The Economist - USA (2022-06-11)

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TheEconomistJune11th 2022 TheAmericas 35

painfulmeasures.ThegovernmentsofCo­
lombiaandChilearemaintainingsubsi­
dies,whileinPeruthegovernmenthasre­
ducedtheconsumptiontaxonfoodand
energy.AcrossLatinAmerica,politicians
havetakenmeasuresworthabout0.3%of
gdp, on average,to try toshieldhouse­
holdsfromtheeffectsofthewar.
Notallisrosy.Evenafteritsupwardre­
visions,theimfexpectsLatinAmericato
growmoreslowlythisyearthananyother
part oftheemerging world, apartfrom
easternEurope.Brazilwillprobablystrug­
gletogrowbymorethan1%thisyear,de­
spitehighcommodityprices.Costlyfood
andenergy,thoughhelpfultoexporters,
arefanninginflation.Consumerpricesare
risingatdouble­digit ratesinChileand
Brazil,andarewellabovecentral­banktar­
getsinLatinAmerica’sotherlargeecono­
mies.Centralbankershaveputupinterest
ratestopreventsurgingpricesfromtrans­
latingintoa broaderlossofconfidencein
governments’ control over inflation—a
meaningfulriskina regionwitha history
ofspirallingprices.Buthigherratesalso
squeezeinvestmentandgrowth.
Conditionsmaydeterioratefurtherif
inflationinricheconomiesprovesmore
persistentthanexpected,forcingcentral
bankstoraiseratesbymorethanmarkets
anticipate.Inthe1980s,whentheUnited
Stateslastbattledtosubdueseriousinfla­
tion,theconsequencesforLatinAmerica
weregrim:a waveofdebtcrisesandaneco­
nomiclostdecade.Macroeconomicpolicy


acrossthe Americashas improveda lot
sincethen.Butthecombinedpressureof
multipleshockstodayhasleftsomeecon­
omiesvulnerable.
Theregioncannotaffordanothercrisis.
LatinAmericasuffereda largerdeclinein
gdpin 2020 than anyotherpartofthe
world.Thepandemicresultedinforgone
investment, missed hours of schooling
andweakerproductivitygrowth. Thisis
likelytodepresseconomicgrowthinthe
yearsahead;indeed,theimfreckonsthat
in 2024 outputacrossLatinAmericawill
probablyremainabout5%shortofthepre­

pandemic trend. Recent hardships have
fallenhardestonthepoor.
In countries plagued by extreme in­
equality,suchunevenlydistributedcosts
couldaggravatepoliticalinstabilityorex­
tremism. Elections in Colombia this
monthandinBrazilinOctoberseemcer­
tain to yield winners who are poorly
equippedtomeetthechallengesofthemo­
ment.Andifgovernmentsremainunable
todeliverrelieftostrugglingLatinAmeri­
cans—atallordergivenglobalheadwinds,
highcommoditypricesornot—thenfrus­
trationacrosstheregionwillonlygrow.n

A mixed picture
Latin America

Sources:HaverAnalytics;RefinitivDatastream

12
10
8
6
4
2
0
2020 21 22

Consumer prices, % increase on a year earlier

Mexico Peru

Colombia

Chile

Brazil

130

120

110

100

90
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun

Currencies against the $, January 3rd 2022=00

Brazilian real Peruvian
sol

Colombian peso

Chilean
peso

Mexican peso

Canada

A politer kind of populism


O


n a sundayin April 600 people packed
into the Elks Lodge on the outskirts of
North  Bay  in  northern  Ontario.  Some  had
driven  hours  to  hear  Pierre  Poilievre,  the
only  Canadian  politician  who  sets  pulses
racing these days. Cars bore bumper stick­
ers that read “Freedom Convoy 2022”, a ref­
erence  to  protests  against  vaccine  man­
dates led by truckers that shut down Otta­
wa,  Canada’s  capital,  for  three  weeks  in
February. “Defund the cbc”, Canada’s pub­
lic  broadcaster,  demanded  a  sign  held  by
an  eight­year­old  boy.  One  man’s  t­shirt
proclaimed  him  to  be  a  “Thought  Crimi­
nal”. But many looked like mild­mannered
folk  with  time  to  kill  between  attending
church and visiting their grandchildren.
Blue­shirted  and  tieless,  the  43­year­
old Mr Poilievre warmed up the crowd like
a  late­night  talk­show  host.  He  cracked
jokes  before  laying  into  the  country’s  Lib­
eral  government,  led  by  Justin  Trudeau.  A
proposal  to  regulate  content  on  the  inter­
net  befits  the  regimes  of  North  Korea  and
Iran,  Mr  Poilievre  fumed.  Inflation,  the
worry  uppermost  in  voters’  minds,  is  a
form  of  oppression.  “You  might  be  the
working guy who has lost his freedom to go
on  a  hunting  or  fishing  trip  on  the  week­
end  because  gas  prices  are  a  buck­ninety­
three a litre and you can no longer fuel up
your  truck,”  he  speculated.  When  he  is
prime minister Canadians will be “the fre­
est people in the world”.
Before that, however, he has to become
leader  of  the  Conservative  Party  in  a  vote
scheduled  for  September  10th.  Polls  sug­
gest  that  he  is  the  front­runner.  He  is  the
hard­edged,  plain­speaking  antithesis  of
many Canadian politicians. “Pierre is real.
He’s a breath of fresh air,” said Nancy Olm­
sted,  a  former  Olympic  canoeist  who  at­

tended the event in North Bay. 
When  Mr  Trudeau  was  elected  prime
minister in 2015 he was the breath of fresh
air. Possessed of Kennedyesque charisma,
he offered moderately progressive answers
to  grievances  about  economic  insecurity.
But Mr Trudeau has become a symbol of di­
visions he had hoped to narrow. His atten­
tiveness  to  the  concerns  of  vulnerable
groups,  from  indigenous  people  to  trans­
gender  folk,  has  made  some  ordinary  Ca­
nadians feel that he cares less about them. 
Things came to a head during the truck­
ers’  protest,  when  Mr  Trudeau  accused
protesters  of  promoting  “hatred  and  divi­
sion”,  a  charge  that  misrepresented  many
of  them.  He  appalled  civil  libertarians  by
invoking the Emergencies Act for the first
time  in  its  34­year­history,  allowing  the
government  to  restrict  assembly  and
freeze  bank  accounts.  Two  inquiries,  one
in Parliament which is already under way,
and another led by a judge, will investigate
whether  the  government  was  right  to  in­
voke the act. 
As elsewhere, voters are shocked by in­
flation, too, which reached 6.8% in the year
to  April,  its  highest  level  in  more  than  30
years. On June 2nd Doug Ford, whose Pro­
gressive  Conservative  Party  is  the  provin­
cial  counterpart  of  the  Conservatives  in
Ontario, won re­election as the province’s
premier in part on a promise to “keep costs
down”.  As  worrying  to  many  is  the  rise  of
nearly  50%  in  house  prices  since  early
2020, though these have begun to fall since
the  Bank  of  Canada  began  raising  interest
rates in March (see Finance section). 
Mr Poilievre seeks to convert unease in­
to  anger.  A  politics  nerd  who  has  been  an
mp since he was 25, he adopts a Trumpian
swagger  on  the  stump.  He  rails  against

N ORTH BAY, ONTARIO
Pierre Poilievre is Canada’s answer to Donald Trump
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