tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1560191475956867915.post7843872875952698356..comments2023-06-26T09:00:10.400-04:00Comments on Ramon's Kiva Blog: Soon to be Republica Bolivariana de Ecuador?Ramonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07497282705635098520noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1560191475956867915.post-44071641855359875072007-03-23T17:10:00.000-04:002007-03-23T17:10:00.000-04:00Very interesting stuff.I tried to send you email t...Very interesting stuff.<BR/>I tried to send you email to respond to your comment. Thanks for trying to translate. I can read Spanish. And he got funded! I got a response from Kiva too, saying it slipped through.<BR/><BR/>I asked Kiva if they could put up a comment section so we could translate if someone else hadn't.<BR/><BR/>Can't wait till we get the new Friend of Kiva discussion board!Juliahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16190994136967533456noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1560191475956867915.post-28898610318524352942007-03-22T10:29:00.000-04:002007-03-22T10:29:00.000-04:00The problem of progress in Latin American countrie...The problem of progress in Latin American countries, or any other developing country for that, is that the few success-stories are hardly cookie-cutter examples to be replicated:<BR/>- I'd say, the best relevant example is Chile. It has a flourishing economy and quite a low poverty rate. The problem of Chile is, that the reason for the economic success is because of Pinochet's regime. With all its human rights abuses, it's hardly something you'd want to copy.<BR/>- Costa Rica is another example. The main reason for their economic success is a stable, non-violent, reasonably democratic society, which has managed to avoid internal and external conflicts for many decades now.<BR/>- Although one of Latin America's largest economies, I'd say the place not to copy is probably Mexico. Although having a well sustained growth, the underclass hasn't gotten any richer. This means that either the top class is getting richer (and thereby increasing the gap) or that most of the wealth is taken out of the country.<BR/>- For my favorite LatAm country, Perú, there is hope. Perú has shown a sustained growth of about 7% annually over the last 10 years or so. Though the majority of the growth has been due to the expanding mining industry (run by Western and Asian companies that have taken most of the gains to their non-Peruvian shareholders), one can clearly see a movement of people from the (upper-)lower class to the (lower-)middle class. A campaign to formalize informal businesses has had not only the effect of increasing access to capital to informal businesses (and thereby enabling growth), but it also had the intangible effect of business owners taking their business more serious, becoming more reliable, and therefore more trustworthy as business partners.<BR/><BR/>As for a campaign to give the poor access to basic necessities, like water, education, health care, etc.: I see this done by governments and NGOs alike. In many places, the government is simply not able to provide this in a consistent way. Also, many times (especially in the Andean countries), the need is greatest in the rural areas, which often means inhospitable, high-altitude regions that lack basic infrastructure and that are many hours away from the nearest larger town. Governments are barely able to provide the extra incentives needed for good teachers to go there, and building roads, maintaining health centers, etc. is a very expensive business. Luckily, there are NGOs that are active in these areas. I may do some further investigation and highlight some of them in a separate post.Ramonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07497282705635098520noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1560191475956867915.post-27606755011105279552007-03-22T09:59:00.000-04:002007-03-22T09:59:00.000-04:00Interesting stuff. I too will start paying more a...Interesting stuff. I too will start paying more attention to what is happening there, and I don't have KIVA investments in Ecuador.<BR/><BR/>My uninformed guess is that the governments of Latin America, both military and civil, in general have never given a damn about the poor of their nations, no more than did the king of France before the French Revolution. <BR/><BR/>Is there an existing country that models your hopes for Ecuador? Even in providing the raw basics of the Millennium Development Goals, so that the bottom classes can read and write, have access to clean water, etc? Seems to me there has to be a bottom line provided by the government to provide an atmosphere where people can gain adequate means for life through their own efforts.Christopher Newtonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03040506750850825847noreply@blogger.com