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| Frequently
Asked Questions about the Plan Puebla Panama
Written by CIEPAC, Chiapas, Mexico, ciepac(@)laneta.apc.org
, http://www.ciepac.org/
October 21, 2002 http://www.zmag.org/chiapas1/index.htm
(click here to view PDF format)
1.
Is there a one or two sentence summary of what the PPP is?
On one level the Plan Puebla Panama is very easy to understand.
It is a vast infrastructure construction project, designed
to please big business, that covers 9 states in south-southeast
Mexico and the 7 Central American republics.
2.
Who is pushing the PPP the hardest?
Ostensibly the answer is Mexico, since the PPP was supposedly
conceived by the present Fox administration, but its antecedents
lie in plans and projects previously designed by the World
Bank and the Inter-American Development Bank for Mexico and
Central America. After Fox was inaugurated in December 2000,
he put a number of the construction projects in Mexico and
Central America into a single PPP package. Fox presented the
package to the Central American presidents in a summit meeting
in El Salvador on June 15, 2001, which was subsequently approved.
3. Does the PPP have anything to do with NAFTA (North
American Free Trade Agreement)?
NAFTA is a 1994 trade agreement that sets the rules for trade
among nations, in this case between Mexico, Canada and the
US. Now, the US seeks to expand the same rules to all 34 countries
in North, Central and South America, plus the Caribbean nations
(except Cuba), in a trade agreement known as the FTAA (Free
Trade Area of the Americas).
The
FTAA, we might add, has a geopolitical dimension of great
importance to the United States. It would create a single
trading block, from the Yukon to the Patagonia, under US hegemony,
that will rival the European and Asian blocks. FTAA carves
out the Western Hemisphere for the United States, at least
in terms of trade.
So
the trade agreements (NAFTA and FTAA) are a necessary prerequisite
for the proper investment climate that corporations are looking
for. The PPP goes a step further by channeling billions of
state funds to develop needed infrastructure to further interest
corporations.
4.
How does the PPP tie into other plans?
The PPP ties in with a similar infrastructure project in South
America called IIRSA (South America Regional Infrastructure
Integration Initiative). The PPP and IIRSA seek to create
basic infrastructure, or improve that which exists, in an
effort to entice large corporations into investing in the
area. The improvements in infrastructure would essentially
boost corporate profits by easing, for example, the movement
of goods in and out of the region, by improving roads. Yet
the cost of infrastructure projects would be borne to a large
degree by the people of the countries involved, either through
direct taxpayer payments, or through loans taken out by participating
countries that will eventually be repaid through taxpayer
contributions.
5.
Why is the PPP of importance to people who live outside the
Mexico-Central American region? Why should it be of particular
interest to Americans?
Because mostly American MNC interests will be benefited. The
PPP will make it easier for large multinational corporations
(MNCs) to invest in a region that is rich in oil, mineral
deposits, timber, tourism sites. It is one of the most biologically
diverse areas in the world, making it of interest to pharmaceutical,
seed, and genetic-research firms. It is also strategic for
the areas geography since it is the narrowest part of the
Americas, making it a natural corridor for east-west trade.
6.
But wait. You say MNCs will be interested, but MNCs come in
all shape and sizes. The PPP wouldn’t benefit just American
MNCs, would it?
Quite right. Investment capital from throughout the world
might find it profitable to invest in the PPP area, but for
a number of reasons American companies are sure to be the
major beneficiaries. Here’s why. For one, it is in the
US historical backyard, where the US has had a major say in
how things are run since the 19th century, to favor its own
political and corporate interests. As US Secretary of State
Colin Powell has said with startling frankness, “Our
objective with the FTAA is to assure for American corporations
control of a territory that runs from the North Pole to the
Antarctica, free access, without any hindrance or difficulty
for our products, services, technology and capital through
the hemisphere”(2). Security strategists have taken
renewed interest in Mexico and Central America since the September
11 attacks. George W. Bush proposed a new free-trade agreement
with the Central American republics in January 2002. President
Bush recently won “fast-track” negotiating authority
from Congress.
All
of this means that American MNCs are the most closely linked
to this region.
7.
Why has this particular area been so designated? Why link
the south-southeast of Mexico to Central America?
The official line has to do with promoting foreign investment
in an area which, although rich in natural resources, has
some of the highest poverty in the Americas. The Fox administration,
at the urging of the IDB and the World Bank, touted the Plan
Puebla Panama as a way of addressing the region’s poverty
in a supposed integration manner. For neoliberal politicians
and strategists, poverty must be addressed, but not necessarily
resolved (which would entail looking at why people are poor
in the first place). Their way of addressing poverty is through
job creation that hopefully will come with MNC investment,
once large companies are enticed into the PPP area.
8.
Well, if the PPP area is so rich in resources and opportunities,
why haven’t MNCs been chomping at the bit to get in
and invest?
MNCs are anxious to exploit opportunities worldwide that will
increase profits, but precisely because there is competition
throughout the world for investment capital, MNCs can be choosy.
They want things their way, and that means having basic infrastructure
constraints resolved, but obviously at government (i.e., taxpayers)
expense. For example, why put factories in an area where there
is a shortage of reliable sources of energy? If roads are
poor, how are inputs and outputs to make their way into and
out of factories? If large tracts of land are necessary for
monoculture export crops, have the poor farmers been moved
out, or neutralized by some sort of deal cut by the government?
Same goes for harvesting interesting plants and microorganisms
in areas rich in biodiversity. Have the indigenous people
been removed or neutralized, thus facilitating MNC access
without lengthy delays and (potentially embarrassing) hassles?
The
MNCs want these aspects addressed before investing a dime.
This is on top of the usual government giveaways: free land
on which to build factories, free utilities and tax holidays
for decades, government-financed training of the workforce,
and other perks.
9.
What specifically, then, is the PPP going to do to entice
MNC capital to sit up and take notice?
One of the major components of the PPP is highway construction.
Two major corridors are to be built, running roughly from
the Texas-Mexico border, around the Gulf of Mexico, to the
Yucatan peninsula, with spurs leading into Belize, Guatemala
and into Honduras. The other is a Pacific coast route that
will run from Mexico City, parallel the Pacific into Guatemala,
through Central America into Panama.
Another
major component in the works is dam construction. A total
of 25 dams is planned for the region that will generate the
energy needed for greater industrialization of the PPP area
and supply the US market. This aspect harbors the greatest
threat for indigenous people in the area, due to the flooding
of thousands of acres of presently-inhabited land, and destruction
of archeological sites, old-growth forests, indigenous communities
and even cities. Between two to five dams are on the drawing
board for the Usumacinta River that divides Mexico and Guatemala.
Also,
if we look at a map of the PPP region, we see it is the narrowest
point of the Americas. Much infrastructure is to be built
linking the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific. A ‘land bridge’
in the Isthmus of Tehuantepec, at Mexico’s narrowest
point, is under construction, which would assure speedy passage
of containerized goods for burgeoning east-west trade.
10.
What are the major components of the PPP?
There are eight components. When formally presented by PPP
officials, the components are usually given in the following
order: 1. Sustainable development 2. Human development 3.
Prevention and mitigation of natural disasters 4. Tourism
promotion 5. Facilitation of trade 6. Highway integration
7. Energy interconnection 8. Integration of telecommunication
services
The
last four, however, are where the emphasis is being placed;
in other words the infrastructure needed to entice the multinational
corporations into investing in the PPP area. The greatest
funding is for construction or upgrading highways, followed
by energy interconnection and facilitation of trade.
These
eight components each have separate ‘mega-projects’
some 28 in total
11.
Just how much money is behind the PPP and where is it coming
from?
The PPP is currently budgeted at US$10 billion, but some sources
place the figure at US$25 billion. Principal lenders of this
amount are the IDB, the World Bank, European Union, the Andean
Development Corporation (CAF), the Central American Integration
Bank (BCIE), and development agencies of the US, Japan, Spain
and other countries. Some PPP countries will use taxpayer
funds to create or improve PPP infrastructure. For example,
Mexico has budgeted US$550 million for 16 PPP projects and
studies in 2002 (down from the original US$742 million, due
to budget cuts). Again, most of the money has to do with highway
construction, on the order of 84%.
Some
private companies have begun to underwrite certain infrastructure
costs, but with the intent of getting in on the action early
in order to corner the market. One example is found within
the energy interconnection component. This plan will link
the energy grids of Mexico and Central America, and is slated
to cost US$405 million. The Spanish energy company ENDESA
is putting in US$45.8 million and in so doing becomes a co-owner
of the network.
12.
How will the PPP affect development?
Depends how you define development. The PPP is a public-works
scheme whose intent is to draw foreign investment into the
region. Consequently the PPP is designed to please big business
interests. While some of the components (see list in question
10) purportedly address the poverty in the region, these are
the least-developed and least-funded components. Neoliberal
economists might argue that the PPP covers ‘social development’
insofar as they posit that private investment will create
jobs and thus eradicate poverty.
But
this is an absurd simplification. Neither public nor private
investment automatically leads to higher living standards
for the poor, unless steps have been taken beforehand to eliminate
the structural injustices that exist in the economic, political,
social and cultural spheres. In fact, investment often deepens
poverty, as has been the case during the last 20 years of
neoliberal policies, precisely because existing injustices
have not been eliminated. Thus the rich and powerful benefit
more from investments.
In
fact no pro-poor policies are contemplated for the PPP that
would address the roots of structural poverty. The plans and
projects are designed in collaboration with and for big business,
not for the 65 million people who live in the PPP area, the
vast majority of whom are in poverty (75% living with less
than US$2 a day).
Many
activists are against the PPP for a number of reasons, but
among the most important is the exploitation of natural resources
for corporate profit, with only token consideration, or not
at all, for the people who will be directly affected by the
projects carried out. The PPP area has on the order of a hundred
distinct ethnic groups, the majority of whom have not heard
of the PPP. At times those consulted by the government and/or
the banks have been brought into the fold with vague promises
of particular works and benefits for their groups.
13.
What about the environmental aspects of the PPP?
Another reason activists have opposed the PPP is that it is
environmentally unsound. One of the principal components is
the ‘Meso-American Biological Corridor’, one of
the World Bank’s pet projects for years, whose intent
is to link various biologically rich and diverse patches of
territory throughout the PPP region. Although defended on
ecological arguments regarding the need to ensure gene pools
and protect territory for diverse animals and plants, the
corridors will be opened up for exploitation by pharmaceutical
and seed companies, seeking to patent new biological matter.
One of the major bioengineering and seed companies in the
world, Pulsar, already has signed agreements with Conservation
International to work jointly in the Lacandon jungle in Chiapas.
CI is a supposed environmental NGO, whose 27-member board
of directors harbors CEOs from giant corporations such as
Navigation Technologies Corporation, Eagle River Inc. (a telecom
holding), Hyatt Development Corporation, First Philippine
Holding Corporation.
When
one begins to see the multiple business connections and interests,
it is difficult to avoid concluding that the PPP is more about
energy and resource extraction than it is about development.
14.
But surely there will be some positive ‘spill-over’
effects of this investment and economic activity for the poor
of the region.
It’s hard to see what they might be. If we keep in mind
that this is a plan for big business, then it is easy to understand
that all its aspects are geared to please corporate interests,
not to benefit the poor majority. A US$10 billion plan to
benefit the poor majority would look very different, with
emphasis placed on building schools, rural clinics, feeder
roads to get agricultural goods to market, rather than toll
highways, hydroelectric dams, etc.
But
if we search for ‘spill-over’ effects, one of
the highly-touted benefits that the PPP will bring is, supposedly,
jobs for the poor. Not just any jobs, but maquiladora jobs.
Maquiladoras are the sweat-shops that have operated on Mexico’s
northern border since 1966. Most of them are assembly plants
that bring in parts from other countries and use cheap labor
to make finished products.
Health
and safety requirements, and labor rights, such as the freedom
of workers to organize, are laxly enforced on the maquiladoras,
and sometimes not at all. Nor do maquiladoras comply with
other requirements, such as using locally-made goods as inputs,
or transferring technology to the host country. Maquiladoras
de-link production from the host country’s needs, and
respond exclusively to the needs of the MNCs that set them
up.
It
would be unfair to deny that maquiladoras have provided employment
to over a million people, just on Mexico’s northern
border. But apart from the (low) wages they pay, their benefits
have been practically nil for the rest of the economy. In
spite of certain dynamism (which, in fact, has fallen in the
past two years), the maquiladoras’ separation from the
rest of the economy makes it virtually impossible for other
sectors of the economy to benefit.
Yet
this is the economic model that the PPP seeks to encourage
in Mexico and Central America. The improved infrastructure
that the PPP would bring, plus the low wages paid in south
Mexico and Central America, would entice MNCs to set up maquiladoras
that, in turn, would absorb, in theory, some of the peasants
that are sure to be expelled from their land due to certain
PPP projects such as dams.
15.
Are there alternatives to these corporate-led plans?
Yes. For example the Hemispheric Social Alliance, a group
of civil organizations from throughout the Americas, has drawn
up a detailed alternative proposal to the free trade agreements
and the rules of the game that the rich and powerful would
impose on us through the FTAA. The proposal has received support
from hundreds of civil and social organizations throughout
the Americas. The HAS’s documents are available on their
web page www.asc-hsa.org or through organizations such as
Common Frontiers in Canada, www.web.ca/comfront and Alliance
for Responsible Trade in the United States, www.art-us.org
.
As
Global Exchange has written,
“Policy makers and pundits often try to make it seem
that corporate globalization is a naturally occurring phenomenon.
Nothing could be farther from the truth. In fact, the current
economic processes known as globalization have been defined
and driven by a very small number of corporations. Citizens
around the world are creating an alternative: grassroots globalization
a peoples globalization that puts economic, social and political
justice at the center of trade and investment. Citizens groups
from across the Western Hemisphere have written an alternative
Agreement for the Americas that offers guidelines for building
this socially responsible and environmentally sustainable
commerce. (www.globalexchange.org )
16.
What are people doing locally to protest the PPP?
In a year and a half there have been three regional encounters
on the PPP that have brought activists together from Mexico,
Central America and other parts of the world. These events
have been held in Chiapas, Mexico (March 2001), Guatemala
(November 2001), and Nicaragua (July 2002). A fourth such
encounter is scheduled for Honduras in March 2003. Attendance
at the events has grown from over 300 participants in Chiapas
to over 1,200 in Nicaragua, representing over 400 organizations.
Participants
at the PPP encounters have sounded a resolute NO! to the PPP.
Activists are coordinating education and protest activities
on a national level, and, in Nicaragua, agreed to a region-wide
day of protest on October 12, 2002. The protests will vary
from country to country, but may include sit-ins at border
crossings, protest marches at PPP infrastructure works, demonstrations
at the Inter-American Development Bank and World Bank offices
in each country, etc.
17.
What can I do to help?
Find out more about the PPP and then talk about it to your
organization, community or neighborhood group. Get training
so as to give talks. There are organizations who can help
you to do this. Talk to groups about the PPP’s links
to the wider FTAA negotiations now underway. Tell people that
there are alternatives to corporate globalization, and that
different options have been proposed by the Hemispheric Social
Alliance. Get the word out that people organizing together
have achieved victories against corporate globalization throughout
the world, and that activists, organizers, and common citizens
from the PPP have met on three occasions in the past year
and a half to say NO! to the PPP. And that they need your
solidarity and participation. Find out how you and your group
can protest the PPP on October 12, or join the activities
of other groups. Continue to encourage grassroots globalization.
Notes
within the text: (1) One of the most complete books is a series
of essays published as “Mesoamerica, los rios profundos:
Alternativas plebeyas al Plan Puebla-Panama” (published
by Instituto Maya, Armando Bartra, Coordinator, Mexico City,
2001). We know of no book yet in English on the subject. (2)
Osvaldo Leon, “Movilizacion continental contra el ALCA”,
January 24, 2002, in ALAI (Agencia Latinoamericana de Informacion),
http://alainet.org/docs/1698.html (3) The figure for Mexico
during 1994-1998 is 85.1%, according to a Economic Commission
for Latin America and the Caribbean (UN) study by Enrique
Dussel Peters, “El Tratado de Libre Comercio de Norteamerica
y el desempeno de la economÌa en Mèxico”
(Mexico City, 2000), ref. LC/MEX/L.431, p. 20. Miguel Pickard
The
Center for Economic and Political Investigations of Community
Action, A.C. CIEPAC, CIEPAC is a member of the Movement for
Democracy and Life (MDV) of Chiapas, the Mexican Network of
Action Against Free Trade (RMALC) www.rmalc.org.mx, Convergence
of Movements of the Peoples of the Americas (COMPA ) www.sitiocompa.org,
Network for Peace in Chiapas, Week for Biological and Cultural
Diversity www.laneta.apc.org/biodiversidad, the International
Forum "The People Before Globalization", Alternatives
to the PPP http://usuarios.tripod.es/xelaju/xela.htm, and
of the Mexican Alliance for Self-Determination (AMAP) that
is the Mexican network against the Puebla Panama Plan. CIEPAC
is a member of the Board of Directors of the Center for Economic
Justice http://www.econjustice.net and the Ecumenical Program
on Central America and the Caribbean (EPICA) http://www.epica.org.
To
join the PPP informational listserve e-mail noppporganizing(@)mutualaid.org
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