Professor Eva Paus in the Irish Times
Writing in
the February 4
Irish Times, Peadar Kirby of Dublin City University
noted Professor Eva Paus's participation in a discussion
of the economic future of Costa Rica. Paus, the director of the
Center for Global Initiatives and professor of economics, is
author of a recent study, Foreign Investment, Development,
and Globalization: Can Costa Rica Become Ireland?
Here is an
excerpt from Kirby's piece, "Latin America Finds
Lessons in Irish Approach to Economy," which is available
online only to subscribers to the Irish Times:
"Can Costa
Rica become Ireland?" was the provocative question
discussed last week at a conference in the economics department
of the University of Costa Rica in San José. Attracting
not just academics but also senior government officials, it is
yet another sign of the widespread interest in Latin America in
the success of what they label "the Irish model."
Professor
Eva Paus of Mount Holyoke College, Massachusetts, gave a lengthy
presentation on her recently published book on foreign
investment, development, and globalization and which carries
the subtitle Can Costa Rica Become Ireland? I was invited to
address
the social deficits of the Irish model, thereby broadening the
debate to include its social impacts.
The similarities
between Costa Rica and Ireland are telling. With almost exactly
the same
populations, both have had to cope
with
situations of major civil conflict on their northern borders
while pursuing active strategies to attract foreign investment,
particularly
from the U.S.
As one former Costa Rican government negotiator told me, it
was not easy to help U.S. investors distinguish peaceful and
stable
Costa Rica from its neighbors Nicaragua, El Salvador, and Guatemala,
which collapsed into brutal civil wars in the 1980s after decades
of severe government repression.
Costa Rica
managed to attract a major investment by U.S. multinational Intel
in 1997 that has
brought 3,000 high-tech jobs to the
country. This has raised major expectations that it is following
the path
of Ireland's success in which the same U.S. company played
a key role in the early 1990s.
In her contribution
to the conference, Professor Paus emphasized the importance of
the different
regional contexts in which
both countries find themselves.
While Ireland
received high levels of structural funds from the EU to help
it upgrade its
infrastructure and workforce,
Costa
Rica was dependent on aid from the U.S. during the 1980s
which
came with
far more strings attached.
High levels
of U.S. aid to Costa Rica were part of Reagan's policy to combat
insurgency
in other Central American
countries in the
1980s. Washington's plan was to make Costa Rica into
a showcase for free-market economic success in contrast
to
the policies
of the left-wing Sandinistas in neighboring Nicaragua.
Yet,
in fact, this helped dismantle what Professor Jorgé Rovira
Mas described to me as "the 30 glorious years
from 1950 to 1979," when Costa Rica achieved
through determined state action what no other country
in the
developing world managed - high economic
growth rates, a stable political democracy, and a
developed welfare state.
Their country
in those years was far more successful
than Ireland at the time.
As part of
the liberalization of Costa Rica's economy, advisers from Ireland's
Industrial Development
Authority (IDA) were
brought in to advise on attracting foreign investment.
Yet
Costa Rica has had more modest success than has had Ireland
in the 1990s in attracting U.S.
investment.
Professor
Paus
attributed this to the subsidies that Ireland
provides in addition to the
low-tax regime for foreign companies that both
countries offer. If Costa Rica is unlikely
to become Ireland,
the conference also heard how both countries
face ever more
intense competition
to
build on their successes to date.
Many are now
worried that the imminent approval of the Central America Free
Trade Agreement
(Cafta) with the
U.S. will further
undermine the advantages Costa Rica has enjoyed
in
the region. And, as Professor
Paus put it, if the challenge for Costa Rica
is to become Ireland, the challenge for Ireland
is
to become
Singapore,
as it loses
its advantage of being a relatively low-wage
economy and sees companies
moving to other locations.
She told her
Costa Rican audience that she was impressed by Ireland's proactive
approach
to
addressing the
challenge of
investing in
its own research capacity while also seeking
to lure multinationals to do more research
and development
here. She saw some
success to this strategy but admitted that
it was far too early to
judge whether it will manage to continue
the Irish "miracle."
On
the Web:
The
Irish Times
***article available to online subscribers***
On
the MHC Web:
Eva Paus Faculty Profile
Center for Global Initiatives
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