Why
Cuba move will help America/Fareed Zakaria is the host of Global Public Square, which airs Sundays at 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. ET on CNN. For more of Zakaria’s commentary, visit GPS or watch his upcoming Moonshots special on December 28. The views expressed are his own.
CNN
| 20/12/14
In
opposing President Barack Obama’s opening to Cuba, Florida’s Republican
senator, Marco Rubio, explained, “This entire policy shift announced today is
based on an illusion, on a lie, the lie and the illusion that more commerce and
access to money and goods will translate to political freedom for the Cuban
people.” Rubio has correctly touched on the core issue. But theory, logic and
history suggest that he’s wrong in his conclusions.
I
would recommend to Rubio one of the classics of conservative thought, Milton
Friedman’s “Capitalism and Freedom.” He doesn’t have to spend too much time on
it. The first chapter outlines the “relation between economic freedom and
political freedom.”
The
point Friedman makes in the book is one that America’s founding fathers well
understood. Drawing on the political philosopher John Locke, they believed that
the freedom to buy, sell, own and trade were core elements of human freedom and
individual autonomy. As they expand, liberty expands.
This
is not just theory, of course. Over the last two centuries, the countries that
embraced “more commerce and access to money and goods” in Rubio’s phrase —
Britain, America, then Western Europe and East Asia — have moved toward greater
prosperity, but also political freedom. If you exclude oil-rich countries,
where money is not earned but dug from the ground, almost every country that
has used free markets and free trade to grow is also a democracy.
Yes
there are a few exceptions: Singapore and China (though the latter is still not
quite a developed economy.) But on the whole, there has been a remarkably
strong connection between economic freedom and political freedom.
In
Latin America itself, the line has been clear. Augusto Pinochet’s regime opened
up its economy in the 1970s. Chile began to grow, but that growth then produced
a stronger civil society that over time clamored for the end of the Pinochet
dictatorship. (The same pattern could be seen in Taiwan, South Korea, Spain and
Portugal.) In Latin America today, democracy and markets have acted to
reinforce each other, transforming the continent, which 30 years ago was almost
entirely ruled by dictatorships to one that is today almost entirely ruled by
democracies.
Cuba
is an outlier, one of the last regimes in Latin America that has embraced
neither markets nor ballots. The Obama administration is acting on the theory
that more commerce, capitalism, contact, travel and trade will empower the
people of Cuba and thus give them a greater voice in their political future.
And so the first point to make is that it will help Cubans economically — it
will raise their incomes, their standard of living, and boost access to
technology. These are all good things in and of themselves.
But
easing the embargo will also help Americans, who will benefit from being able
to trade with a neighbor. This is the reason that conservatives have long
understood that free trade is not a gift bestowed on someone. It helps both
countries and in particular, helps the United States.
That’s
why the Wall Street Journal’s editorial page — bastion of conservative thought
— has been an advocate on lifting the trade embargo against Cuba, which is a
far larger step than Obama’s normalization.
So,
did it support Obama’s opening? Of course not. It turns out that he has done it
in the wrong way. It is difficult not to think that the problem here is not the
policy, but who the president is. Had George W. Bush announced this initiative,
I have a feeling that the Wall Street Journal would be hailing it — and Rubio
would be quoting Milton Friedman to us all.
No hay comentarios.:
Publicar un comentario