Imperial Valley Press

Nicaragua’s economy suffering

- BY CHRISTOPHE­R SHERMAN AND ALFREDO ZUNIGA

LEON, Nicaragua — Two days after protests began in Nicaragua in April, a foreign auto components company was meeting at a hotel in the city of Leon when smoke from a burning university building just a block away billowed above the hotel’s colonnaded courtyard.

The visitors quickly cut short their event and began changing their travel plans to exit Nicaragua. Within three months, the El Convento hotel itself was forced to close for lack of business, as a sister hotel in the same city had in June.

Nicaragua’s economy has been devastated by the nearly five months of unrest sparked by cuts to social security benefits that quickly evolved into calls for President Daniel Ortega to step down.

In June, the country’s economic activity was down 12.1 percent compared to a year earlier, according to the central bank. Economists estimate 200,000 jobs have been shed, including as many as 70,000 in the tourism sector, which has become Nicaragua’s top source of foreign currency in the past two years.

Revenue at hotels and restaurant­s plunged 45 percent in June compared to 2017, according to Nicaragua’s central bank. Similarly, constructi­on suffered a 35 percent drop and retail 27 percent. Some $900 million in deposits fled Nicaragua’s banks. They responded by tightening their lending to preserve liquidity, thus also contribute­d to the economic slowdown.

Nicaraguan Union of Agricultur­al Producers says more than 12,000 acres of private land have been occupied by government supporters in what business leaders have called confiscati­ons in revenge for their support of the protesters.

The producers say 91 percent of the land occupied by squatters was used for farming and livestock.

Victor Hugo Sevilla, the general manager of both Leon hotels, continues checking email, but said “I haven’t gotten any requests from foreigners for reservatio­ns. We have received five, maybe eight, rate inquiries from domestic (travelers), but no firm reservatio­ns.”

Leon, Nicaragua’s second-largest city, was among the places where protests and roadblocks were most intense. From the beginning, those protests were met with violence from riot police and civilian government supporters. In July, they violently cleared the roadblocks and ran protesting students off occupied university campuses.

More than 300 people have been killed in the unrest, according to human rights groups. The government calls the protesters “terrorists” and says it defeated an attempt to drive Ortega from office that was sponsored by the U.S. government and domestic opposition, including some in the private sector.

Ortega conceded this month that the roadblocks and unrest have cost the country jobs. In an interview with Spanish news agency EFE, he said domestic tourism was starting to return, but “where there has been more of a problem is in attracting internatio­nal tourism, because this situation tends to repel the tourists.”

A major factor has been that the countries that send Nicaragua’s big-spending foreign tourists, including the U.S., Canada, Spain and England, issued travel warnings urging their citizens to avoid travel to Nicaragua.

Major airlines such as American and United cut their flights to Managua from three per day to one. Spirit, Delta and other carriers trimmed their flights as well, said Jose Adan Aguerri, president of the Superior Council for Private Enterprise.

The council, which is Nicaragua’s main business chamber, joined the call for a national strike Sept. 7. The Civic Alliance, formed to represent a broad swath of Nicaraguan society in a stalled dialogue with the government, said the strike aimed to push the government back to dialogue and to protest the arrest of alliance members and other political prisoners.

The country’s primary tourist destinatio­ns like the colonial gem Granada and the Pacific coast surfer paradise San Juan del Sur began feeling the consequenc­es of the unrest almost immediatel­y. Hotels and restaurant­s cut back hours, then days and eventually closed completely.

For years, Ortega enjoyed a relatively stable relationsh­ip with private business. Since returning to power in 2007, the one-time Marxist rebel commander had softened his views and largely left Nicaragua’s private sector to do what it wanted.

The relationsh­ip was criticized by some as a tacit agreement to keep the country’s business elites out of politics. In an interview in July with Venezuela’s Telesur network, Ortega said his understand­ing with Nicaragua’s private sector had been strictly economic and not political.

In April, however, the country’s business interests, caught off guard by the social security system changes, quickly joined the opposition. As the social and political crisis deepened, the private sector became increasing­ly outspoken in calling for Ortega to move up elections.

Mario Arana, director of the Nicaragua Associatio­n of Producers and Exporters and a former head of the central bank, said the private sector decided to get more involved when student protesters were killed.

“When there was an overreacti­on here to a civil, peaceful protest by the students, where people began to lose their lives, society suffered a social explosion where the private sector aligned with the people,” he said. “The private sector is committed to trying to find a negotiated exit from the crisis.”

 ??  ?? The colonial downtown of the city of Granada and its cathedral looks forlorn and empty for lack of tourists, in Nicaragua, on Monday. Nicaragua’s economy has been devastated by the nearly five months of unrest sparked by cuts to social security benefits that quickly evolved into calls for President Daniel Ortega to step down. AP PHOTO/ALFREDO ZUNIGA
The colonial downtown of the city of Granada and its cathedral looks forlorn and empty for lack of tourists, in Nicaragua, on Monday. Nicaragua’s economy has been devastated by the nearly five months of unrest sparked by cuts to social security benefits that quickly evolved into calls for President Daniel Ortega to step down. AP PHOTO/ALFREDO ZUNIGA

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