Bolivia: Restoring the Rule of Law | Recuperar el Estado de Derecho

By Brujula Digital, El Diario:

“Restoring the Rule of Law is the First Necessary Measure”

During his speech at the Bolivia 360 event at Harvard University, candidate Jaime Dunn delivered a direct criticism of Bolivia’s current economic and political model, stating that the country punishes legality and rewards informality.

“That is Bolivia. A system where being formal is a punishment. A tax in Bolivia is a fine for doing things right. And telling the truth is a crime,” he said.

“The first act of my government will be to restore the Rule of Law. The first economic measure is actually a legal one. The rule of law must return,” he stated. “Everyone who used power to protect criminals, to plunder the nation, must be held accountable.”

“The disease in Bolivia is moral, institutional, and structural,” he said. He also added that what truly ails the country is excessive public spending and what he called “the looting of the future.”

During his presentation, Dunn cited an IDB study estimating that 6% of Bolivia’s GDP is lost due to public spending inefficiency. He denounced examples such as the construction of stadiums for 15,000 people in towns with 13,000 inhabitants. “That is not public investment. That is legalized theft in Bolivia,” he asserted.

For Dunn, corruption, drug trafficking, and injustice are not flaws of the system—they are the system itself.

While he acknowledged that the current crisis is serious, he stated that it is temporary and will eventually be resolved.

He proposed transforming the role of the State, affirming that “the first duty of a government is not to give, but not to hinder.” He defended the market as “the most human expression of freedom” and stated that “the State should not redistribute what belongs to others, but protect what is one’s own.” For him, progress is achieved not through wealth redistribution but through wealth creation.

He criticized the National Customs Office, proposing to eliminate tariffs and reduce taxes so that even smugglers would prefer to register.

He rejected the idea of merely managing the current State, which he described as “failed.” He said that informality is not a cultural trait but a survival response to a system that punishes legality.

On monetary policy, he proposed fiscal discipline, free monetary competition, and an independent Central Bank. He argued that financing the deficit should be prohibited by law and that the Bank’s authorities should be replaced.

He also proposed returning power to the regions, ending centralism, and laying the groundwork for a federal model. He asserted that each department should manage the majority of its resources. He stated that natural resources must return to their true owners: the citizens.

Regarding lithium, he warned that it is not magic gold, but rather “the salt in the salad,” and that Bolivia’s true wealth lies in its talent, tourism, agribusiness, and creativity. He proposed granting full property titles to campesinos so they can access credit, mortgage their land, and divide it. (Brújula Digital)

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