| “WE NEED TO REDISTRIBUTE CHILE’S WEALTH NOW” |
| Written by Benjamin Witte | |
| Wednesday, 17 October 2007 | |
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(Ed. Note: Two-time presidential candidate Tomás Hirsch of the Humanist Party has kept himself incredibly busy since the 2005 elections, in which he won 5.4 percent of the popular vote. In addition to traveling extensively throughout Latin America and Europe, the outspoken political leader also found time to pen a new book. Entitled “El Fin de la Prehistoria: Un Camino hacia la Libertad” (The End of Prehistory: A Path Toward Freedom), the work is set for official release later this month. The Santiago Times recently sat down with Hirsch in his suburban Santiago home, where he talked at length about his budding friendship with Bolivian President Evo Morales – who wrote the prologue to Hirsch’s book – his views on Venezuelan leader Hugo Chavez, and his interest in trying once again for the Chilean presidency. Hirsch, who ran in the last election under the banner of the Juntos Podemos (Together We Can) coalition, also offered an insightful analysis of Chile’s current political left.) By Benjamin Witte Santiago Times: What’s the significance of the title of your new book? ST: How is that violence you talk about manifested here in Chile? ST: And to put an end to this violence? ST: How exactly do you propose redistributing the country’s wealth? You also have to have a pension system that doesn’t just perpetuate the same poverty people suffer during their working years. I’m not saying anything new here. This isn’t my invention. Today, the countries that are best able to redistribute wealth aren’t the ones that have gone out of their way to follow a neo-liberal model. The Northern European countries, Australia, New Zealand, Australia – the countries that have the top distribution levels – have all applied policies where the state has a big role to play in carrying out distribution. That obviously involves leaving lots of space for private initiative, and with a strong emphasis on developing small and medium-sized companies, which create the most jobs. They also put a lot of energy into developing quality education systems, not just focusing on quantity. (Ricardo) Lagos said recently that we have 600,000 university students. That’s great, but it’s not enough. Higher education is a disaster these days. You have to modify the tax structure. Chile’s tax rates are so low there’s still a lot of room to raise them. Sweden, which doesn’t seem to have any investment problems, has a tax rate that’s between 52 and 54 percent. It’s the same in Norway, Finland, Iceland, Denmark, and so on. In Chile, tax levels for the richest people, and for the biggest companies is absolutely inadequate for the country’s needs… And the private copper companies need to pay a true royalty. The three percent they pay now is just a joke. I think that after that 3 percent went into effect, (the company owners) must have toasted their pisco sours, because it’s just a joke… There you have some ideas that would be absolutely effective toward improving wealth distribution. None involve expropriating companies, hanging bankers, kicking people out of the country. Nothing like that. But we are talking about a shift in focus. We can’t continue to have a “let it be” state, a state that sits on the sidelines letting the market operate as it will. From the point of view of the needs of the people, that kind of state has proven itself a disaster. ST: The prologue of your book was written by Bolivian President Evo Morales, who comes across in the text as a bit of an environmentalist. Are those ideas you share? ST: Can you comment on the job the current Chilean administration is doing in terms of the environment? We have environmental laws, requisite environmental impact studies, what have you. But they still authorized Pascua Lama. And it’s no secret to anybody that Pascua Lama means the complete destruction of two glaciers that are unique in all the world and that in addition, represent the only water source for an entire Chilean desert province. CELCO time and time again shows it has no concern whatsoever for the environment. Not just in Valdivia, where thousands of (black-necked) swans died. It’s more than that. The pollution of deep wells that end up being used by the region’s indigenous people. Later the Mataquito River. And in every one of those situations, there’s an investigation but ultimately, nothing happens. You can travel Chile from Arica to Punta Arenas and you’ll discover that in every city and rural area, economic powers are given permission to run roughshod over the environment. There’s an incestuous relationship between the big capital holders and the state, all to the detriment of the environment. There is a solution. There’s definitely a way to solve this without reducing the country’s production levels. You need to create an autonomous body, an environmental ombudsmen, that’s independent of the government and has the power to establish norms, regulate and levy fines. Having an Environment Ministry isn’t enough, because it’s still part of any current administration. It’s subject, therefore, to pressures from the Finance Ministry, which is what really decides to accept certain projects even if they harm they environment. To summarize, my evaluation of this government is that it’s doing a disastrous job in terms of the environment. It’s putting the future of Chile at risk. I didn’t even mention the Aysén (hydroelectric dam) issue. The problem with Aysén isn’t just that they’re going to put up some electricity towers that will make the landscape uglier. The problem is that they’re destroying an entire habitat and creating irreversible environmental damage. ST: The Aysén Project, if approved by the government, would generate some 2,750 MW of electricity. Doesn’t Chile need that energy? From a social point of view, it’s better to have a system that involves small, semi-autonomous generating plants. I have no doubt that we need to produce energy. Of course we do. But we should do so with semi-autonomous, smaller, localized generators… Another thing is that we can’t depend on just one energy source. Depending on Argentine natural gas was a mistake. There needs to be a diversified energy matrix… Chile is a country that has how many, 5,000 kilometers of coastline? And where’s the development in wind energy? The president promised that by the end of her term 15 percent of energy generation in Chile would come from alternative sources. We’re not even close to that. Not even close. We’re not even at one percent. Nothing’s been done. ST: Can you talk a bit about where the Chilean left stands these days? Generally speaking, people tend not to want the right in power. And so the social democrats come up with what’s truly a type of blackmail. They say, “if you don’t want the right, then you have to vote for us. We’re the ones that’ll save you.” The people then vote for the social democrats, who end up governing on behalf of the political right, upholding their model but with slight touch ups. And hundreds of millions of people live with this permanent system of blackmail, which is called the “lesser of two evils.” It’s what exists in Italy with (Romano) Prodi, in Chile, in Peru with Alan (Garcia)… There’s another part of the Latin American left that could be referred to as “no longer an option.” With the fall of the real socialist systems, the fall of the Berlin wall, the fall of the Soviet Union – that (traditional) left is no longer an option. That project, that dream is no longer possible. That’s meant that important sectors of the Latin American left have ended up accepting the leadership of the social democrats. They’ve decided the best they can do is exert a slight influence… But at the same time, I’ve seen in Latin America a resurgence, an awakening of people who are seeking new paths. They can’t be classified as the traditional left. It has more to do with new generations, or indigenous peoples, or women. They’re humanist movements. Not necessarily part of my Humanist Party, but humanist movements nevertheless. There are the Zapatistas, for example. In some countries they’ve even formed governments – (Ecuador’s Rafael) Correa, Evo, (Venezuela’s Hugo) Chavez. They’re not of the traditional left. Is Evo a Marxist? No, that’s ridiculous. Is Chavez a Marxist? Not at all. European intellectuals try to classify them as a “New Left,” but that’s not really accurate either. Those government are very interesting, though all very different from one another. Different, but with certain things in common: an emphasis on Latin American integration, the recovery of natural resources and formation of constituent assemblies. This is all relevant in Chile as well. In Chile there’s a group in government that calls itself the left… although they don’t have much to do with the left. They maintain a neoliberal, or semi-neoliberal model. Also there’s a historic, “no longer possible,” left. So what they do is try to influence the Concertación governments a little here, a little there, but with the assumption that they won’t ever be the government. And finally there are small groups that are looking to build something. It seems to me that’s the situation. ST: Speaking of the governments of Correa, Chavez and Morales, do you think those leaders have made any mistakes that could serve as lessons for Chile? In the case of Correa, I really can’t say anything yet. He’s very new. He’s just getting starting and I hope things go well for him. In the case of Evo, I think that yes he has made mistakes, but because of inexperience. He himself admits that. I think he’s unnecessarily fallen into a few traps. He’s allowed himself to be sucked into arguments that the opposition initiates. Things he should have avoided so as to move ahead with the really important issues…I think in the very beginning he got overly excited, going around firing off against everyone, wanting to condemn all different sectors: the Church, the education system, the rightist business world. I think he needs to be more focused, which he’s now doing. But yes, there were some mistakes at the beginning. But on the other hand, look at what Evo’s accomplished. Look how in his first year he fulfilled his campaign promises, something that’s very unusual. He nationalized the gas. He formed a constituent assembly. He developed a community justice system, gave rights back to indigenous peoples, carried out an agrarian reform. All in his first year. It’s all more the impressive when you consider that here in Chile we have a president whose program initiatives have turned out to be paper airplanes. ST: Do you plan to run in the next election? |