral dos fluxos comerciais. Mais adiante os desequilíbrios são corrigidos, via câmbio ou investimentos diretos, e o país fica melhor.
Só não acham os protecionistas renitentes...
Paulo Roberto de Almeida

Pacific Alliance: moving forward

Peru's Ollanta Humala, Chile's Sebastián Piñera, Colombia's Juan Manuel Santos, Mexico's Enrique Peña Nieto and Costa Rica's Laura Chinchilla in Cartagena, Colombia
Peru's Ollanta Humala, Chile's Sebastián Piñera, Colombia's Juan Manuel Santos, Mexico's Enrique Peña Nieto and Costa Rica's Laura Chinchilla in Cartagena, Colombia
It’s all about free trade. The Pacific Alliance, a growing bloc in Latin America that stands among the world’s 10 largest economies, sealed a deal on Monday to eliminate tariffs on 92 per cent of goods and services in a move that distances it further from some of its more protectionist neighbours.
“I don’t think there has been an integration process that has taken decisions so fast as the Pacific Alliance has done,” Colombia’s President, Juan Manuel Santos, told beyondbrics.
Formed in June 2012 and cemented in May last year, the tie-up links the free-trading economies of Chile, Colombia, Mexico and Peru, and is moving quickly to fulfil the goal of unrestricted movement of capital, goods and services, as well as people.
Santos, Ollanta Humala of Peru, Enrique Peña Nieto of Mexico, and outgoing Sebastián Piñera of Chile shook hands at a presidential summit in Colombia’s colonial city of Cartagena, also agreeing that the remaining tariffs for agricultural goods will be eliminated gradually over the coming years.
The total output for the four members accounts for more than a third of Latin America’s total gross domestic product. According to the latest available data, in 2o12 the bloc attracted some 41 per cent of all foreign direct investment inflows. Exports were $550bn and imports $561bn in the same year.
Even if trade between the nations has been flowing thanks to bilateral agreements that were in place before the Pacific rim union was established, the alliance also opens the door for member countries to export to markets where some of them had limited or no access, strengthening their value chains to be more competitive in the global supply chain, with a particular focus on Asia.
Santos added:
“We have a common vision on how to manage our economies, common attitudes regarding foreign investment, the role of the market in the economy, respect for private property.”
“Because we have common denominators, we would be able to play with more specific weight on the global economy.”
Other regional economies such as Brazil, Argentina and Venezuela – which are part of another regional bloc called Mercosur – are more inward-looking when it comes to trade and capital flows, and have been struggling with slippery economic growth.
Notwithstanding, late last week, Brazil’s foreign minister, Luiz Alberto Figuereido ,said Mercosur was interested in trade integration with members of the Pacific bloc.
The Pacific Alliance is set to expand in coming months with the entrance of Costa Rica as a full member. Panama and then Guatemala are likely to follow suit. Several other countries inside and outside the region act as observers – including the US, the UK and China.
In addition to removing trade barriers, member countries have opened joint trade offices and diplomatic missions around the world in places such as Ghana, Azerbaijan and Vietnam.
Sceptics say that, for the moment, the Pacific club is not much more than a very successful marketing strategy that highlights how the member countries are open for business. Eduardo Ferreyros, Peru’s former foreign trade minister, shrugs off the argument, saying “what’s been agreed today demonstrates there are concrete results, there is dynamism.”

terça-feira, 31 de dezembro de 2013

Nafta, 20 anos depois: nem sucesso, nem fracasso - BusinessWeek

Nafta 20 Years After: Neither Miracle nor Disaster


Cargo trucks entering the United States from Mexico in 2011
Photograph by David Maung/Bloomberg
Cargo trucks entering the United States from Mexico in 2011
Bill Clinton made the North American Free Trade Agreement a cornerstone of his 1992 presidential campaign, saying it would help level the playing field for U.S. businesses trying to sell their products abroad. Candidate Ross Perot predicted Nafta would result in “a giant sucking sound going south”—the sound of American manufacturing jobs and factories being funneled into Mexico.
Nafta went into effect on Jan. 1, 1994, which now gives us 20 years’ worth of data on economic growth, trade volume, and employment to figure out who was right. The bottom line? Nafta has been neither as good as Clinton promised nor as bad as Perot warned.

Let’s start with the most basic measure of economic growth: gross domestic product. Since 1993, the year before Nafta was enacted, U.S. GDP has grown about 63 percent, while Canadian and Mexican GDP have grown 66 percent and 65 percent, respectively, according to data compiled by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. Those tightly clustered growth rates are significantly better than the industrialized nations of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development as a whole; their composite GDP has grown about 53 percent since Nafta.
Of course, plenty of factors have contributed to North American economic growth, and Nafta’s direct impact on GDP is difficult to measure. However, the Congressional Budget Office estimated (PDF) in 2003 that the impact had probably been positive, if slight, and that it had grown consistently since the agreement was enacted.
Let’s move on to what Nafta was specifically designed to do: encourage trade. In the early ’90s, the Clintonites promised that free trade would create a more favorable environment for the U.S. to sell its goods and services. Since 1993, U.S. exports to Canada and Mexico have climbed 201 percent and 370 percent, respectively.
Exports are only half of the trade equation. Nafta’s supporters said it would also trigger a rise in imports, leading to lower-priced goods and services for consumers and more competitive companies. Since 1993, the value of imports into the U.S. from Canada and Mexico has jumped by 194 percent and 621 percent, respectively.
Protectionists argued that the disparity between imports and exports was cause for concern because it could put pressure on U.S. companies to lower prices in order to compete in an oversaturated market.
The U.S. trade deficit with Mexico has grown dramatically since Nafta—from a trade surplus of $4 billion in 1993 to a deficit of $54 billion in 2012. Yet in most industries, corporate profit margins have risen over that period. Recently, the U.S.’s deficits with Mexico and Canada have contracted as export growth has accelerated.
As with economic growth, it’s difficult to say with certainty how much of the rise in trade between the U.S. and the other nations is directly attributable to Nafta. Trade liberalization among the U.S., Canada, and Mexico was already underway, and economists say the economic cycle plays a significantly larger role in determining trade volume than Nafta does. In its 2003 report, the CBO found Nafta’s effect on trade had been positive and that had grown in each year since the agreement was enacted. The CBO also concluded that Nafta had wielded a larger effect on U.S. exports than imports.
So what about Perot’s big fear, the labor market? Estimates of Nafta’s effect on U.S. payrolls vary wildly and depend on methodology. Here’s an unfavorable statistic: Today, there are 12 million manufacturing jobs in the U.S., down from about 17 million when Nafta was enacted.
Of course, to lay all the blame on Nafta would be to ignore a fundamental shift in the makeup of the global labor force. Relatively lax labor laws and lower wage requirements have moved a significant portion of the world’s factories to China and India since Nafta.
The Economic Policy Institute, a left-leaning think tank based in Washington, estimates that Nafta was responsible for the loss or displacement of more than half a million American jobs, mainly in manufacturing. Some Nafta supporters say certain job losses were inevitable but that the agreement was so broadly stimulative that the net effect on employment was either negligible or positive. (For what it’s worth, total U.S. employment is up about 22 percent since Nafta was enacted.)
What do you think? Was Nafta good or bad for the U.S.? Share your thoughts in the comments below.

terça-feira, 30 de julho de 2013

Nacionalismo petrolifero no Mexico: igual ao Brasil? - Carlos Puig

Provavelmente. Sem querer abusar do velho ditado segundo o qual o nacionalismo (ou o patriotismo, mais exatamente) é o último refúgio dos canalhas, pode-s facilmente encontrar paralelismos entre os nacionalismos petrolíferos do México e do Brasil, ambos emergindo nos anos 1930, com a nacionalização dos recursos minerais e depois com a constituição de empresas estatais, que só serviram de cabide de empregos para políticos e para alimentar a corrupção de todos os envolvidos nesse negócio lucrativo (e privatizado pelos "expertos").
A Pemex necessita de 900 bilhões de dólares para explorar as reservas off shore, assim como a Petrobras precisa de mais ou menos de 600 bilhões para explorar os recursos do pré-sal.
Nenhuma das duas possui todo esse dinheiro, ainda que elas pudessem facilmente se abastecer nos mercados comerciais ou receber investimentos estrangeiros, se fossem abertas e se as políticas governamentais fossem menos estatizantes e monopolizadoras.
A burrice petrolífera é algo muito disseminado na América Latina, infelizmente.
Paulo Roberto de Almeida

A Mexican Slick

A protester held a sign that read Tomas Bravo/ReutersA protester held a sign that read “Defend Pemex, it is not for sale,” during a demonstration against the sale of the oil monopoly in Mexico City.
MEXICO CITY — Andrés Manuel López Obrador, the two-time left-wing presidential candidate, is angry — very angry. “The proposal from PAN’s elites to privatize our oil reaffirms their role as lackeys. Posers. Followers of EPN,” he wrote in a tweet, referring, first, to a rival political party, and, second, to President Enrique Peña Nieto. “Traitors to Mexico.”
He then added, about the national oil company: “If EPN wants to modernize Pemex it would suffice to clean its corruption. But no, the proposed privatization is looting. Thieves!”
The fuss started when Peña Nieto, while in Europe last month, informed several news outlets of his plan to send to Congress a bill that would allow private investment in Mexico’s government-run energy sector. He gave no specifics, but the simple mention of “private investment” was enough to cause a stir and prompt parties on the left to say that they would end all ongoing negotiations to reform the electoral code, tax laws and the education system.
López Obrador, who took second place behind Peña Nieto in last year’s presidential election, has vowed to take to the streets of Mexico City if the government and its allies in Congress approve any changes to Article 27 of the Constitution, which grants the government, among other things, all rights to explore, produce, process and distribute oil.
Lorenzo Meyer, a leading historian and political commentator, speaking on television recently, tried to lend some historical depth to López Obrador’s position with this flourish: “We cannot forget that oil was what coagulated our nationalism.”
It is true that oil talk has been the mother of political debates in Mexico ever since 1938, when President Lázaro Cárdenas expropriated all oil and gas companies and nationalized them to form Pemex — today a 150,000-employee monster that has an absolute monopoly on every aspect of oil exploration, processing and distribution in Mexico and generates 34 percent of the government’s revenues. Official textbooks used in primary schools today paint that move as a sacred moment — a formative episode when a Mexican leader expelled all foreigners seeking to take advantage of our natural resources. Many Mexicans see Pemex itself as a national good and a bulwark against shady outsiders.
But all this nationalism is obscuring the real problem, which is that the United States, the biggest consumer of Mexican oil, is buying less and less from us at a time when Pemex has no money to explore Mexico’s soil where, according to a recent report by the Mexican Institute of Competitiveness, lie enormous untapped reserves.
In recent decades, countries with similar restrictions on foreign investment, like Brazil, have eased those laws to allow private capital into state companies that explore and process energy resources. But not Mexico — at least not yet. The current government is convinced that partial privatization is the way to jumpstart a stagnating economy and address deepening social problems:the number of poor people in Mexico increased from 49 million in 2008 to 53 million in 2012.
And so Manlio Fabio Beltrones, the leader of Peña’s party in Congress, dismissed the naysayers last week: “They talk about Article 27 as if it were the Virgin of Guadalupe — never to be touched.” If Lopez Obrador has his way, and manages to organize the massive protest he has called for on Sept. 9 in the Zócalo, the capital’s main square, the debate could, indeed, take on Biblical proportions.

Carlos Puig is a columnist for the Mexican newspaper Milenio and the anchor of the television show En 15.

quarta-feira, 5 de dezembro de 2012

Carlos Marichal: um grande historiador economico





Carlos Marichal Premio Nacional de Ciencias y Artes 2012 y Premio a la Trayectoria en Investigacón Histórica sobre la Independencia de México Ernesto de la Torre Villar 2012

  28 de noviembre de 2012
Aviso mportante


Con gran orgullo comunicamos a todos los miembros de la AMHE y a las asociaciones hermanas la feliz noticia de que nuestro querido amigo y colega Carlos Marichal ha recibido la distinción más importante que se otorga en nuestro país a quienes realizan actividades artísticas o académicas: el Premio Nacional de Ciencias y Artes 2012.
Se trata de un reconocimiento que honra a la comunidad de historiadores económicos de México y América Latina y que corona una trayectoria de grandes logros y aportaciones. Además de sus propias investigaciones, muchas de ellas convertidas en clásicos dentro de nuestro campo, Marichal ha iniciado decenas de proyectos (porque, como todos sabemos, es un hombre de muchas ideas) y ha promovido innumerables iniciativas, desde el rescate de archivos hasta la construcción de nuestra Asocicación Mexicana de Historia Económica.
El Dr.Carlos Marichal Salinas, fundador, presidente de la AMHE (2000-2004) y actual secretario del Consejo de Honor, ha recibido también en estas fechas el Premio a la Trayectoria en Investigación Histórica sobre la Independencia de México Ernesto de la Torre Villar 2012, otorgado por el Instituto Nacional de Estudios Históricos de las Revoluciones de México.
Estos premios atestiguan la calidad de la producción académica de Carlos y dan merecido reconocimiento a su trayectoria profesional, y nohacen sino consolidar la huella que ha dejado en nuestra disciplina y en nuestra comunidad.
¡Felicidades, Carlos!
ATENTAMENTE
ASOCIACIÓN MEXICANA DE HISTORIA ECONÓMICA


Algunas ligas de interés

Notas periodísticas
- http://www.oem.com.mx/elmexicano/notas/n2778428.htm
- http://www.proceso.com.mx/?p=326278
- http://www.eluniversal.com.mx/cultura/70429.html
- http://www.jornada.unam.mx/ultimas/2012/11/27/1209426-otorgan-premios-nacional-a-investigadores-de-unam-e-ipn

Diversas intervenciones en la ceremonia de entrega del Premio Nacional
de Ciencias y Artes 2012
- http://www.presidencia.gob.mx/2012/11/diversas-intervenciones-en-la-ceremonia-de-entrega-del-premio-nacional-de-ciencias-y-artes-2012/

Video (minuto 13:50)
- http://youtu.be/JnoN1aQXTXQ

Sitio personal de Carlos Marichal
- http://www.colmex.mx/academicos/ceh/carlosmarichal/

Carlos Marichal

Historiador latinoamericanista, es profesor-investigador del Centro de Estudios Históricos de El Colegio de México desde 1989. Doctor en Historia por la Universidad de Harvard, ha sido profesor visitante en numerosas universidades de Europa, Estados Unidos y América Latina. Cofundador y presidente de la Asociación Mexicana de Historia Económica.

Es autor de la Historia de la deuda externa en América Latina (Alianza Editorial, 1989 -edición en inglés de Pinceton University Press-) y de Bankruptcy of Empire: Mexican Silver and the Wars between Spain, Britain and France, 1760-1810 (Cambridge University Press, 2007), premiado por la Economic History Association de los Estados Unidos y por la Asociación Española de Historia Económica. Ha editado una veintena de libros de historia económica.

Su obra más reciente es Nueva Historia de las Grandes Crisis Financieras: Una perspectiva Global, 1873-2008 (Debate/Random Haouse, Madrid-México-Buenos Aires, 2010).

terça-feira, 6 de março de 2012

Cenas de protecionismo ordinario - Marcelo de Paiva Abreu (Estadao)

Protecionismo e uvas verdes



Marcelo de Paiva Abreu*

O Estado de S.Paulo05 de março de 2012
A iniciativa brasileira de rediscutir as bases do acordo automotivo Mercosul-México, vigente desde 2003, suscita avaliar os equivocados rumos da política comercial brasileira e tem impacto importante nas relações diplomáticas entre Brasil e México.
Embora haja espaço para reforma do acordo, o objetivo de equilibrar o comércio é mais um passo atrás na política comercial brasileira. O primeiro ano em que foi registrado déficit bilateral significativo do País com o México no passado recente foi 2011: US$ 1,2 bilhão. Desde 2003 o superávit médio do Brasil com o México foi de US$ 2 bilhões por ano, sem que houvesse iniciativa mexicana para denunciar o acordo. A ideia de que os fluxos de comércio são determinados por vantagens comparativas não tem trânsito fácil em Brasília. A presidente da República estaria contrariada com o atual déficit do Brasil com o México no comércio de veículos. Além disso, haveria insatisfação com a baixa exigência de conteúdo nacional (30%) para caracterizar os veículos mexicanos, ante os 65% estabelecidos pela estapafúrdia legislação brasileira que discrimina as importações na cobrança do Imposto sobre Produtos Industrializados (IPI) sobre veículos.
O Brasil é exportador eficiente de produtos agrícolas e minerais. E será exportador importante de petróleo no futuro. Déficits no comércio de manufaturados não são surpreendentes. O que não se justifica é o uso de um arsenal protecionista "em defesa da indústria nacional" que não está pautado por visão estratégica quanto a custos, prazos de proteção e definição dos setores industriais afetados por falhas de mercado que mereceriam subsídios temporários.
As relações Brasil-México têm sido atribuladas, com fricções frequentes entre seus diplomatas nos foros internacionais. No início dos anos 90 do século passado, a absorção do México no bloco econômico formado por EUA e Canadá tendeu a agravar as dificuldades bilaterais. Ao México, após a negociação do Nafta, era fácil se apresentar como campeão do liberalismo em vista da concentração do seu comércio com os EUA. A ineficiência de sua agricultura, além disso, impedia o endosso da ênfase do Mercosul na liberalização do comércio agrícola mundial. Essas diferenças foram dolorosamente explicitadas em Cancún em 2003. O endosso mexicano à posição das economias desenvolvidas empenhadas na defesa de seu protecionismo agrícola contribuiu para que surgisse, como reação, o G-20 da Organização Mundial do Comércio.
Durante muito tempo, o modelo mexicano foi apresentado, por policy makers e acadêmicos nas economias desenvolvidas, como algo a ser emulado. A crise mexicana de 1994 atenuou tais ilusões, mas as negociações da Alca revigoraram as comparações entre o México liberal e cooperativo e o Brasil protecionista e criador de obstáculos. Isso despertou ressentimentos no Brasil quanto à postura mexicana. E o que se vê hoje são avaliações que certamente exageram no otimismo sobre o Brasil e, talvez, também no pessimismo sobre o México.
Os ressentimentos mexicanos agora são simétricos e exacerbados. Especialmente quanto à participação do Brasil no Brics e à postulação brasileira na reforma do Conselho de Segurança da ONU. Sucessivos artigos de Jorge Castañeda, ex-chanceler mexicano, bem ilustram a intensidade desses ressentimentos. Configurando o que poderia ser qualificada como a estratégia das "uvas verdes", Castañeda, em dificuldades para expor as possíveis excelências mexicanas, se tem dedicado a sublinhar as deficiências das atitudes adotadas pelos Brics e, em especial, pelo Brasil. O raciocínio, diria um cínico, parece ser: se todos são deficientes, o México tem chance de ser proeminente. A vontade de depreciar o Brasil é tão grande (ou será incompetência?) que, em artigo recente, listou o Brasil como tendo se abstido no voto crucial de 1947, na ONU, sobre a partição da Palestina e a criação de Israel. Em contraste com o México, que se absteve, o Brasil votou a favor, em votação presidida por Oswaldo Aranha.
Castañeda precisa entender que o México incorreu em custos políticos significativos ao manter relações tão íntimas com os EUA a partir do início da década de 90. A frustração mexicana com a mediocridade dos benefícios da integração com o Canadá e os EUA, em relação às expectativas, não atenua essa percepção, que enfraquece a posição do México entre os países em desenvolvimento.
Saudades dos tempos em que a remoção de Alfonso Reyes, estimado embaixador do México no Brasil, ensejava famoso rondó de Manuel Bandeira, celebrando o almoço oficial de despedidas no Hipódromo da Gávea: Os cavalinhos correndo / E nós, cavalões, comendo... / Alfonso Reyes partindo / E tanta gente ficando... / Os cavalinhos correndo / E nós, cavalões, comendo... / O Brasil politicando / Nossa! A poesia morrendo... / O sol tão claro lá fora / O sol tão claro, Esmeralda / E em minhalma - anoitecendo!
Mais Reyes, menos Castañeda. A diplomacia dos dois países deve tratar de desarmar os espíritos. O reexame do pacto automotivo Mercosul-México não contribui para desanuviar o ambiente de rivalidade. Mas rivalidade não deve significar necessariamente mala leche.



*Marcelo de Paiva Abreu, doutor em economia pela  Universidade de Cambridge, é professor titular do Departamento de Economia da PUC-Rio.