Mexico’s Theology of Oil/Enrique Krauze is a historian, the director of the literary magazine Letras Libres and the author of Redeemers: Ideas and Power in Latin America. This article was translated by Hank Heifetz from the Spanish.
The New York Times |01/11/2013
In almost every country, the availability and exploitation of oil are
essentially economic issues — every country, that is, except Mexico, where it
is a matter of secular theology. For many Mexicans, the question of whether to
open the national oil industry to private investment is much more than a
practical decision: It is an existential dilemma, as if permitting foreign
investment were to bargain away the country’s soul.
Over the next few weeks, the Mexican Congress is likely to become a kind of
theological council to discuss the so-called Energy Reform proposal put forward
by President Enrique Peña Nieto. The measure would modify Articles 27 and 28 of
the Constitution and allow contracts between the Mexican government and private
companies to share profits from the extraction of oil and gas throughout the
country as well as deep-water sites in the Gulf of Mexico. It would also open
the door to free competition along the whole chain of the industry: refining,
transport, storage, distribution and basic petrochemicals.
The historical significance of this proposal cannot be understated. In
1938, the Mexican oil industry was nationalized, and in 1960, a constitutional
change assigned full control of the industry to Pemex, a state monopoly.
The Energy Reform will require a two-thirds majority that can be achieved
through the representatives of the PRI (the party that ruled Mexico from 1929
to 2000 and was voted back into power in 2012), the PAN (a center-right party,
which would prefer even greater liberalization of the industry) and a few small
parties. Representatives of the PRD (a party of the moderate left) will likely
vote against the reform.
The main opposition will not emerge from the chambers of Congress, but
rather from the streets, where protests promise to become massive and angry.
The opposition has a charismatic leader: Andrés Manuel López Obrador. Defeated
in the last two presidential elections, he is positioning himself for a third
run, in 2018. There can be no stronger platform than adamant resistance to a
reform that he and millions of his followers regard as “a betrayal of the
nation.” In a recent speech, he compared the possible passage of the Energy
Reform to the loss of Texas in 1836 and Peña Nieto to Santa Anna, the general
who lost the Mexican War and is remembered in history books as a “traitor.”
But the economic arguments for such a rejection are weak. The opposition
says that Pemex can, by itself, successfully explore the Gulf of Mexico and
exploit shale deposits if the government grants it the financial autonomy to
increase its investment. But the government commitment to oil exploration has
risen sixfold in the last 10 years (to $25 billion, from $4 billion), without
major results. The United States may be on the path to energy self-sufficiency,
thanks to oil wells drilled each year in the Gulf (about 150) and about 10,000
new wells a year for shale oil and gas. Pemex drills only about five oil wells
per year in deep water and plans only 140 wells per year for shale gas. And
Mexico has to import large quantities of gas and gasoline.
How, then, can the fierce opposition to contracts with private companies —
which would halt the decline in production, modernize the industry, create
jobs, substantially increase oil profits for the Mexican state and foster much
needed economic growth — be explained? Why can’t Mexico, like Brazil or Norway,
develop its publicly owned oil company into an enterprise that can successfully
benefit from association or competition with private companies?
The first reason is the controversial record of privatization in Mexico.
When Carlos Salinas de Gortari, president from 1988 to 1994, transferred
ownership of banks, television and telephone companies from the state to
private hands, the general view was that he had favored his friends, with
lucrative results for the new owners but not for the consumer. Yet the Energy
Reform is not an act of privatization. Contrary to the opposition’s rhetoric,
no property will be transferred to the companies involved.
A second explanation — deeper and more complex — is the weight of
nationalism. The Constitution of 1917, the product of a social revolution that
began in 1910, was a foundational document for the new Mexico. Its most
emblematic article was the 27th, which assigned ownership of aboveground and
underground resources, formerly the property of the Spanish crown, to the
nation. For two decades, British, Dutch and American oil companies refused to
accept Article 27 and operated as extraterritorial enclaves, manipulating their
books and evading taxes. Then, on March 18, 1938, after a labor dispute,
President Lázaro Cárdenas nationalized the industry. The popular reaction was
spontaneous. To pay the debts incurred by the expropriation of the foreign
companies, rich women contributed their earrings and poor people their
chickens.
From then on, textbooks, monuments and annual ceremonies celebrate
Cárdenas’s actions as a restoration of national honor. In a number of ways, it
was. And so, understandably, to many Mexicans — including Cuauhtémoc Cárdenas,
Lázaro’s son and the respected leader of the moderate left — today’s Energy
Reform appears to be a sin against history.
But a third issue, little discussed by the opposition, seems the most
compelling: the fear that increased oil revenue will simply raise the level of
corruption to the point reached during Mexico’s last oil boom, which began in
the late 1970s and led to a traumatic experience for the Mexican people.
Mishandling the new abundance and elevated world prices, the PRI government
created a vast bureaucracy that embarked on wasteful projects, contracted
gigantic international debts and eventually bankrupted the country, leading to
the disastrous devaluation of the peso in 1982.
Given the past performance of Mexican governments, it is legitimate to be
skeptical. The opposition could do a great deal of good by focusing on
practical steps to avoid another economic fiasco: maintaining tight vigilance
over contracts, ensuring the productivity and transparence of new investments,
creating a fund for future development (as in Norway), monitoring potential
ecological damage, restructuring and modernizing Pemex, and, most important,
assuring that profits are not used to expand bureaucracy but are delivered to
the Mexican people.
With the opposition still completely opposed to the Energy Reform, the only
way the government can win this battle is not through a theological debate
about the Mexican soul, but by convincing ordinary Mexicans that the reform can
deliver tangible results, that this time it will be different and the newly
generated wealth will reach the hands of its presumed owners: the Mexican
people, especially the tens of millions among them most in need.
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