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- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive
- Path: sparky!uunet!wupost!mont!pencil.cs.missouri.edu!rich
- From: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu (Rich Winkel)
- Subject: El Salvador: Proceso 528: Legislation
- Message-ID: <1992Sep6.214319.18313@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
- Followup-To: alt.activism.d
- Originator: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
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- Organization: PACH
- Date: Sun, 6 Sep 1992 21:43:19 GMT
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Lines: 104
-
- /** reg.elsalvador: 163.0 **/
- ** Topic: Proceso 528: Legislation **
- ** Written 11:39 am Sep 5, 1992 by cidai@huracan.cr in cdp:reg.elsalvador **
- From: cidai@huracan.cr (Centro de Informacion Documentacion y Apoyo a la Invest. - UCAJSC)
- Subject: Proceso 528: Legislation
-
- Center for Information, Documentation and Research Support (CIDAI)
- Central American University (UCA)
- San Salvador, El Salvador
-
- PROCESO 528
- September 2, 1992
-
- LEGISLATION:
- The State at the service of coffee capital
-
- The Legislative Assembly unanimously passed a law whose avowed
- goal is to compensate coffee growers for the precipitous drop in
- international coffee prices. The mechanism consists in the issuance
- of $45 million worth of bonds used to pay each grower $15 per 100
- lbs. produced. This is not a subsidy, but rather an advance, since
- $4 will be returned from each 100 lbs. exported starting with the
- 1994/95 crop, until the entire $45 million are paid back with
- interest.
- In principle, the creation of a stabilization fund of this
- nature is socially a good idea since, as stated in the preamble to
- the bill, protecting coffee is a short-term boon for environmental
- protection and job creation. This must have been what motivated the
- legislative deputies to pass the bill, especially those from the
- opposition. The problem is that the honorable deputies probably
- failed to read the bill carefully; here we see how the old adage,
- "once the law is passed the trap is set" [hecha la ley, hecha la
- trampa], has come true. Especially noteworthy are four articles.
- Art. 3 establishes that "the Direction and Administration of the
- Fund will be in the hands of the Salvadoran Coffee Council." This
- Council is an organization which does not represent all producers,
- since the coffee oligarchs control it entirely. Cooperatives, which
- produce about one-third of all coffee, only have one representative
- on the Council.
- Although in the text it is reiterated several times that
- compensation will go "to the producers," articles 13 and 14
- describe the true beneficiaries of the Fund. According to Art. 13,
- the Council "shall pay" producers "through the coffee processing
- exporters." And Art. 14 states, "The compensation referred to in
- this law will serve first to pay the obligations incurred by coffee
- growers directly with the banking system or coffee processing
- plants..." In order to banish all doubts, Art. 15 insists that
- financial institutions and coffee processing exporters must turn
- over copies of their credit portfolios with coffee growers "in
- order to withhold from producers the necessary funds to amortize
- their respective obligations."
- Therefore, the goal is to obtain $45 million in order to,
- first, maintain the profits of coffee processing exporters and,
- second, help recently privatized banks improve their debt
- portfolios. If we think about who the owners of the chief coffee
- processing plants are, and who have taken control of some of the
- reprivatized banks, the law smacks of another traditional way for
- the coffee oligarchy to gain control over the political apparatus
- -with the president of the Republic at its head.
- But things do not end here: the funds are to be obtained by
- issuing a series of bonds valued at $1,000 or more each. These
- bonds will be repaid at a rate of 1.5% over the prime rate of the
- U.S. banking system. This level of profitability is not high enough
- to lead us to believe that those who have a few thousand dollars
- "squirreled away" will spend them to acquire these bonds. But have
- no fear: the free market ideologues toss the market into the
- wastebasket by ensuring that, in Art. 20, "The Official Autonomous
- Institutions, excepting the Central Reserve Bank, shall invest part
- of their resources in acquiring the bonds..." The public resources
- of the Salvadoran people will be put at the service of the declared
- enemies of the public sector! The State will be used by market
- apologists to prevent market forces from working! Again we see how
- the bourgeoisie is only opposed to the role of the State when the
- latter is not completely subjected to the former. The ploy is
- certainly intelligent: autonomous state institutions will invest
- their reserves in low-yield bonds, thereby depreciating the wealth
- of the nation. This is one more argument for the campaign against
- public sector "inefficiency."
- (Note: this payout can operate in a different way: the bonds
- -in dollars- could be acquired by the nation's wealthy, in other
- words, the coffee processing exporters, at an exchange rate of
- 8.5:1. And a few months later, the national currency could be
- devalued, say, to 12:1, so that each $1,000 bond for which 8,500
- colones has been paid will yield 12,000 colones plus interest when
- amortized.)
- This leads us to wonder how the opposition could have voted
- for this bill without amendments, a law which reflects such a
- classically burlesque scheme on the part of the coffee oligarchy.
- Is it possible that the deputies from the Christian Democratic
- Party, Democratic Nationalist Union and Democratic Convergence
- believed that the direct beneficiaries of the law (the Cristianis,
- Borgonovos, Duenas, Salaverrias, etc.) will become reconciled with
- them as a result of a measure which so favors their interests? If
- so, then the honorable deputies should rest assured that the
- potential votes cast by these ten or so families will not offset
- those of the harvest workers, whose salaries will not improve one
- iota from these $45 million, or those of the Social Security and
- Public Employees' Pension Institute beneficiaries, whose funds will
- be used to help coffee exporters obtain the same share of the
- profits they have been taking for the last century.
-
-
- ** End of text from cdp:reg.elsalvador **
-
-