What are we going to live off of? | ¿De qué vamos a vivir?

Editorial, El Dia:

This very question was asked several times by the coca grower Morales. Once, when he sought to initiate oil exploration in national parks without the permission of indigenous peoples. Another time, when he justified the slash-and-burn farming that destroyed millions of hectares in Santa Cruz, Beni, and Cochabamba. He also said something similar when seeking to justify the destruction of the Isiboro Sécure Park to build a road to facilitate coca production and cocaine exportation.

In reality, that’s the only industry the MAS regime has really put effort into since coming to power, convinced that drug trafficking could be the best answer to the country’s development. They destroyed the gas industry, lithium has been a failure, mining only serves to pollute the environment and make people sick, and agriculture survives thanks to the brave souls who have fought against the unprecedented hostility toward food producers.

But it’s become clear that neither the massive drug production stimulated by the government nor smuggling, nor any of the criminal sectors that have been part of the MAS power structure, can provide a satisfactory answer to the coca grower’s question. The recent complaint from Luis Arce is evidence of this. He claims that without gas, Bolivia lacks resources to meet people’s needs, namely, paying the hefty subsidies burdening the national economy.

The government’s proposed solution is to increase taxes, but it’s not about milking the same thin cow. It’s about forcing other sectors, especially the indigenous bourgeoisie that has emerged in recent years, to pay taxes, implementing a fuel price hike, and eliminating subsidies. However, the Arce government will not do any of this, as it risks a social explosion like the one Sánchez de Lozada experienced when he tried to tax wages or when Evo Morales attempted to raise gasoline prices by 70 percent.

The ideal would be to end this government, which at this rate will lead us to annihilation. But that’s a very remote possibility, not only because there was a resounding failure after the coca grower’s escape but also because there is no opposition in Bolivia. It doesn’t exist; it’s dulled, domesticated, completely surrendered. It’s practically impossible for there to be an electoral option capable of stopping this regime by 2025.

The only alternative is for the economy to drive Arce away, as happened with Siles Zuazo, at a catastrophic cost. The advantage is that from the ashes, a new, different country emerged, and the left was buried for two decades. Let’s hope this time it’s forever.

The only one who can escape the catastrophe is Arce himself, and he doesn’t have to do anything at all. It’s already a big step to acknowledge – Milei-style – that there’s no money, and everything else is simply to stop hindering, like bad players do. Let the private sector take the lead, clear the way for farmers and all sectors to work in peace, just like drug traffickers who face no restrictions, no hostility, not even encroachments on their ventures. It’s not too much to ask.

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