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Caribbean-Latin America
Bolivia Plans to Nationalize More Sectors
2006-05-03
LA PAZ, Bolivia (AP) - Bolivia's leftist government said Tuesday it would extend control over mining, forestry and other sectors of the economy after President Evo Morales nationalized the country's huge natural gas industry. Foreign governments warned relations could be damaged.

Soldiers were posted at 56 gas installations around the country a day after Morales issued a decree that analysts say could drive petroleum companies from South America's poorest nation and isolate Bolivia from important allies like Brazil and Spain. "We're not expelling any company, but they will not earn much - not like before," Morales told Venezuela's Telesur on Tuesday. "We hope they'll remain partners and if they don't respect these laws, we'll make them respect them with political force."
That's going to encourage the companies to stay.
The move solidifies Morales' role alongside Venezuela's Hugo Chavez and Cuba's Fidel Castro in Latin America's new axis of communist socialist-inclined leaders united against "capitalist, imperialist" U.S. influence.

Morales said Monday that the gas decree "was just the beginning, because tomorrow it will be the mines, the forest resources and the land." Morales' planning minister earlier this month spoke of plans for "drastic reforms" of mining laws.

On Tuesday, Vice President Alvaro Garcia Linera said mining companies could face higher taxes and royalty payments and that the government will intensify enforcement of existing laws to break up big underdeveloped land holdings, apparently to turn them over to the poor.
They'll be racing to catch Zim-bob-we by this time next year.
In Santa Cruz, Bolivia's petroleum hub and the country's financial center, business leaders called for a one-day general strike Thursday to protest the nationalization plan. The use of the military "was an excessive measure and a media show that sends negative signals to the international community," said Gabriel Dabdoub, who heads the Santa Cruz Chamber of Commerce and Industry.
Festivities begin Thursday!
Posted by:Steve White

#17  Actually, zero may be optimistic - Did you account for capital flight or repatriation?
Posted by: Whong Whoting4646   2006-05-03 23:28  

#16  Sorry - DFI = Direct Foreign Investment
Posted by: DMFD   2006-05-03 23:16  

#15  From the Bolivian American chamber of commerce web site:

DFI has grown from US$ 169 million in 1992, when it represented 45% of private investment and 18.4% of total investment in Bolivia, to reach a figure nearing US$ 1,000 million in 1999.

And approaching ZERO in 2007.
Posted by: DMFD   2006-05-03 23:16  

#14  Striving for that Mugabe moment!
Posted by: 3dc   2006-05-03 16:18  

#13  They are probably looking at our AMTRAC system as an example.
Posted by: Besoeker   2006-05-03 11:54  

#12  headed back for the bad old days
seems to be a widespread theme or meme.
Whether it's 1892, 1492 or 1292, a drive backward seems to be in effect.
Posted by: jim#6   2006-05-03 11:34  

#11  Looks like trouble for the US and Columbia. South America is headed back for the bad old days when everybody fights everyone else. South American don't play by Western rules when they fight. At one time Paraguay was fighting Argentina, Brazil, and Uraguay and suffered, depending on whose history you believe, 50% to 90% of its population.
Posted by: RWV   2006-05-03 11:22  

#10  Source of Funding for American Aid to Bolivia
The Administration has requested more than $150 million in assistance for Bolivia in Fiscal Year 2004.
In Fiscal Year 2003, the U.S. provided Bolivia with approximately $170 million in assistance

That's about 5% of the government's budget. Cut them off. Let's see how fast Morales destroys the mining and agricultural sectors, or how much gas they can export through hostile Chile and Peru.
Posted by: ed   2006-05-03 10:35  

#9  As the Myrmicologist observed:
"Wonderful theory. Wrong species."
Posted by: mojo   2006-05-03 10:19  

#8  lol, DB! Gotta wonder where you went to school to see a Prof. spouting such stuff as that!
Posted by: BA   2006-05-03 09:59  

#7  Isn't this like the 20th time that some country is going to try to get socialism to work?

I still remember a cranky old prof I had who memorably asked us, "If the East Germans couldn't get it to work, who the hell could?"
Posted by: Desert Blondie   2006-05-03 09:54  

#6  JFM: I could mention that Brazil is getting screwed over on this scheme too.

You know, Brazil, the guys who sent Chavez oil when PDVSA was on strike and he didn't have any of his own under production?
Posted by: Abdominal Snowman   2006-05-03 09:51  

#5  It worked so well for Chavez too. Really. That is why his oil system is crumbling and he is going to western countries to hire specialists to keep total failure away. Keep it up Morales.
Posted by: DarthVader   2006-05-03 07:54  

#4  Morales is nationalizing oil and gas wells who are basically in the hands of a Spanish company.. quite unconvenient for his Friend Zapatero.

Also that oil company is backing a psrt of a dirty scheme (not because it is Zapatero but because there have been irregular things during all the operation) the aimed at putting a Spoanish electric company in the hands of a company controlled by friends of Zapatero and by a bank who has "forgotten" to ask the socialist party to refund its debts. Now the oil company will be starved of cash for supporting Zapatero's bright scheme.... All due to Zapatero's friend Morales...
Posted by: JFM   2006-05-03 06:57  

#3  Morales is from the ranks of cocaine growers,
He could have every other industry in his country fail and still make oodles out of coke.
Posted by: 3dc   2006-05-03 04:10  

#2  Socialism 100 million dead and counting. All I can say is good luck hanging out with those 2 success stories Castro and Chavez.

Even Brazil isn't that looney.
Posted by: SPoD   2006-05-03 03:47  

#1  Popcorn...get yer popcorn here! Piping hot...hey bud - you got something smaller? I just started...
Posted by: Rex Mundi   2006-05-03 02:40  

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