Wednesday, October 2, 2024

NOTES AND MATERIALS ON CONTEMPORARY PERU (III)

 

Continuing with our NOTES AND MATERIALS ON CONTEMPORARY PERU, starting today, we will comment on the report: Foreign Direct Investment in Latin America and the Caribbean • 2024 by ECLAC, a UN institution.

The report of the imperialist economic institute, referred to above, confirms which is the main imperialism that dominates us, Yankee imperialism, through foreign direct investment (FDI), one of the forms that the export of capital from imperialist countries to oppressed nations takes. And, it also confirms the prominent role of China in trade (export/import of goods) with Latin America and its secondary place in FDI, one of the main forms that the export of capital takes in the imperialist stage. Regarding what we have just written, the report says:

“Chapter I.- 5. Foreign direct investment by country of origin

(...) When considering the 11 countries that present information on the origin of FDI inflows in 2023, it is observed that the United States and the European Union remain the main investors, although there are some changes in participation. The United States maintained its position as the main investor in the region, with 33% of the total, but, compared to 2022, there was a 29.7% decrease in investment inflows from that origin. This trend was not reflected in Colombia, where US FDI inflows increased by 14% compared to the previous year. This increase consolidates Colombia as the third destination for US investments in Latin America and the Caribbean, with 18% of that country's total investments in the region. Although Mexico (41%) and Brazil (33%) remain the main destinations for US FDI in the region, both experienced a decline in inflows originating in the country (30% and 21%, respectively).

(...)

The relative share of European Union countries (excluding Luxembourg and the Kingdom of the Netherlands) increased by 29.4% to 22% of the total. Among the countries of the bloc, Spain stands out as a prominent investor in Latin America and the Caribbean in 2023. This country was the second largest individual investor in the region (11% of the total) and the origin of 52% of the inflows marked as belonging to the European Union, with a notable share in Brazil (which accounts for 38% of the total investment from Spain), Mexico (35%) and Colombia (15%).

The share of Latin American and Caribbean countries as the source of FDI entering the region fell by 46% to $10.825 billion (6% of the total). (Our note: it is interesting to note that much of the FDI from imperialist countries uses Latin American countries as a springboard for their investments in the region (see ECLAC report on the same topic from 2023, corresponding to 2022, which corresponds to the role of agent or intermediary of the imperialism of the big comprador bourgeoisie)

(...) Although investments from China and Hong Kong (China) have always represented a small proportion compared to those from other origins, in 2023 these inflows experienced a significant decline, mainly due to negative inflows from Hong Kong (China). In 2023, investments from these markets also represented an almost negligible share of total FDI inflows into the region (US$790 million, 0.4% of total FDI entering the region from China, and negative inflows of US$772 million from Hong Kong (China)). Despite their low contribution in global terms, approximately half of Chinese investment went to Brazil, while the rest was distributed between Colombia (19%), Mexico (19%) and Ecuador (9%)2.

 

To conclude this part of our introduction to the ECLAC report, we go directly to the conclusions of Chapter I, with the aim of returning to the rest in later installments. We do so to make the following clear using the report itself:

“With regard to the change in the actors involved, the predominance of the old actors in regional FDI is confirmed, both in terms of their origin (led by the United States and Europe) and in terms of recipients (Mexico, Brazil and Chile). The role of FDI from China remains reduced, which contrasts with the great importance of that country in trade flows. Meanwhile, when looking at the FDI panorama from project announcements, a growing weight of projects of Chinese origin is observed.”

Regarding Peru for 2023, it says:

 

“FDI inflows into Peru experienced a notable drop of 65% in 2023 compared to the previous year and reached a total of 3,918 million dollars, a figure lower than the average of the last decade. All components of FDI registered a decline, with negative inflows in intercompany loans and equity contributions. Although inflows in the area of ​​reinvested earnings were positive, they also suffered a 42% reduction compared to 2022.

After a 2022 in which there were few notable mergers and acquisitions in Peru, in 2023, a transaction in the mining and quarrying sector caught the eye. Australian mining giant Rio Tinto PLC sold 55% of its stake in the La Granja copper project in Peru to Canadian company First Quantum Minerals Ltd. for US$105 million. Considered one of the largest undeveloped copper deposits in the world, the project is expected to receive an additional investment of US$546 million from First Quantum Minerals Ltd. in the joint venture (Rio Tinto, 2023). As for project announcements, in 2023, Peru attracted attention with 47 projects and a total announced investment of 1.773 billion dollars. Two projects in the transport and storage sector stand out, which together are estimated to amount to 707 million dollars. One of them is the expansion of the activities of the Danish company Maersk in the country (Maersk, 2023).”

 

In the previous installment of our NOTES AND MATERIALS ON CONTEMPORARY PERU II, we have made available to you the speech of Chairman Gonzalo at the Teachers Union of Huamanga (1974), to clarify a series of confusions that arise from the understanding of the problem of bureaucratic capitalism, therefore, before continuing with the topic that concerns us today, from the President's speech, we quote:

“The problem of bureaucratic capitalism is important because it allows us to understand what is the dominant path that imperialism imposes in a backward country, in a semi-feudal and semi-colonial country; understanding this problem we will be equipped to combat the thesis of the capitalist character of the country and its political derivations.

(…) some maintain that to raise bureaucratic capitalism in the country is to ignore its semi-feudal and semi-colonial character; they say that it is covertly stated that the country is capitalist. This is an error that ignores the laws of social development of our country and of backward countries; Because bureaucratic capitalism is precisely the path of imperialism in a semi-feudal and semi-colonial country. Without semi-feudal and semi-colonial conditions there would be no bureaucratic capitalism. Thus, to propose the existence of bureaucratic capitalism is to propose as a premise that the country is semi-feudal and semi-colonial.”

 

We add, on the three mountains that exploit and oppress the people, the following:

 

Who is plunging the Peruvian people into the greatest crisis in its history? Who are those responsible? The three mountains that exploit and oppress the people: imperialism, bureaucratic capitalism and semi-feudalism; mountains that, through the organized reactionary violence that is the Peruvian State, a State supported by its armed forces as a backbone and by bureaucracy, maintain the prevailing order of oppression and exploitation that still exists; order and State headed and directed by the big bourgeoisie, mainly the comprador class, with the support of revisionism and opportunism of all kinds and the protection of its imperialist master.

 

Why is it semi-colonial? Chairman Gonzalo teaches us that the modern Peruvian economy was born subjugated by imperialism, the final phase of capitalism masterfully characterized as monopolistic, parasitic and dying; imperialism that, while it allows our political independence, controls the entire Peruvian economic process, depending on how it serves its interests: our natural resources, export products, industry, banking and finances; in short, it sucks the blood of our people, devours our energies as a nation in formation and today it also exorbitantly squeezes us through foreign debt as it does with other oppressed nations.

 

Lenin, in summary, stated that there are many forms of imperialist domination, but two are typical: colony, that is, the complete domination of the imperialist country over the oppressed nation or nations, and an intermediate form: semi-colonial, that is, politically independent but economically subjugated, an independent Republic that finds itself subjugated in the ideological, political, economic and military web of imperialism, no matter how much self-government it has. We reject what revisionism used in the 60s: "neo-colony", whose essence is to conceive that imperialism applies a milder form of domination and led them to the characterization of "dependent country".

 

Then, Chairman Gonzalo, applying Chairman Mao's thesis that a period of struggle is opening against the two superpowers that are fighting to divide up the world and that the main enemy of the moment must be specified, defines that the main imperialism that dominates us is Yankee imperialism but affirms that we must ward off Russian social-imperialism that is penetrating the country more and more every day, as well as the action of the non-superpower imperialist powers; thus the proletariat, in leading the democratic revolution, is not tied to any superpower or imperialist power and maintains its ideological, political and organizational independence.

 

Peruvian society, like other Latin American nations, continues to be a nation in formation and its semi-colonial character subsists and can be seen in all fields and in the new conditions.

 

About the report: Foreign Direct Investment in Latin America and the Caribbean in its 2024 edition

 

With the above theoretical basis, we deal with foreign direct investment in our country in relation to the report already mentioned at the beginning: Foreign Direct Investment in Latin America and the Caribbean • 2024 by ECLAC, a UN institution. The report by the imperialist economic institute CEPA, begins by recognizing the generalized crisis that Latin American countries and therefore Peru are going through, in this regard it says:

 

“The report Foreign Direct Investment in Latin America and the Caribbean in its 2024 edition is presented at an extremely challenging time, since Latin America and the Caribbean is in a development crisis that is expressed in three major traps: a trap of low capacity to grow, characterized by low, volatile, exclusionary and unsustainable economic growth, a trap of high inequality, with low mobility and social cohesion and a trap of low institutional capacity and ineffective governance” (from the Executive Summary of the Report).

 

Another report from the same institute says:

 

“Over the course of the last decade, Latin American countries have exhibited a low level of economic growth, with an average rate of 0.9% in the period 2015-2024, lower than the 2.0% recorded in the so-called “lost decade” of 1980. Boosting growth is a primary task for the region to be able to respond to the environmental, social and labor challenges it faces today (…)”

 

The same report concludes:

 

“The macroeconomic scenario that the countries of the region face, both externally and internally, is characterized by low growth in economic activity, uncertainty and limited space in the area of ​​fiscal and monetary policies” (Economic Survey of Latin America and the Caribbean • 2024 Executive Summary).

 

It is clear, according to this imperialist institute that establishes the guidelines for economic policy for Latin America and the Caribbean, that they do not even speak of economic development, but simply of “growth of economic activity” and they say that this “growth...” in the previous period has been less than that of the lost decade of the 1980s. Where is the “capitalist” economic development that the LOD speaks of? It is impossible because what develops, as Chairman Gonzalo says, on a semi-colonial and semi-feudal basis, is bureaucratic capitalism as the dominant path that imperialism imposes in our countries.

Note: We will continue with the subject in subsequent installments.