Title: Central America: Poverty, Violence, and Dependency
1 Central America Poverty, Violence, and
Dependency
-
- Political Science 332
- Maxwell A. Cameron
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3Poverty
4Poverty
- GDP per capita of US nine times that of Central
America - Small minority captures most wealth and income
- Real income of poorer half is between 500 and
1000 per year - 1/20th US average income - yet
prices the same - Source Booth et al. 2006, pp. 16-17.
5Educational Inequality
- Percentage of the population over 25 with no
schooling c. 2000 - Costa Rica 9
- El Salvador 35
- Guatemala 47
- Honduras 26
- Nicaragua 18
6Income Inequality
- Ratio of incomes of wealthiest 10 to poorest 10
of population, c. 2000 - Guatemala 63
- El Salvador 47
- Honduras 49
- Nicaragua 56
- Costa Rica 25
7Human Development
- Human Development Index scores of
- select countries
- Chile 0.844
- Costa Rica 0.801
- Uruguay 0.826
- Peru 0.739
- Guatemala 0.642
8Dependency
- Definition a complex political, economic, and
social phenomenon that retards the human
development of the majority in certain
privilege-dominated Third World countries with
heavily externally oriented economies (Booth et
al 2006, p. 20).
9Dependency Syndrome
- in order for the dependency syndrome --with all
of its negative human consequences--to exist, a
country must have both an externally oriented
economy (specializing in commodity exporting) and
a socially irresponsible political elite (Booth
et al 2006, p. 20).
10Example
- Refusal of wealthy Guatemalans to pay taxes
- Unwillingness of Honduras elites to accept modest
reforms implemented by Manuel Zelaya - Low levels of social spending (except in Costa
Rica)
11US Role in the Dependency Syndrome
- Repeated attempts to thwart socially responsible
reformist governments - Intervention in Nicaragua, establishment of
National Guard - CIA overthrows democratic government in Guatemala
in 1954 - US proxy wars in Nicaragua and El Salvador in
1980s - Honduras 2009 - same old pattern?
12Violence
- 300,000 deaths during internal conflicts
(1960s-1990s) - Peace Accords in Guatemala and El Salvador
- As much violence today in Guatemala, Honduras,
and El Salvador as there was during the internal
conflicts - Today Central America is struggling to come to
terms with political violence that in some cases
had genocidal features even as it faces new forms
of violence
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14Roots of Violence
- Augusto Cesar Sandino in Nicaragua waged
guerrilla campaign against US intervention in
1930s. US backed Anastasio Somoza, whose family
ran Nicaragua until 1979 - Maximiliano Hernandez Martinez in El Salvador
killed between 10,000 and 20,000 people in
response to peasant rebellion, military rule
until 1970s.
15Roots of Violence
- October revolution, 1944 wave of protests leads
dictator Jorge Ubico to resign - Juan Jose Arevalo elected in 1945, succeeded in
1950 by election of Colonel Jacobo Arbenz,
center-left coalition. - CIA deposes Arbenz after he attempts land reform
which brings him into conflict with the United
Fruit Company
16Structural-Historical Roots of Violence
- Waves of expropriation and struggles over land,
often created by opportunities for
commercialization of agro-export business (e.g.
coffee, bananas) - Banana plantations created enclave economies par
excellence (SSG p.95)
17Structural-Historical Origins of Central American
Regimes
- Significant Mayan and other indigenous groups
(except Costa Rica) demographic collapse - Guatemala was a viceroyalty of Spain gradual
colonization starting in 1522 settlement in
1560s, by which point the indigenous populations
were in decline
18Demographic collapse of Mayan population in
Guatemala
Pre-Conquest population 2,000,000 1650 120,000 1
964 2,000,000 1990 6,000,000
19Structural-Historical Origins of Central American
Regimes
- United Provinces of Central America created at
Independence Liberal/Conservative cleavage. - Plantation economies Produced bananas, coffee.
Conservative rural oligarchs dominant type of
agricultural production labor intensive, often
coercive. - Power of military work closely with rural
oligarchs.
20Social Pyramid
Penninsulares
Criollos
Ladinos
Indigenous and black slaves
21Is Structure Destiny?
- Guatemala had October revolution in 1944
- Costa Rica had brief civil war in late 1940s
- Since then, they have evolved in opposite
directions - Today both are polyarchies, but very different
ones
22Guatemala Today
- Democracy is not just elections
- A means of living together without killing one
another - Yet violence remains as great today as during the
guerrilla war - Existing democratic institutions appear unable to
process conflicts
23- Luchas territoriales, Estado, y Convenio 169,
AVANCSO, 29/10/2009
24- Luchas territoriales, Estado, y Convenio 169,
AVANCSO, 29/10/2009
25- Luchas territoriales, Estado, y Convenio 169,
AVANCSO, 29/10/2009
26- Luchas territoriales, Estado, y Convenio 169,
AVANCSO, 29/10/2009
27http//www.rightsaction.org/video/elestor/eviction
.mov
28Conclusion
- In beginning of 1980s, only Costa Rica was an
electoral democracy - Few of the major political forces made democracy
their objective. - Today, all five Central American nations are
polyarchies electoral democracies with civilian
presidents.
29Conclusion
- Yet, they are unlikely to evolve toward high
quality democracies they combine authoritarian
elements (repression, the power of the military,
climate of fear) with polyarchy (free and regular
elections). - They cannot regulate social conflicts.
30Guatemala - Basic Facts
- GDP per capita 3,900
- Largest country (9.8 million) very
heterogeneous 56 Ladino, 44 Indian. - Adult literacy 67. Major literacy campaign
today. - Democratization in 1984, brings Christian
Democrats to power, then Jorge Serranos Movement
of Solidarity Action (MAS) in 1990. - Peace accords signed in 1996.
- Serranazo 1993 an attempted autogolpe styled
after the Fujimori self-coup in 1992 - Current government
31Costa Rica - Basic Facts
- GDP per capita 5,900
- Exceptionalism? More egalitarian, large class of
small farmers small (3.2 million) socially and
racially homogeneous country. - 96 white, 2 black, 1 Indian, 1 Chinese.
- Adult literacy rate 95. Major investments in
education during the 20th Century. - Social consensus and constitutional politics.
- Civil war 1948-52 leads to a pact.
- Continuation of peaceful, democratic transfers of
power in Costa Rica.
32Nicaragua - Basic Facts
-
- GDP per capita 1,800
- A small (3.9 million) country 69
- mestizo, 17 white, 9 black, 5 Indian.
- Adult literacy 63.
- Run like a plantation by Somoza dynasty
(1934-1979). - Sandinista revolution 1979-1990.
- UNO victory in 1990 the first peaceful transfer
of power from governing to opposition forces
since republic formed 150 years earlier. - Ortega elected in 2006
33El Salvador- Basic Facts
- GDP per capita 4,400
- Large size (5.6 million) 89 mestizo, 10
Indian, 1 black. - 77 adult literacy.
- Radical church has major impact (Romero, Vatican
II). - 1972 Duarte denied power by fraud October 1979
reformist military coup. - Duarte in power 1980-1989. Military stalemate
developed. - 1989 first democratic transfer of power since
1931 (ARENA comes to power with Cristiani). UN
sponsored peace accords (1992) between FMLN and
government led to internationally supervised
elections in March 1994. - FMLNs Mauricio Funes elected president in 2009.
34Other Resources
- John A. Booth, Christine J. Wade, and Thomas W.
Walker, Understanding Central America Global
Forces, Rebellion, and Change. Westview 2006. - Deborah Yashar, Demanding Democracy Reform and
Reaction in Costa Rica and Guatemala,
1870s-1950s. Stanford UP, 1997. - Luchas territoriales, Estado, y Convenio 169,
AVANCSO, 29/10/2009 (on course blog). - Romero the movie, played by Raul Julia.