27 de diciembre de 2011

Midlife Crisis Economics


OP-ED COLUMNIST

Midlife Crisis Economics

The members of the Obama administration have many fine talents, but making adept historical analogies may not be among them.
Josh Haner/The New York Times
David Brooks
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When the administration came to office in the depths of the financial crisis, many of its leading figures concluded that the moment was analogous to the Great Depression. They read books about the New Deal and sought to learn from F.D.R.
But, in the 1930s, people genuinely looked to government to ease their fears and restore their confidence. Today, Americans are more likely to fear government than be reassured by it.
According to a Gallup survey, 64 percent of Americans polled said they believed that big government is the biggest threat to the country. Only 26 percent believed that big business is the biggest threat. As a result, the public has reacted to Obama’s activism with fear and anxiety. The Democrats lost 63 House seats in the 2010 elections.
Members of the administration have now dropped the New Deal parallels. But they have started making analogies between this era and the progressive era around the turn of the 20th century.
Again, there are superficial similarities. Then, as now, we are seeing great concentrations of wealth, especially at the top. Then, as now, the professional class of lawyers, teachers and journalists seems to feel as if it has the upper hand in its status war against the business class of executives and financiers.
But these superficial similarities are outweighed by vast differences.
First, the underlying economic situations are very different. A century ago, the American economy was a vibrant jobs machine. Industrialization was volatile and cruel, but it produced millions of new jobs, sucking labor in from the countryside and from overseas.
Today’s economy is not a jobs machine and lacks that bursting vibrancy. The rate of new business start-ups was declining even before the 2008 financial crisis. Companies are finding that they can get by with fewer workers. As President Obama has observed, factories that used to employ 1,000 workers can now be even more productive with less than 100.
Moreover, the information economy widens inequality for deep and varied reasons that were unknown a century ago. Inequality is growing in nearly every developed country. According to a report from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, over the past 30 years, inequality in Sweden, Germany, Israel, Finland and New Zealand has grown as fast or faster than inequality in the United States, even though these countries have very different welfare systems.
In the progressive era, the economy was in its adolescence and the task was to control it. Today the economy is middle-aged; the task is to rejuvenate it.
Second, the governmental challenge is very different today than it was in the progressive era. Back then, government was small and there were few worker safety regulations. The problem was a lack of institutions. Today, government is large, and there is a thicket of regulations, torts and legal encumbrances. The problem is not a lack of institutions; it’s a lack of institutional effectiveness.
The United States spends far more on education than any other nation, with paltry results. It spends far more on health care, again, with paltry results. It spends so much on poverty programs that if we just took that money and handed poor people checks, we would virtually eliminate poverty overnight. In the progressive era, the task was to build programs; today the task is to reform existing ones.
Third, the moral culture of the nation is very different. The progressive era still had a Victorian culture, with its rectitude and restrictions. Back then, there was a moral horror at the thought of debt. No matter how bad the economic problems became, progressive-era politicians did not impose huge debt burdens on their children. That ethos is clearly gone.
In the progressive era, there was an understanding that men who impregnated women should marry them. It didn’t always work in practice, but that was the strong social norm. Today, that norm has dissolved. Forty percent of American children are born out of wedlock. This sentences the U.S. to another generation of widening inequality and slower human capital development.
One hundred years ago, we had libertarian economics but conservative values. Today we have oligarchic economics and libertarian moral values — a bad combination.
In sum, in the progressive era, the country was young and vibrant. The job was to impose economic order. Today, the country is middle-aged but self-indulgent. Bad habits have accumulated. Interest groups have emerged to protect the status quo. The job is to restore old disciplines, strip away decaying structures and reform the welfare state. The country needs a productive midlife crisis.
The progressive era is not a model; it is a foil. It provides a contrast and shows us what we really need to do.
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/27/opinion/brooks-midlife-crisis-economics.html?_r=1&emc=eta1

23 de diciembre de 2011

Vaclav Havel - un gigante moral entre pigmeos


Remembering Vaclav Havel

A Moral Giant among Pygmies

By Erich Follath
Photo Gallery: The World Mourns for Vaclav Havel
Photos
AFP
Since last Sunday, the world has been mourning the death of Vaclav Havel. The Czech leader led a rollercoaster life that saw him go from prison cells to palaces, from poetry to politics. In this personal remembrance from a SPIEGEL editor, Havel is remembered as a man who unflaggingly labored to "live within the truth."
Info
A look at his friends is enough to show that Vaclav Havel was not your typical politician. A man who discusses God and the world with playwright Tom Stoppard and the Dalai Lama and can talk shop with cult musicians like Frank Zappa and rock idol Mick Jagger is anything but a run-of-the-mill career politician straight out of the political machine, someone who thinks merely in terms of power constellations and coalitions.

Havel's image of res publica was probably closest to Plato's concept of the philosopher-king. After all, as a writer, moralist and his country's president, Havel was precisely that. However, the Greek idea of the perfect state assumed that all citizens had the same understanding of what is good -- and it left no place for dissidents.
And herein lies the root of the minor dilemma this great man found himself in: Havel was never easily pigeonholed. Perhaps this explains why he had such a pleasant and yet thoroughly difficult character. Havel was a creature of light who dazzled many, especially those who didn't even cast a shadow themselves.

PHOTO GALLERY


8  Photos
Photo Gallery: Mourning Vaclav Havel

I recall visiting Vaclav Havel at his humble vacation home in the village of Vlčice, in eastern Bohemia, in July 1989. His mustache was an icy gray, his ruggedly masculine Belmondo-esque face was folded by wrinkles, and his hand trembled, forever holding a cigarette. I wondered whether he had just spent another night in a cell for one of those 12-hour interrogations that the authorities picked him up for with alarming regularity.
No, he replied. He had been up until the early hours talking with his friends from Solidarnosc, the Polish trade union. "The Poles are further along than we are," he grumbled, hungover but wide awake. An envelope lying on the kitchen table amid vodka bottles was labeled "To be given to Z. if I'm locked up again." The envelope contained a rough draft of the speech Havel planned to give in Frankfurt, where he was to be presented with the Peace Prize of the German Publishers and Booksellers Association. As he rightly suspected, the regime of then-Czechoslovakian President Gustav Husak would refuse to let him out of the country to attend the award ceremony.
Five months later, on Dec. 29, 1989, the "Velvet Revolution" had swept the communists from power in Czechoslovakia, and Havel, the leader of the dissident Civic Forum, found himself on a balcony overlooking Wenceslas Square in Prague, having been named head of state by the newly elected parliament. And the entire nation was celebrating. The poet-president drew red hearts on hundreds of outstretched hands. Later, he pedaled impetuously through the corridors of Prague Castle, the venerable seat of government, on a child's scooter.
The Path to Dissident Writer
In contrast to many other Eastern European dissidents, the man who helped bury communism in Czechoslovakia never flirted with the powerbrokers of the former regime, partly because of his upper middle-class background. Havel's bourgeois upbringing was both a burden and a privilege. It shaped his development significantly, honing his senses and judgment.
Vaclav Havel was born in 1936, the son of a wealthy architect and landowner. His uncle was one of the most important producers of Czech movies. In 1948, when the communists confiscated the family's property, those carefree days were over. To make ends meet, his father had to get a job as an office assistant, and his mother worked as a tour guide. Barred from entering higher education, Vaclav began an apprenticeship in a chemistry lab, but he also secretly attended evening classes, where he attained his high school diploma and was able to enroll in a transport engineering program at the Czech Technical University in Prague, for which only one place was available. His application to study at the Academy of Musical Arts was turned down because of his alleged political untrustworthiness. Havel was also a passionate theatergoer, so he worked as a stage-lighter and scene-shifter and began a correspondence course in directing.


Havel started writing in his spare time. Inspired by Romanian-French playwright Eugene Ionesco, and especially by the surreal reality of the socialist system around him, Havel penned satirical comedies such as "The Garden Party," which earned him acclaim abroad and ostracism at home. Havel also became famous for his essays in defense of the individual in the face of totalitarianism, and he eventually joined the editorial board of Tvár (The Face), a cultural political monthly. A speech he gave against censorship at a writer's conference in 1967 played a significant role in paving the way for the Prague Spring a year later. But when Soviet tanks brutally suppressed the reform movement, Havel was banned from publishing his work.
Bringing Down the Regime
Vaclav Havel spent a total of 50 months in prison. During his incarceration in a cold, damp cell, he wrote his moving "Letters to Olga," the fellow student who became his first wife in 1964 (after her death in 1996, he married actress Dagmar Veskrnova).
When the civil-rights activist wasn't in prison, secret policemen monitored his movements around the clock, even while he worked in a brewery. Sometimes he took pity on his minders, provocatively inviting them to join him for a drink at a local bar. When it was foggy and he was annoyed at being followed in his car, he would try to lose his pursuers with daring maneuvers on country roads. Havel drew on these bizarre situations, writing absurd plays and clever mental experiments as well as various other takes on the theme of finding oneself within a depressing police state.
Charter 77, a civic initiative he co-founded, catapulted Havel to the forefront of the civil rights movement. A relentless opponent of both moral cowardice and the form of extreme passivity the Czechs call "svejkism" (a term derived from the classic World War I Czech novel "The Good Soldier Svejk"), Havel repeatedly tried to convince his friends in the West that "freedom" meant nothing unless it was imbued with life. And he pitied those who avoided him out of fear that "the inevitable nature of our contact" would irritate the government in Prague unnecessarily and therefore "threaten the fragile foundations of a budding easing of tension." After all, he argued, "It was they, not I, who voluntarily sacrificed their freedom."
Havel was never a committed Catholic, but he always had ties to people with firm religious beliefs, people like Vaclav Maly, a dissident priest and fellow Charter 77 signatory. Harassment by President Gustav Husak's Communist Party fused Havel and Maly together, lending them a resolve Havel would later call "a direction, a purpose," a sense that good could come of bad.
In 1989, Maly was one of the organizers of the rallies that eventually toppled the communist regime, and he would later stand alongside his friend on the balcony overlooking Wenceslas Square.
The Tribulations of the Poet-President
Havel made phenomenal achievements in his first years in office. He negotiated the withdrawal of Soviet troops with Russian President Mikhail Gorbachev, gained rapturous applause for his pro-European views in the European Parliament, signed a peace treaty with Germany and apologized for what he termed the "morally reprehensible" expulsion of ethnic Germans from the Sudetenland after World War II -- a generous gesture that wasn't exactly popular in his native country.
But even the poet-president was not immune from setbacks in everyday political matters. He made mistakes precisely because he focused too little on the details. A series of errors suggested he was growing tired and felt trapped by his position, blunders including an amateurish comment about the constitutional system of communist Czechoslovakia and the fact that the otherwise modest Havel signed into law (albeit reluctantly) an amendment outlawing "slandering the head of state." Over time, the schizoid nature of the twin roles of president and artist, political realist and moralist, became painfully clear.
Although he was unable to prevent the breakup of Czechoslovakia, Havel remained the president of the Czech Republic for another 10 years, even leading his former Warsaw Pact country into NATO. But his decision-making powers were gradually eroded, and, as he complained in an interview with SPIEGEL in 1999, it became "difficult to live within the truth when nearly everyone else has settled into their house of lies."
Havel also shared a heartfelt animosity with Vaclav Klaus, his successor in Prague Castle. A diehard admirer of former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, Klaus derided Havel as an unworldly "clown," even though Havel had been farsighted in his condemnation of what he called "mafia capitalism."

Havel left the political stage in 2003, a chastened rather than bitter president. "They turned me into a mythical creature," he said, "and people enjoy shattering myths." After his departure, Havel's unquestionable moral authority continued to secure him much attention, even though he was seen as more of a prophet abroad than back at home.
At our last meeting, a year ago, the clearly gaunt former president told me that "the Angel of Death has crept around (his) bed" time and time again. And, time and again, he was able to chase it away.
In early December, Havel wanted to see the Dalai Lama one last time. But it was a meeting that wasn't to be. Vaclav Havel died in his sleep last Sunday at the age of 75, a political and moral giant in an era of pygmies.
Translated from the German by Jan Liebelt

FORESTACION el pepe mujica esta matando la gallina de los huevos de oro


Forestadores afirman que no soportan más impuestos

Un estudio explica que el sector tributa US$ 152 millones al año

La Sociedad de Productores Forestales (SPF) encargó un estudio de la estructura impositiva que afecta al sector, análisis que, para determinadas circunstancias, estimó un aporte anual de US$ 152 millones (US$ 172/ha) que –dado un momento muy adverso en los mercados– motivó al secretario ejecutivo de la sociedad, Edgardo Cardozo, a enfatizar que “el sector no soporta un impuesto más”.

Así las cosas, si el Impuesto a la Concentración de Inmuebles Rurales (ICIR) se aplica como se perfila desde el Parlamento, las empresas de este sector de la agroindustria se verán perjudicadas, según se reflexiona a nivel de la SPF, por lo cual se decidió encargar el citado trabajo a los profesionales Gustavo Michelin y Horacio Bafico.

Cardozo dijo que “el objetivo fue exponer en forma objetiva, mediante un trabajo serio y profesional, cuál es la estructura impositiva que el sector soporta”.

“El trabajo demuestra que en una situación de equilibrio –en base a 884 mil ha plantadas, a una cosecha anual potencial de 18 millones de m3 sólidos y a la estructura industrial existente– el sector estaría pagando anualmente US$ 152 millones considerando toda la estructura impositiva, o sea US$ 172/ha por año”, señaló.

Eso, indicó, es una expresión clara, en términos absolutos, “pero en términos relativos hay que considerar que no podemos exportar nada, desde hace tres o cuatro años fue cayendo la colocación de madera sólida y ahora hay una caída muy significativa de los indicadores para fibra de celulosa, desde el 1° de enero al 30 de noviembre de 2011 el precio cayó 25% en el mercado internacional”.

Eso está indicando que “no podemos soportar un impuesto más”, afirmó, y destacó que un ejemplo de la adversidad es la declaración en concordato de la empresa Urupanel (fábrica de tableros contrachapados) o el cierre desde el 1° de octubre de la planta industrial de Weyerhaeuser.

Tras 20 años de esfuerzo

El estudio de Michelin y Bafico se tituló “Después de 20 años de esfuerzo: ¿Dónde está el sector forestal uruguayo y cuáles son sus problemas?”.

En las conclusiones se afirma, entre otras reflexiones, que “las modificaciones graduales del marco legal, tributario y regulatorio que conforma las reglas de juego con las que se invitó a invertir en el sector se suman a un encarecimiento en dólares de los costos y a precios internacionales sumamente deprimidos. Es por eso que al momento de pensar a dónde va el sector a futuro es que surgen interrogantes”.

Se destaca que “el esfuerzo hasta ahora es un buen ejemplo de política de desarrollo productivo donde el Estado sacrificó recursos tributarios, generó reglas de juego duraderas en el largo plazo y aportó un subsidio a la plantación. Estas medidas hicieron creíble el objetivo de desarrollo del sector y atrajeron la inversión local e internacional. El subsidio otorgado fue de US$ 94 millones distribuido en el tiempo”.

También se manifiesta que “el estímulo fiscal se condice con los objetivos generales para promover inversiones y que aplican para todos los sectores de actividad de la economía que son declarados promovidos o de interés nacional. De ser una actividad marginal en la matriz productiva pasó a ocupar un lugar destacado”.

Se concluye que “se crearon 13.000 puestos de trabajo al 2010, lo que crecerá con la maduración de la producción debido a la intensidad de mano de obra en la etapa de cosecha”, que “se elevó el estándar de calidad de la mano de obra promedio para las actividades primarias” y que hubo exportaciones “por US$ 1.080 millones en 2010 y aumentando anualmente con la maduración de la producción”.

Se aludió a ventajas como “desentralización y escala para el desarrollo efectivo de proyectos fuera de la cercanía del puerto de Montevideo”, a la “utilización de tecnologías limpias e inversiones en investigación, desarrollo e innovación”, y a la “diversificación de la matriz energética incrementando la capacidad de generación de energía sobre la base de biomasa a través de inversiones del sector privado que van en línea con el objetivo del gobierno de reducir la dependencia de la generación de energía eléctrica sobre la base de recursos no renovables”.

Por otro lado, se menciona que el “desafío para el desarrollo del sector pasa por actualizar la infraestructura de transporte que está en mal estado por falta de mantenimiento oportuno y por un uso que se va intensificando”.

El total de peajes pagado por la carga del sector en 2010 fue US$ 7,7 millones y cuando se alcance la producción de tendencia (13,7 millones de toneladas) el monto que se pagará por dicho concepto ascenderá a US$ 14,5 millones.

El estudio manifiesta que “a los US$ 80,5 millones anuales que aportará el sector entre peajes y sobrecosto de los combustibles hay que sumar el esfuerzo por mantener una infraestructura de caminos internos del orden de 25.000 kms y los convenios con gobiernos departamentales para mantener la caminería rural”.

“El concepto común de que el sector está promovido y por ende no paga impuestos es equivocado. Los cambios de la Reforma Tributaria de 2007 y otras modificaciones sobre la forma de las sociedades y la carga tributaria han ido cambiando la realidad y gravando paulatinamente al sector. El ICIR propuesto es un caso más de los desvíos en el tratamiento impositivo”, concluye el informe.

Análisis de una coyuntura muy difícil

lGustavo Michelin y Horacio Bafico sostienen que “en la coyuntura actual, la inversión hundida a riesgo de los inversores se encuentra con una coyuntura muy difícil donde los costos en dólares evolucionan mucho más rápido que los ingresos en dólares. Los mercados internacionales no muestran una recuperación sostenida para los productos finales. En este contexto el tipo de cambio real se muestra atrasado en relación a niveles de equilibrio, situación que se agrava al pensar que la producción tiene como destino el mundo desarrollado, donde el atraso es mayor. Estimamos que este desvío se ubica en el primer semestre del 2011 en el orden del 23%”.

También citan que “la coyuntura de costos es testigo de este problema ya que los componentes más sensibles han registrado aumentos de precios en dólares que los multiplicaron por tres en la mano de obra y el gasoil y por cinco en el caso de la tierra. Este último fenómeno hace que el sector padezca doblemente el ingreso de capitales ya que deprime la cotización del dólar y encarece la renta potencial de la tierra que, al estar destinada a la producción forestal por décadas, no se puede cubrir”.

Finalmente, los economistas expresan que “el sector tiene el potencial para concretar el deseo de la política de desarrollo, armar un cluster con proyección internacional que fortifique la marca país y permita incorporar cada vez más valor agregado a lo que produce el suelo uruguayo. Más allá de la pésima coyuntura internacional y de precios, hacia dónde va el sector depende fuertemente de que se restituyan las señales de apoyo claras desde el gobierno”.
Resumen de carga sobre producción anual de tendencia

Fuente: economistas Gustavo Michelin y Horacio Bafico / a precios de 2010/11 / datos en millones de US$ anuales

Aportes patronales seguridad social (*): 26,0
Tributos al Gasoil (incluido el fideicomiso) (*): 37,0
Sobrecosto monopolio Ancap: 29,0
IRAE: 12,5
Impuesto Patrimonio: 8,3
Contribución Inmobiliaria Rural: 2,0
Carga financiera IVA servicios contratados (**): 14,6
Peajes: 14,5
Propuesta ICIR: 8,5
Total para tendencia de 18 millones de mcs: 152
Impuestos a pagar por hectárea: 172
Impuestos a pagar por mcs producido: 8,5

mcs = metro cúbico sólido / (*) incluye la carga financiera del aporte realizado a lo largo del ciclo de producción / (**) 70% de la plantación y 50% de mantenimiento generan IVA que se recupera al final del ciclo y por lo tanto crea carga tributaria al 10% anual.

Es una carga

En el cuadro adjunto, según Michelin y Bafico, “se resume la carga que representan los diferentes impuestos, tributos y otras obligaciones del Estado sobre la producción que alcanzarán las plantaciones cuando la producción llegue a su madurez (…) se trata de una carga no menor, que en los últimos ocho años se ha ido incrementando gradualmente con la introducción de cambios en las reglas de juego en relación a lo que el país presentó desde un inicio como política de desarrollo de una actividad inexistente”.

http://www.elobservador.com.uy/noticia/215514/forestadores-afirman-que-no-soportan-mas-impuestos/

21 de diciembre de 2011

Argentina especialista en crisis da lecciones a Europa


The Crash Specialists

Argentina's Lessons for a Crisis-Ridden Europe

Photo Gallery: Argentina's Rise from the Ashes
Photos
AP
Ten years ago, Argentina's economy was in a shambles, the victim of vast sovereign debt, a peso that was pegged to the US dollar and rigid IMF austerity measures. A decade later, Europe is facing many of the same problems. Argentina's recovery has plenty of lessons for the euro zone -- if only it would listen.
Info
For a retired politician, Roberto Lavagna, 69, is a busy man. The telephone in his office in downtown Buenos Aires rings constantly, as he fields calls from worried bankers in Spain or Portuguese investors seeking advice. The World Bank even flew Lavagna to Madrid for a recent seminar on the euro crisis.
The elegant Argentine is considered a specialist in handling national bankruptcy. It was he who negotiated the restructuring of Argentina's foreign debt during his term as economics minister from 2002 to 2005.
Precisely 10 years ago, South America's second largest economy was on the verge of collapse. The government restricted its citizens' access to their bank accounts and announced a cessation of debt payments. Hundreds of thousands took to the streets in protest, and 30 people died in the unrest. President Fernando de la Rúa resigned in December 2001, ultimately fleeing the government building by helicopter to escape the angry crowds.
Roberto Lavagna was one of those who helped get the nation back on its feet. The price Argentina paid was high: Private creditors had to write off about 70 percent of their investments. Furious foreign investors attempted to have the president's airplane seized during state visits and Argentina was the pariah of the global financial markets. It took currency devaluation and debt restructuring to get the economy back on firm footing.
'Haven't Learned Anything from Our Crash'
But today, this emerging market stands as a shining beacon when compared to crisis-ridden countries in Europe. In the past, European and American politicians were only too happy to lecture Latin American countries on good budget management and debt control. Now, the question when European diplomats visit Buenos Aires is quite the opposite: Can Europe learn from Argentina?
Two American economists, Nobel Prize winner Paul Krugman and crisis prophet Nouriel Roubini, have advised Europe to take a close look at the Argentine debt crisis. "It seems as if they still haven't learned anything from our crash," Lavagna says, pointing out that Europe has prescribed its debt-ridden member countries the same austerity measures that brought down Argentina. "That creates a long-lasting recession," he says, "and the region spirals further and further into decline."
Few countries have the kind of extensive experience with financial crises that Argentina does, a country which underwent three collapses in the space of 20 years. Hyperinflation, chaos at the banks, debt moratoriums, debt restructuring -- the same scenes simply repeated themselves. Argentines saw three different currencies come and go within 10 years and the country was a regular customer at the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
"We're crisis specialists," confirms José Luis Machinea. As economics minister under President Fernando de la Rúa, he had a front row seat as the crash unfolded. Machinea draws parallels to the crisis in Greece: Argentina too was caught in a currency trap, he says, with its peso tied by law to the US dollar.
As a result, Argentina's government had to pay higher and higher interest rates on loans issued in dollars. By the mid-1990s, it was clear the country was headed for a financial crisis. The IMF tied a bailout to a tough austerity program, and Argentina cut pensions and government employees' pay. Instead of stimulating the economy, leaders focused on battling the country's deficit.
Greece Calling
By the time the IMF finally approved the first capital infusion after months of negotiations, it was too late. "If they'd stepped in two years earlier, we could have avoided the 2001 crash," Machinea says. He believes Europe could stand to learn a lesson from that experience: "The longer they hold off on saving Greece, the higher the cost will be."
The political consequences of those events can still be felt in Argentina today. After de la Rúa's downfall, the country cycled through five presidents in the space of two weeks. Not until the election of Néstor Kirchner, a Peronist, did the situation settle down.
De la Rúa's party, for decades the political home of Argentina's middle class, atrophied into a mere splinter group, and ex-president de la Rúa became a tragic figure, insulted by passersby when he dared show his face in public. These days, he lives a reclusive life in an apartment in Recoleta, Buenos Aires' upper class neighborhood. Security guards keep watch over the building's entrance and the door to the elevator is locked.
The former president answers the door himself, his face marked by bitterness. De la Rúa considers himself a victim of the IMF and of neoliberal financial gurus in Washington. "The IMF wanted to make an example of Argentina," he says. In particular, he blames Horst Köhler, head of the IMF at the time, for the crash, saying Köhler conjured up "a perfect storm" with his hard-line conditions. "He left us alone in our hour of need," the former president says. Köhler, who went on to serve as Germany's president until his resignation in May of last year, has remained a despised figure in Argentina; to this day, diplomats advise him against visiting Buenos Aires.
De la Rúa, on the other hand, has gradually been able to make forays back into public life. Former IMF Deputy Managing Director Stanley Fischer wrote him an encouraging letter and people in restaurants suddenly want their picture taken with him again, while European friends call to ask his tips on overcoming the euro crisis. "Most of the calls I get," de la Rúa adds, "are from Greece."
Translated from the German by Ella Ornstein

ARTICLE...


19 de diciembre de 2011

Claeh - los primeros medicos formados en Punta del Este Uruguay


Egresan en Punta del Este los primeros médicos formados en una universidad privada

16.12.2011 | 17.37

Por primera vez en Uruguay, estudiantes de medicina egresarán de una universidad privada. Se trata de 29 doctores en Medicina de la Facultad de Medicina del Centro Latinoamericano de Economía Humana (Claeh), ubicada en Punta del Este, que este viernes tendrán su ceremonia de graduación. Estos profesionales de la salud se suman a los más de 14.000 titulados que se han recibido en la Universidad de la República. Para repasar el proceso, que comenzó en 2006, En Perspectiva se trasladó hasta Punta del Este para conversar con el doctor Humberto Correa y con una de las integrantes de esta primera generación de doctores del Claeh, Carolina Sosa. El 50% de los alumnos de la institución proviene de Maldonado, Rocha y Minas, y el resto de otros departamentos del interior, Montevideo y el extranjero. Correa contó cómo fue el inicio y el desarrollo de la propuesta: "Comenzamos con un proyecto, con programas, con una especie de utopía de formar médicos diferentes en un tiempo de seis años, y eso lentamente fue tomando vida propia y fue transformándose en un proceso en el que intervinieron múltiples personas e instituciones". Destacó además que la diversidad del alumnado (allí estudian alemanes, brasileños, israelíes, argentinos, chilenos, españoles) es una visión que "enriquece", y puntualizó que si el Claeh no brindara "un programa distinto en temas y en modos educativos, no se justificaría". Por su parte, Sosa dijo que la impronta humanista de algunas asignaturas de la carrera se refleja "en el sanatorio y en los centros" a los que asistieron. "Tenemos herramientas diferentes", añadió.

Newt Gingrich

“One of the great problems we have had in the Republican Party is that we . . . encourage you to be neat, obedient, and loyal and faithful, and all those Boy Scout words which would be great around the campfire but are lousy in politics. ... You’re fighting a war. It is a war for power. ... Don’t try to educate. That is not your job. What is the primary purpose of a political leader? To build a majority.”

18 de diciembre de 2011

Václav Havel, from his 1985 essay "An Anatomy of Reticence":


Václav Havel, from his 1985 essay "An Anatomy of Reticence":
A state that denies its citizens their basic rights becomes a danger to its neighbors as well: internal arbitrary rule will be reflected in arbitrary external relations. The suppression of public opinion, the abolition of public competition for power and its public exercise opens the way for the state power to arm itself in any way it sees fit. . . . A state that does not hesitate to lie to its own people will not hesitate to lie to other states.

17 de diciembre de 2011

Francisco Faig - el mayor obstáculo a la prosperidad nacional está en la izquierda anquilosada


Es Vázquez

Francisco Faig
La mayoría de los intelectuales y líderes de opinión nada dirán porque su identidad de izquierda silencia su espíritu crítico. Pero es cada día más evidente para todos: el rey está desnudo.
No solamente porque es incapaz de conducir políticas públicas de forma eficiente en educación, salud, medioambiente, seguridad, vivienda, relaciones exteriores y defensa, en tiempos en que vivimos el mayor crecimiento que registre la historia. Sino también y sobre todo, porque no hay semana en la que no nos sorprenda con alguna tontería, cada vez más angustiosa, entre sus habituales copas de vino rosado de todos los mediodías, y el común malhumor de su cansancio acumulado de todas las tardecitas.
Sobran razones para insistir en criticar a Mujica. Parecería ser que cuanto más pasa el tiempo, más queda claro lo necesario que era el papel de tutor gubernativo de Vázquez: desde que se llamó a silencio, ensordece el ruido de los objetos rotos por las ideas elefante en el bazar del gobierno.
La inteligencia de la izquierda moderada pasa por responsabilizar a los tupamaros, desordenados, de origen no frenteamplista y de talante populista, por el caos del gobierno actual. Se preserva así una izquierda distinta encarnada por Vázquez: suerte de natural estadista-protector capaz de gobernar bien, y no como esta administración mujiquista.
Sin embargo, no es posible explicar los desatinos actuales del gobierno sin percibir su génesis real en la primera administración frenteamplista.
El horror de la educación fue multiplicado por la ley de educación de Vázquez; el caos de salud pública es consecuencia de su reforma en tiempos de la administración Vázquez; el desborde sindical tiene sus claras raíces en la época de Vázquez; la incapacidad de tomar un rumbo internacional favorable a los intereses nacionales se arrastra desde el ejecutivo de Vázquez; nada se hizo en vivienda, desde el quinquenio de Vázquez; la inoperancia en seguridad pública se agravó con los ministros del interior de Vázquez; la invención de un relato de historia reciente oficial proclive a la izquierda toma cuerpo con Vázquez.
En realidad, lo que ocurre es que estamos ante el mismo perro con diferente collar. Porque detrás de Vázquez y de Mujica está la misma fuerza política de siempre.
Es el mismo Frente Amplio clientelista, conservador, seguro de su superioridad moral, obsecuente con sus bases sindicales, gangrenado por su militancia leninista, y gobernado por una mayoría de gerontes totalmente autistas de la realidad internacional posterior al derrumbe del muro de Berlín. Es el mismo Frente Amplio que Tabaré Vázquez se preocupaba por seducir a través de su discurso de unidad, lleno de contemplaciones internas y enamorado de su estima militante, antes del desliz de su confesión proestadounidense.
Es un profundo error creer que el gran responsable es Mujica. El presidente caerá en el tobogán de su descrédito creciente e inevitable. En realidad, el mayor obstáculo a la prosperidad nacional está en la izquierda anquilosada incapaz de modernizarse. La de Vázquez.