




Enter key words or concepts
then select the 'search' button to search the Socialist Action web site


|
Socialist Action /September 2002

Uruguay hit by Economic Crisis
Uruguay, formerly known as the Switzerland of Latin America, seems to
be plunging into a deep social and political crisis parallel to that of
its larger neighbor Argentina. On Aug. 25, Uruguayan independence day, according
to the Mexico City daily La Jornada, 100,000 marched in Montevideo
to protest the government's economic austerity policy and capitulation to
the demands of imperialist finance.
The action was called by the Uruguayan union federation, the PIT/ CNT,
along with an organization representing small and medium businesses. A union
representative, Jose Suarez, told the crowd that since the government decided
to allow the local currency to float on June 20, workers had lost 25 to
30 percent of their purchasing power. The currency has lost 50 percent of
its value. But despite the cheaper exchange rate, since the beginning of
the year, exports have fallen by 40 percent.
On July 30, the government declared a bank holiday to try to stop the
drain on the banking reserves. Since January, according to a report in the
Aug. 7 issue of Le Monde, the country's currency reserves have shrunk
by 80 percent, and bank deposits by 45 percent. According to the PIT/CNT,
the jobless now number 250,000 in a country whose total population is only
3.3 million, and 50 percent of new babies are born into families living
below the poverty level.
The slide into economic disaster provoked a general strike on Aug. 7
that totally closed down the banks, the government offices, and education.
In its Aug. 13 issue, La Jornada reported that students at the national
university had started an unlimited strike against the government's neoliberal
policy and its acceptance of the IMF demand for slashing public spending
and liquidating public services.
The eruption of economic crises in Uruguay and Brazil has forced the
United States to offer some loans, despite its announcement that it would
do nothing to bail out the Argentine economy. In the case of Uruguay, the
U.S. loan amounted to $1.5 billion. But the loan was not sufficient nor
intended to solve Uruguay's economic difficulties. It was designed only
to facilitate the mechanism of austerity, to prevent an uncontrolled collapse
of the banking system. -G.F.
Socialist Action /September 2002 |