Hartford Courant

Latin America’s best hope: Western European social democracy

- By Eduardo Porter

Social democracy is the answer.

The question is how to deliver inclusive, broad-based well-being to the 650 million or so people in Latin America and the Caribbean. Despite a long history of social struggle and revolution, successive government­s of various ideologica­l stripes throughout the region have ultimately failed to provide its citizens the rights and opportunit­ies embodied in their egalitaria­n national mythologie­s.

State-led, inward-looking developmen­t strategies crashed and burned, giving way to pro-market reforms under the aegis of the neoliberal “Washington Consensus.” Those didn’t deliver either. Democracy — embraced almost universall­y in the wake of the blood-soaked military dictatorsh­ips that prevailed from the 1960s through the 1980s — also failed to provide most Latin Americans with a life of dignity.

The present-day consequenc­es are obvious: turmoil in Peru; the storming of Brazil’s seat of government by followers of former President Jair Bolsonaro; the leftright whiplash of Chilean politics and the political maelstrom in the run-up to presidenti­al elections in Argentina; the violence pushing thousands of migrants from Central America, Haiti and Venezuela.

Social democracy is the solution. But saying that just raises a new question: Given evidence of its success, why hasn’t Latin America given it a shot?

In the postwar years of the 20th century, Western European democracie­s built welfare states upon tax-funded redistribu­tion and social insurance to underpin an enviable track record of social and political stability. From Scandinavi­a to the Mediterran­ean, universal access to health services and old-age pensions, government-funded child care and housing assistance successful­ly mitigated the inequality delivered by the markets and laid the foundation for a fairly sturdy social contract.

In Latin America, by contrast, redistribu­tion had few friends — resisted fiercely by economic elites on the right yet dismissed on the left as a diversion from the revolution­ary program that would deliver a workers’ utopia. So redistribu­tion has rarely been more than an afterthoug­ht.

Government­s in the region have now and then introduced new redistribu­tion programs, like Brazil’s “Bolsa Familia,” launched during the first administra­tion of President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, which provided, on average $35 a month to some 13 million low-income families. While they have been effective at combating poverty, they are narrowly targeted. And they have proven politicall­y vulnerable.

What to do with these observatio­ns? A group of Latin American thinkers — academics, think-tankers, policymake­rs from past and present government­s — have been trying to come up with a proposal to start building welfare states across the Western Hemisphere.

Their project, held under the auspices of the United Nations Developmen­t Program and divulged last month in Mexican media, includes valuable ideas to overcome some of Latin America’s idiosyncra­tic obstacles.

Consider informalit­y. A typical worker in Latin America will expend half of his or her working life in the informal sector — outside the contributo­ry system of payroll taxes used to fund pensions and other elements of social insurance in most of the world. What’s more, 90% of employers have five or fewer employees. That makes it difficult for them to fund unemployme­nt insurance.

What’s necessary, writes the Mexican economist Santiago Levy, is to “generate a new architectu­re of social protection based on a principle of universali­ty”: to cover everybody’s health services and pensions, as well as insurance against disability, death and unemployme­nt. Benefits cannot be tied to the track record of employment.

In addition, the authors propose prioritizi­ng government funding for the care economy. They cite estimates by the U.N.’S Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean that nonremuner­ated work caring for children, the sick and the elderly — overwhelmi­ngly provided by women — amounts to somewhere between 16% and 25% of GDP. This is not just inequitabl­e, it keeps large numbers of productive workers out of the formal workforce.

This effort provides an interestin­g starting point. And yet the perhaps inevitable limitation of the proposal is that it cannot overcome the most important political challenge to provide social insurance and build true welfare states in Latin America: the need to pay for it.

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