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       Bolivian  President Evo Morales speaks during a joint press conference with  Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Ankara, Turkey, April 9, 2019  (AP photo by Burhan Ozbilici).       
                        
How Bolivia’s Morales Weathered Latin America’s Backlash Against the Left
 
            Andrew Thompson 
Monday, April 22, 2019
 
                 Not much remains of the “pink tide” of leftist governments  that swept across Latin America in the 2000s, riding the long  commodities boom. After the boom came the bust, and with it widespread  voter dissatisfaction. Where free elections have been held, most of the  region has subsequently swung to the right. 
There are, of  course, some exceptions, most notoriously in Venezuela. President  Nicolas Maduro, who came to office in 2013 as the handpicked successor  of the leader who launched the wave, Hugo Chavez, continues to preside  over one of the worst economic and humanitarian disasters in recent  Latin American history. He’s still claiming to be some kind of  revolutionary.
But another leftist leader who was swept into  office by the “pink tide” is faring much better. Farther south, in  Bolivia, President Evo Morales has survived the regional backlash.  Morales is an ideological brother-in-arms to Maduro. There is a  temptation to see the two men and their political trajectories as  similar, and there are certainly points of comparison. But the  differences are more revealing. 
The biggest one by far is  economic. In Venezuela, it has taken 19 years of self-described  “Bolivarian socialism,” six of them under Maduro, to largely destroy the  country’s economy. Its GDP has dropped by as much as half,  hyperinflation is uncontrolled, and up to 4 million Venezuelans 
have fled the country.  In Bolivia, by contrast, after 13 years of rule by Morales and his  Movement for Socialism, or MAS, the economy seems to be thriving. Annual  growth has averaged just under 5 percent during his time in office.  According to the International Monetary Fund, growth this year will be 4  percent, the highest rate in South America, and well ahead of what is  being achieved by some prominent center-right and right-wing  governments, for example in Argentina and Brazil. Bolivian inflation and  its exchange rate remain remarkably stable.
In some ways,  Bolivia and Venezuela are heading in entirely opposite directions. Once  wealthy and middle-class, Venezuela is crashing headlong into poverty,  while Bolivians are quietly getting modestly wealthy. For the first time  in the country’s history, the middle class has become the largest  socioeconomic group. From 2006, when Morales took office, to 2017, the  proportion of the population living in poverty 
dropped  from 59.9 percent to 36.4 percent, according to the INE, the National  Statistics Institute. Those suffering from extreme poverty 
fell  from 38.2 percent to 15.2 percent. Per capita income tripled to  $3,130—still very modest by regional and international standards, but  entailing a world of difference for Bolivians.
There is an  economic policy story behind these numbers. Both Venezuela and Bolivia  are commodity exporters: oil in the case of Venezuela; natural gas, zinc  and gold in the case of Bolivia. Both enjoyed a decade-long export  boom. Both countries nationalized key industries. But the similarities  end there. 
Venezuela’s nationalized industries were basically looted and run by incompetent cronies of Maduro and Chavez. The country 
used its windfall oil profits unwisely,  splurging on an array of politicized subsidies and handouts that  favored its supporters. What was left disappeared into industrial-scale  corruption schemes. 
Bolivia was smarter in how it managed the  bonanza from gas, zinc and gold. Cash transfers to the poor were more  controlled and more sustainable. And rather than patronage handouts,  Morales’ government invested in major infrastructure projects in order  to diversify the economy—for example, by 
promoting the mining of lithium,  the highly sought-after and lucrative mineral used in all kinds of  modern batteries. Although there have been allegations of corruption in  Bolivia, including some involving the notorious Brazilian construction  giant Odebrecht, the scams seem to have been on a smaller scale. And  perhaps most of all, despite spending on some expensive prestige  projects like a new government headquarters in La Paz, Bolivia under  Morales maintained a budget surplus up until 2013, and in subsequent  years has sought to control the size of the deficit. This is a world  away from Venezuela printing ever-more money in order to cover  uncontrolled deficits, which in turn has fed relentless hyperinflation.
Morales could still lose support as a result of deep social changes that he helped initiate.
This  isn’t to suggest that there are no economic problems looming on  Bolivia’s horizon. The end of the commodities boom has taken a toll. The  country now has double deficits—a fiscal deficit of around 7 percent of  GDP, and a current account deficit of around 5 percent of GDP. Foreign  currency reserves are half what they were in the boom years, which  peaked in 2014, and debt has increased, although it is still 
manageable.  Absent sustained export growth, Bolivia could face a future currency  crisis. But that can be said of many post-commodities boom countries in  Latin America. 
The political implications of how Bolivia’s  economy has not just survived but thrived, while other leftist  governments fizzled, are startling. They suggest that, at the end of the  day, ideology may be much less important than basic managerial  competence. Back in 2006, Jorge Castañeda 
outlined  a taxonomy of Latin America’s “left-wing resurgence,” categorizing it  not as one but two Latin American lefts. “One is modern, open-minded,  reformist, and internationalist, and it springs, paradoxically, from the  hard-core left of the past,” he wrote in Foreign Affairs. “The other,  born of the great tradition of Latin American populism, is nationalist,  strident, and close-minded.”
There was also a parallel  distinction between leftist leaders who were genuinely committed to  democracy and term limits, and those addicted to holding on to power at  all costs. Venezuela remains a clear case of Castañeda’s second  category: a deeply entrenched, populist and increasingly authoritarian  regime. Morales may look more like the first category, given his  positive economic record, but his story is not yet finished.
Bolivia’s  first indigenous president is standing for re-election once more in  presidential elections this October, facing a divided opposition but  potentially his most serious challenger yet: former President Carlos  Mesa, who was in office from 2003 to 2005. But Morales can only run  again because of his own populist and even authoritarian impulses. He  didn’t take no for an answer when 51 percent of voters rejected a change  to the constitution, by a referendum held in February 2018, that would  have allowed him to seek a fourth consecutive term. Morales instead  orchestrated a ruling by the pliant Supreme Electoral Tribunal that has  allowed him to do just that, on the dubious grounds that his political  rights would otherwise be violated. His move mirrored Juan Orlando  Hernandez, the autocratic right-wing ruler of Honduras, who arranged his  own unconstitutional re-election on similar grounds last year.
What  kind of leftist leader will Morales ultimately be? The answer may lie  with Bolivia’s new middle class. Those who emerged from poverty thanks  to the economic policies of Morales and his party might remain loyal to  him. Yet that is not what happened in neighboring Brazil. The middle  class there grew rapidly as poverty fell during the rule of the  left-wing Workers’ Party, from 2003 to 2016. But the new middle class  disliked poor public services and widespread corruption and crime. It  came out on the streets and ultimately voted the government out.
Morales  could face the same phenomenon, ultimately losing support as a result  of deep social changes that he helped initiate. And there could yet be a  strong backlash among voters to his brand of populism. It says  something that he has already 
opened a museum to himself.  It may turn out that Morales misjudged the right time to leave office.  If so, he would hardly be alone among Latin American presidents, from  the left to the right, who have been seduced by the temptation to hold  on to power, seeking re-election after re-election.
Andrew  Thompson is a journalist and political risk analyst who covers Latin  America. He was previously a foreign correspondent in Mexico, Argentina  and Brazil, and head of the BBC’s Latin American Service. He is also an  associate fellow at London-based Canning House.        
             
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