Destructive compasión
By Carlos Alberto Montaner*
Chávez is going to send 40 auxiliary electrical plants to his friend Daniel
Ortega. They are small and inefficient, but they'll help mitigate the
brownouts the Nicaraguans experience. They'll supply energy at prices
subsidized by the Venezuelans. The plants will arrive from Cuba, where they
cease to accomplish a similar mission. With the plants, Chávez will send
crude oil to the Sandinista leader and will surely grant him a generous line
of credit.
For its part, the Cuban government will offer doctors, cataract surgery,
literacy programs and some fellows who teach how to pole-vault or play
baseball. With those elements, Daniel Ortega will begin to expand his base
of popular support. In early January, he will assume power with 60 percent
of the population against him, but he is ready to overcome that
inconvenience by quickly bringing together an electoral clientele that in
the future will repay him -- in votes -- for the goods and services he can
dispense them.
That is how revolutionary populism builds its massive support. It does not
generate the conditions for society to create wealth but instead alleviates
the symptoms of misery by recruiting in the process an army of grateful
stomachs. That's how Perón, Chávez, Castro and that entire family of
demagogues built their power system. They "give" things "free of charge,"
they dispense presents and invert the normal relationship between society
and government. "Free," of course, is a figure of speech, because someone
always has to pay for the good or service delivered. In a well-organized
society, the government lives from society. In the little populist hells,
society lives from government. But because governments are terrible
producers and bad administrators, and because populism drains the available
resources by destroying the sources of capital, the inverted spiral swirls
at dizzying speeds: the more populism, the more poor people, but the more
poor people, the more clients to augment the base of support. That's how the
PRI ruled Mexico for 70 years. When it lost power, half the country was in
miserable shape. Exactly the half of the country that supported the party.
During Chavismo, the number of the Venezuelan poor has increased by 8
percent. The same rate of increase as "hard-line" Chavismo.
In addition, this obscene and counterproductive purchase of consciences is
presented as a superior form of moral superiority. How can any decent person
object to the distribution of food or clothing to the poor? Don't the
Scriptures talk about feeding the hungry and giving water to the thirsty?
Isn't compassion an admirable attitude? It depends. Compassion can be
terribly destructive. A cocaine addict who displays the symptoms of
abstinence alleviates his pain and anxiety with a dose of the drug, but if
we give it to him all we do is to perpetuate the problem.
Of course, the first common objective of any mature society is to rescue the
neediest. And there is no doubt that any responsible government must take
care of the most urgent problems experienced by defenseless people. But we
musn't forget that the end of poverty is never achieved by means of
demagogical gestures made by populist governments.
What we have learned by observing the societies that have managed to
eradicate or reduce the indices of poverty is that this objective is reached
by a combination of good education, technological transferences, national
and foreign investment, efficient juridical guarantees and institutions,
reasonable fiscal pressure and a reduced public expenditure, in such a way
that an entrepreneurial fabric will expand within the private sector,
becoming increasingly denser, more competitive and sophisticated, so the
workers' wages will also gradually increase.
The tragedy lies in the fact that this political message is not very
attractive. It talks about responsibility, not of rights. It accentuates
freedom to built one's own fate, whatever the risks, not on the passive
tranquillity of someone who waits for someone else to build his life from
the outside. It places the burden of happiness-building on the individual
and denies the governments the power to mold our existence. That is why the
battle is so difficult. The siren songs always are more pleasing to the ear.
Even though they lead us to disaster.
December 31, 2006
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