The old adage that "When America gets a cold, Latin America catches pneumonia" has been widely cited. However, there is good reason to believe that South America, in
particular, can weather this storm with minimal damage if it adopts the
right macro-economic policies.
The uniformity of the collapse of Latin American
economies raises important questions about the changes and claims of
independence, decoupling and post-liberal models, which many regime leaders,
ideologues and progressive US-European Latin American writers made over the
past several years.
Final Declaration of "The International Conference on Political Economy: Responses from the
South to the World Economic Crisis," which took place in Caracas, Venezuela
from October 8-11, 2008, and was attended by academics and researchers
from 18 countries around the world.
Regardless of the impact of the existing economic meltdown, the
Venezuelan government has taken important economic decisions, even
before the crisis was even known, that now benefits and secures its
economy against the financial crisis.
It is not that pure capitalist politicians are all against the state
intervention in the economy, they just want that the money go straight
into very rich people, this time for the amount of $700 billion dollars. On the other hand, socialist state intervention prioritizes the most basic needs of people.
Central America, Cuba,
the Dominican Republic and islands in the eastern Caribbean are
receiving more and more oil from Venezuela, while major refineries are
planned in South America -- at Pernambuco in northeastern Brazil, and
at El Aromo, on Ecuador's Pacific coast.
September 1st 2008, by Federico Fuentes - Green Left Weekly
On August 27, Venezuelan President Hugo
Chavez announced the end of negotiations with former owners Ternium
over the nationalisation of the Sidor steel factory, stating that the
government would “take over all the companies that it has here”,
insisting Ternium “can leave”.
The attempt of the Venezuelan government to regain control over the
resources of the country is entirely justified. Yet it has been met by
howls of protests from the multinationals. How can these gentlemen speak of the so-called efficiency of the private bankers?
On June 11, President Chavez, accompanied by several of his principal
ministers, met with the 500 most important
employers in Venezuela. He called
there for "national unity". The socialist journal Marea Socialista asked Stalin
Perez Borges to evaluate this meeting in the present Venezuelan context.