Rodrigo Paz: Between Evo and Arce | Entre Evo y Arce

Editorial, El Dia:

Rodrigo Paz tries to present himself as a sensible, modern politician — educated abroad and backed by a public track record. However, his statement during the presidential debate that “there’s money in Bolivia” completely exposes him. This was no slip of the tongue or miscalculation; it revealed his disconnection from reality and, worse still, his alignment with an ideologized discourse that already wreaked havoc in the past.

When a country is in intensive care, the first thing it needs is an IV drip, not a placebo. Bolivia is experiencing an unprecedented crisis: no dollars, no fuel, an inflation artificially contained, and a productive apparatus suffocated by the lack of inputs. Saying “there’s money” under these conditions is, at best, an act of irresponsibility. What exists isn’t “money” but “bills”: local currency that can’t buy diesel or import wheat, because what’s missing are foreign reserves. And the most serious part — printing more bills doesn’t create wealth; it only worsens the problem and pushes us toward the inflationary abyss.

Paz’s statement dangerously echoes Evo Morales’s rhetoric, which turned economic sovereignty into an ideological dogma rather than an exercise in responsibility. Morales expelled the U.S. embassy, scared off multinational companies, criminalized international cooperation, and portrayed every financial link abroad as a threat to national independence. The result was devastating: an economy dependent on gas prices, a collapsed industry, and a bloated state bureaucracy that swallowed up the surplus from the boom years.

Rodrigo Paz seems to be falling into the same trap. His discourse is built on denial — denying the need to approach the International Monetary Fund or to seek external financing. As if asking for help were a sign of weakness. It isn’t. When a country is on the brink of collapse, turning to multilateral organizations or strategic partners isn’t surrender — it’s reaching for a lifeline. Argentina understood this. Javier Milei, with all his liberal drive, resorted to international loans because he knew that austerity without financial backing is suicidal. Bolivia needs that same realism.

Tuto Quiroga said it bluntly: the country urgently needs at least 12 billion dollars to stabilize its economy. It’s an enormous sum, but a necessary one. Refusing to acknowledge it means continuing to lie to Bolivians. And economic lies have consequences: long lines for fuel, idle tractors, food that doesn’t reach the markets. That’s the cruelest face of populism disguised as patriotism.

Paz’s discourse sounds like an echo of Luis Arce, who insists on denying the crisis. Both prefer to look for scapegoats rather than solutions; neither represents an alternative — only continuity. He has a bit of Evo Morales’s arrogance and a bit of Arce’s blindness. He speaks of sovereignty but repeats the same slogans that sank the country into ideological dependence. Meanwhile, the patient — Bolivia — remains without an IV, without treatment, and without an honest diagnosis.

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