Monthly Archives: February 2017

Revising US foreign policy towards Latin America

Miguel Centeno and Andrés Lajous have an excellent article over at The American Interest. They perceptively diagnose the pathologies and promise of Latin America. They correctly address the diversity of Latin America.

Latin America has lagged global growth rates, even during supposed boom times early in the 21st century before the Great Recession.

Latin America has been too dependent on the export of raw materials. The dependence on China as a consumer of raw materials and, in the case of Venezuela, oil exports, means the region does not have an engine for growth if China slows and oil prices fall.

Latin America has made progress in democratizing. Coups d’état have become a rarity. Parties out of power have respected the outcome of elections and there have been peaceful transfers of power from one to another. Although there has been a trend towards Presidents for Life in Venezuela and El Salvador.

Latin America still suffers from tremendous inequality. The economies are still two-speed with urban, trade-related regions with high income and significant rural poverty. Lack of secure property rights contributes to the poverty. (Unmentioned by the authors are the cultural factors that contribute to this pattern.)

Mexico is no longer a source of illegal immigration to the United States (although they fail to note that remittances are still a large source of income for Mexico).

Guatemala, El Salvador, and Honduras are all struggling with lawlessness and violence driven by the illegal drug trade (also a source of violence in Mexico). This has led to a militarization of law enforcement by those states to reclaim territorial sovereignty (a monopoly on the legitimate use on violence). This drives migrant flows to the United States via Mexico.

Where the authors fail is to advocate the usual liberal internationalist/neoconservative nostrums:

  • Maintaining trade agreements with the region that result in both jobs in the U.S. and economic benefits throughout the region.
  • Recognizing that immigration is not necessarily a burden on the United States but is often a dynamic source of growth.
  • Realistically reappraising the “war on drugs” to take into account what prohibition has cost the region in human, political, and economic terms, and the alternative presented by the legalization of marijuana in several U.S. states.

An alternative that does not assume the United States would continue to be the safety value for people fleeing violence and acquiescence to unequal trade relationships is to:

  • Reform immigration policy like other “normal” countries. Mass unskilled immigration is not a net positive in the short run, contrary to the authors’ contention. Larger amounts of legal immigration for desired skills should be combined with aggressive enforcement of illegal immigration with provision for refugees from Latin America is the most sustainable.
  • Greater levels of the right kind of security assistance is needed in Latin America. That needs to be combined with judicial reform and development assistance to permit the state to exercise sovereignty.
  • The most difficult challenge that the US has little affect except through using trade agreements as the carrot is a transition to Anglo-American legal norms. As the authors correctly note, private property protections are weak. Furthermore, neopatrimonialism is still a prominent feature of the political economy of Latin America. Until government approaches a Weberian rational-legal source of authority, Latin America will continue to lag the world in economic development.

The US needs to avoid stoking anti-Americanism in Latin America. The US needs to avoid creating a continent worth of failed states Central and South America, so a radical restriction on trade would be disastrous, but the status quo is also not working, nor is decriminalization of drugs a solution to the problem of violence. George Washington made a policy prescription in his Farewell Address:

Observe good faith and justice [toward] all Nations. Cultivate peace and harmony with all….In the execution of such a plan nothing is more essential than that permanent inveterate antipathies against particular Nations and passionate attachments for other should be excluded.

This may have been appropriate before the United States became a continental power, but the Monroe Doctrine applies now. The principal goal for US foreign policy regarding Latin America is to foster stability and prevent rival powers from using Latin American nations as a base to threaten the United States. In the modern context, this means constructive engagement, but not necessarily pursuing cosmopolitan policy prescriptions.

Tea for a Polymath

Here at the Noble Polymath we drink tea.  We have a preference for the following varieties.

Lifeboat Tea

Lifeboat Tea Image

Lifeboat is produced by the Williamson Tea Company.  Williamson has their own tea growing plantations in East Africa.  The tea is a robust red liquor with a high caffeine content.  We prepare it by steeping 5 minutes rather than the recommended 3 minutes.  We serve it with raw sugar and homogenized milk.  Purchases of Lifeboat also help support the Royal National Lifeboat Institution, which is a volunteer organization with lifeboat stations around the UK that rescue mariners in distress.

Yorkshire Gold

Yorkshire Gold Tea Image

Yorkshire Gold is produced by Taylors of Harrogate from a blend of African and Indian teas. It is a strong tea, yet with delicate floral notes. It is high in caffeine. We brew it 3 minutes and serve with milk and sugar as well.

Royal Elixir

Royal Elixir is an Impra product.  It is Ceylon tea.  It is medium strength.  It is the tea that we have found that comes close to the tea served with breakfast at the old Yerevan Hotel in Armenia.  It goes great with an egg and crusty bread in the morning.

Our latest discovery is…

Make Mine A Builders

Builders Tea Image

It takes its name from the low quality tea that laborers in the UK drank.  It is a strong tea and definitely jumpstarts your heart in the morning.  Drink it in the afternoon, you may regret the insomnia.  Brewed 3 minutes with milk and raw sugar, it is a sturdy start to your day.  The flavor is close to a more robust Twinings English Breakfast.  It is not nearly as complex as the previous, but it is rejuvenating.  I love the tag line printed on the side of the box: “Britain wasn’t built on chamomile.”

Culture and Wealth

I’ve received a promotion and been busy with the Coast Guard Auxiliary and graduate school in addition to work, so I apologize for my tardiness on getting a post up.  That said, I’d like to treat you to a quantitative analysis I recently conducted on the relationship between a country’s wealth and its culture.

The purpose of the analysis was to attempt a identify what characteristics of a culture contribute to a nation’s wealth.  I first looked at Hofstede’s dimensions and the data set on his website, however, I deemed it not usable since it lacked completeness.  Many countries did not have data across all five dimensions.  I then chose the GLOBE Project data set which is similar to Hofstede’s dimensions.  I downloaded the 2004 GLOBE Phase 2 data set for Society Cultural Scales.

I combined the GLOBE Project data (the Practice dimensions only, not the Values dimensions) with Polity IV Polity Index for the 57 countries in the data set.  I chose Polity because it was a good single value proxy for the variable I am really after, which whether the country has a government that functions on Weber’s rational-legal authority type.  A key control for whether the state is wealthy because it has good government, or whether the state is wealthy because it has a culture that makes it wealthy.  Thus I built my set of 10 independent variables (Polity plus nine dimensions from the GLOBE Project).

For the response variable I created a dichotomous variable from the World Bank’s estimates for states’ income.  The states classified as “high income” were coded 1 and the states with lower incomes were coded 0.

I then ran a logit regression in R.  results of which are below:


> summary(globe_glm_1)

Call:
glm(formula = Income ~ Polity + UASP + FOSP + PDSP + C1SPIC +
HOSP + POSP + C2SPIGC + GESP + ASP, family = binomial(),
data = dat)

Deviance Residuals:
Min 1Q Median 3Q Max
-2.47623 -0.40988 -0.03516 0.30218 1.83126

Coefficients:
Estimate Std. Error z value Pr(>|z|)
(Intercept) 32.5330 18.3861 1.769 0.0768 .
Polity 0.1036 0.1125 0.920 0.3574
UASP 1.1436 1.5992 0.715 0.4745
FOSP 0.2514 1.8538 0.136 0.8921
PDSP -0.4908 1.5613 -0.314 0.7532
C1SPIC 4.1808 2.2206 1.883 0.0597 .
HOSP -3.3569 1.4078 -2.385 0.0171 *
POSP -3.2482 2.7042 -1.201 0.2297
C2SPIGC -3.3308 1.3347 -2.496 0.0126 *
GESP -1.6019 1.5218 -1.053 0.2925
ASP -1.0237 1.7447 -0.587 0.5574
---
Signif. codes: 0 ‘***’ 0.001 ‘**’ 0.01 ‘*’ 0.05 ‘.’ 0.1 ‘ ’ 1

(Dispersion parameter for binomial family taken to be 1)

Null deviance: 80.336 on 57 degrees of freedom
Residual deviance: 35.193 on 47 degrees of freedom
AIC: 57.193

Number of Fisher Scoring iterations: 7

>

The model reduces the deviance more than the NULL model. An analysis of variance of the model terms also shows the important coefficients.

> summary(globe_anova_1)
Df Deviance Resid. Df Resid. Dev
Min. :1 Min. : 0.1141 Min. :47.0 Min. :35.19
1st Qu.:1 1st Qu.: 0.5720 1st Qu.:49.5 1st Qu.:41.63
Median :1 Median : 2.7185 Median :52.0 Median :64.87
Mean :1 Mean : 4.5143 Mean :52.0 Mean :56.83
3rd Qu.:1 3rd Qu.: 7.5384 3rd Qu.:54.5 3rd Qu.:67.39
Max. :1 Max. :15.0461 Max. :57.0 Max. :80.34
NA's :1 NA's :1
Pr(>Chi)
Min. :0.0001049
1st Qu.:0.0122373
Median :0.1073930
Mean :0.2366209
3rd Qu.:0.4799755
Max. :0.7354827
NA's :1
>

The results indicate that the Humane Orientation Societal Practices and the Collectivism II Societal Practices (In-Group Collectivism) with both significant at the 0.05 level and negatively related to the odds of being wealthy society. What this indicates is that societies that are individualistic and competitive are more likely to be wealthy.

Furthermore, the Collectivism I Societal Practices (Institutional Collectivism) is significant at the 0.1 level and positively associated with the odds of being a wealthy society. What this means is that solidarity with employers is also associated with wealth–i.e., cultures like Germany, Japan and South Korea.

Interestingly, the Polity Index did not contribute more to the model. An investigation of outliers revealed that both Kuwait and Qatar, Gulf oil kingdoms, have negative polity scores–i.e., are authoritarian. All others are Polity 10’s, which is the highest score on the strength of democratic institutions and lack of authoritarian tendencies. Thus, there is an identity in this data set between wealth and liberal governance. Oil kingdoms appear to be a class all their own.