Un articulo que no dice mucho (en un informe de FIEL) nos relata los ultimos años de la economia Boliviana. El articulo termina con frases maso menos parecidas a estas: ..."Hay dos temas centrales para consolidar la recuperacion de la economia Boliviana, dado el contexto externo tan favorable. El primero tiene relacion con la baja tasa de inversion/pbi, que para el 2005 se situaba en 13%"... "el segundo tema es la insercion de la economia boliviana en una economia globalizada. El debate publico al respecto es vigoroso, pero con predominio de las posiciones aislacionistas y de ultranacionalismo economico"...
Esa ultima frase te explica porque no solo no se va dar la primera condicion sino que tambien porque no se va a dar la segunda. Es mas, mucho menos se va a dar si el Economist (www.economist.com) te hace semejante prensa ante el capital mundial:
..."In December, Evo Morales, a radical socialist coca growers' leader of indigenous descent, won 54% of the vote in a presidential election on a promise to “refound” the country on more collectivist lines"..."The opposition, too, is jumpy. Mr Morales has already struck an alliance with Cuba's Fidel Castro and Venezuela's Hugo Chávez. On May 1st he fulfilled a campaign promise to nationalise the oil and gas industry. The manner in which he did so—sending the army to seize a plant operated by Brazil's Petrobras—seemed calculated to antagonise foreign investors and Brazil's government, which had considered itself a friend. He has now gone on to launch a big land-redistribution programme. Commercial farmers in Santa Cruz, Bolivia's business capital, fear this may threaten their holdings, and not just involve idle land"...
Este ultimo punto me hace acordar las cartas de Vespucio a Cristobal, explicando sobre la indecencia y barbarie de aquellos sujetos primtivos que vivian en las Americas.
Esa ultima frase te explica porque no solo no se va dar la primera condicion sino que tambien porque no se va a dar la segunda. Es mas, mucho menos se va a dar si el Economist (www.economist.com) te hace semejante prensa ante el capital mundial:
..."In December, Evo Morales, a radical socialist coca growers' leader of indigenous descent, won 54% of the vote in a presidential election on a promise to “refound” the country on more collectivist lines"..."The opposition, too, is jumpy. Mr Morales has already struck an alliance with Cuba's Fidel Castro and Venezuela's Hugo Chávez. On May 1st he fulfilled a campaign promise to nationalise the oil and gas industry. The manner in which he did so—sending the army to seize a plant operated by Brazil's Petrobras—seemed calculated to antagonise foreign investors and Brazil's government, which had considered itself a friend. He has now gone on to launch a big land-redistribution programme. Commercial farmers in Santa Cruz, Bolivia's business capital, fear this may threaten their holdings, and not just involve idle land"...
Este ultimo punto me hace acordar las cartas de Vespucio a Cristobal, explicando sobre la indecencia y barbarie de aquellos sujetos primtivos que vivian en las Americas.
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