114 lines
5.9 KiB
Plaintext
114 lines
5.9 KiB
Plaintext
Chile, capitalism and liberty for the rich
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by Iain MacSaorsa
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* Doesn't Chile prove that the free market benefits everyone?
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This is a common Libertarian argument. Milton Friedman stated that
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Pinochet "has supported a fully free-market economy as a matter of
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principle. Chile is an economic miracle" [Newsweek, Jan, 1982].
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We will ignore the obvious contradiction, ie why it always takes
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authoritarian/fascistic states to introduce "economic liberty",
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and concentrate on the economics facts of the free market capitalism
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imposed on the Chilean people.
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Working on the believe in the efficiency and fairness of the free
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market, Pinochet desired to put the laws of supply and demand back
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to work, and set out to reduce the role of the state and also cut back
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inflation. He, and "the Chicago Boys" - a group of free market economists-
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thought what had restricted Chile's growth was government intervention
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in the economy -- which reduced competition, artificially increased
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wages, and led to inflation. The ultimation goal, Pinochet once said,
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was to make Chile `a nation of entrepreneurs'.
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The actual results were far less than the "miracle" claimed by Friedman
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and a host of other "Libertarians". In per capita terms, the GDP only
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increased by 1.5% per year between 1974-80. This was considerable less
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than the 2.3% achieved in the 1960's. The average growth in GDP was
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1.5% per year, which was lower than the average Latin American growth
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rate of 4.3% and lower than the 4.5% of Chile in the 1960's. Between
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1970 and 1980, per capita GDP grew by only 8%, while for Latin America,
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it increased by 40%. [Not so Free to Choose, Elton Rayack] By the end
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of 1986 Gross Domestic Product per capita barely equaled that of 1970.
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[The Pinochet Regime (pages 137-138, "Modern Latin America",
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Second Edition, by Thomas Skidmore and Peter Smith,
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Oxford University Press, 1989)]
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The Pinochet regime *did* reduce inflation, from around 500% at the
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time of the coup, to 10% by 1982. From 1983 to 87, it fluctuated
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between 20 and 31%. The advent of the "free market" lead to
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reduced barriers to imports "on the ground the quotas and tariffs
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protected inefficient industries and kept prices artificially high.
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The result was that many local firms lost out to multinational
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corporations. The Chilean business community, which strongly
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supported the coup in 1973, was badly affected."
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[The Pinochet Regime, op. cit.]
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Which was part of the reasonm why Pinochet had to go. However, by
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far the hardest group hit was the working class, particularly the
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urban working class. By 1976, the third year of Junta rule, real
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wages had fallen to 35% below their 1970 level. It was only by
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1981 that they has risen to 97.3% of the 1970 level, only to
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fall again to 86.7% by 1983. Unemployment, excluding those on
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state make-work programmes, was 14.8% in 1976, falling to 11.8%
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by 1980 (this is still double the average 1960's level) only
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to rise to 20.3% by 1982. [Rayack, op cit]. Unemployment (including
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those on government make-work programs) had risen to a third of the
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labor force by mid-1983. By 1986, per capita consumption was
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actually 11% lower than the 1970 level. [The Pinochet regime, op. cit.]
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The decline of domestic industry had cost thousands of better paying
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jobs. The ready police repression made strikes both impractical and
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dangerous.
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One consequence of these neoliberal monetarist policies "was a
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contraction of demand, since workers and their families could afford
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to purchase fewer goods. The reduction in the market further threatened
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the business community, which started producing more goods for export
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and less for local consumption. This posed yet another obstacle to
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economic growth and led to increased concentration of income and
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wealth in the hands of a small elite." [The Pinochet regime, op. cit.]
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The number of poor under Allende was million, by 1992, it was
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seven million.
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For all but the small elite at the top, the Pinochet regime of
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"economic liberty" was a nightmare. Economic "liberty" only
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seemed to benefit one group in society, an obvious "miracle".
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The ironic thing is that many "libertarians" point to it as
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an example of the benefits of the free market.
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* But didn't Pinochet's Chile prove that "economic freedom is an
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indispensable means toward the achievement of political freedom"?
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Pincohet did introduce free market capitalism, but this is only
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real liberty for the rich. For the working class, "economic liberty"
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did not exist as they did not manage their own work nor control
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their workplaces and lived under a fascist state.
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As far as political liberty goes, it was only re-introduced once
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it was certain that it was not usable by ordinary people. As
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Cathy Scheider notes, "economic liberty" resulted in most
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Chileans having "little contact with other workers or with their
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neighbours, and only limited time with their family. Their
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exposure to political or labour organisations is minimal... they
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lack either political the resources or the disposition to confront
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the state. The fragmentation of opposition communities has
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accomplished what brute military repression could not. It has
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transformed Chile, both culturally and politically, from a
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country of active participatory grassroots communities, to a
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land of disconnected, apolitical individuals. The cumulative
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impact of this change is usch that we are unlikely to see any
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concerted challenge to the current idealogy in the near future".
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[Report on the Americas (NACLA) XXVI, 4/4/93]
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In such circumstances, political liberty can be re-introduced
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as on one is in a position to effectively use it. In addition,
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the fact that challenging the state in the past resulted in
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a fascist dictatorship which murdered 30 000 people as well as
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repeated and persistent violations of human rights by the juta,
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would also have a strong negative impact for people using political
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liberty to actually *change* the status quo in ways that the
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military and economic elites did not approve of.
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