Kenji Orito Diaz is a Colombojapanese
Professor and Social Worker who became famous in Colombia due to one of its
conferences in the University of Los Andes in Bogota. The topics of this
conference were the myths between Colombia and
Japan. According to Kenji there are three main myths that Colombians have about
Japanese people. The third one is the main topic of this essay. He said “Colombia is a rich country and Japan is
not” (Mito 3 – Yokoi Kenji). Japan is not only the Second Major Economy in
the World but also, one of the most technologically speaking advance countries
too and, still Kenji said Colombia was richer that Japan. How Could Colombia be richer than Japan?
During
the conference he shared an experience about something that happened to him
while he was visiting his paternal family in Japan years before. It was about a
watermelon he said. His grandfather bought a “huge” watermelon and everyone was
so excited about having watermelon for breakfast that morning that his cousins
were screaming and jumping around the house. He could not understand why it was
such a big deal having watermelon for breakfast. He said: “When I was in school we could get a piece of watermelon for around 25
cents of a dollar and my mom usually bought a watermelon for around 2,50
dollars, but In Japan a watermelon cost around $40 dollars” . Then, he make a reflection, he said
Colombians do not really thing that they live in a rich country, as personal I
did not think that too (Mito 3 – Yokoi Kenji).
Geographically speaking Colombia
has a privileged position; 2 oceans, a 1,142,000 km mountain which is called
Andean and it is divided into three branches itself; warm, cold and in between
weathers for the whole year, a unique mountain system, with plateaus,
rainforest, plains, snowy mountains, deserts, tundra and wetlands. Also, not
counting only with the oceans, Colombia also have extend and torrential rivers
going through it (Having a part of the Amazon River too). Because of all this,
this country has one of the richest flora and fauna worldwide. Counting with 0.8%
of the planet’s terrestrial surface, it is the third country in terms of
biodiversity in the world, after Brazil and Indonesia. Moreover, It has more than 3,000 varieties of flowers,
nearly 1.800 bird species out of the 9.000
that exist, huge amount of amphibians, reptiles bats, rodent and insect varieties-
counting with 3.000 species of butterflies (Colombia:
Biodiversity Synonym). And, in terms of raw materials and energy,
Colombia is the world’s leading producer of emeralds, and South America’s
second largest producer of gold and only producer of platinum. Colombia also
owns the largest coal reserves, second largest oil (The government had declined
to join the OPEC because it is worried about not being able to fulfill
compulsory export conditions OPEC members must comply with), and the largest natural
gas reserves in South America (Raw Materials, n.d).
Then, why is it Colombia a
developing (poor) country? What is that that have happened that has not let us
grow as a country and be located in such a bad position among the rest of the
countries in the world? Colombia has
public institutions much more sophisticated than those in Guatemala; it is more
urbanized than Bolivia, and has a more vibrant business sector than the
Dominican Republic but still, shares similar poverty rates with those
countries. The poverty rate in 2012 was of 32,7% and extreme poverty of 10,6%,
which means around 15 million people among the whole country are living in
poverty. Moreover, for 2013, Colombia ranked in the Seventh place of the most
unequal countries in the world. According to the report of the World Bank, this
rate is similar to countries such as Haiti, Angola and South Africa (Breaking with History, n.d).
The
reason is very simple and, also complicated. Colombia has not being able to
reach economic growth because of the Corruption inside its government. According
to the World Bank, corruption is defined as the abuse of public power for
private benefit (Tanzi, 1998). The reasons of why corruption is present in each
country are different but, there are still common features that shape a
suitable environment for corruption to grow and, it looks like Colombia fits in
all of them (El Gammal, 2011). Corruption is a controversial topic in Colombia,
mainly because this one comes from the government and the public institutions
itself. Political Corruption has leaded to many other problems such as poverty,
lack of education, unemployment, crime, drugs and violence (The Armed
Conflict). Being this one the base of everything else that happens in the
country.
Everything
started in the nineteen century with the disputes, usually involving violence,
between the two main political parties in the country. They wanted to maintain their status quo
inside the country; therefore they made an agreement called “Frente Nacional” whose mail goal was
to rebuild the country after their last military government and “give the country an opportunity to grow”.
The two parties then divided the presidential elections and the sits in the
congress by equal. This means every four years, the president would change from
one party to the other one - just the two of them – and the congress would be
equally divided within the two. This caused many conflicts and disputes inside
the country. And leaded to the formation of, what today is the FARC.
Colombia
has been affected by corruption in every single way, from the social, political
and economic point. In recent years, there were
revelations that 48 thousand government officials, including 800 mayors and 30
governors, were being investigated for corruption. (Rojas, 2009). A U.N. study demonstrated that the costs of corruption
committed by public employees were ten times greater than the costs of illegal
acts committed by common criminals. Another study on criminality in Colombia
indicated that, while all crimes were growing at an annual rate of 39.7
percent, those described as committed by public employees were growing by 164.1
percent (El Gammal, 2011).
Specific cases of
corruption have been discovered in the last 10 years. Between the most
important ones we can find: First, Last Government’ Minister of Agriculture,
Andres Felipe Arias, introduced a program of
subsidies for small farmers to help them compete with American agricultural
product. Some of the money went to bigger landholders and politicians—as well
as to the owner of an influential newspaper, and to a former beauty queen who
owned no land. Second, the last Major of Bogota (Capital of Colombia), Mr. Samuel
Moreno, was charged with criminal conspiracy and abuse of public office for allegedly
plotting to have DAS (the Domestic Intelligence Agency), spy on journalists,
judges and the president's political opponents through surveillance and
wiretaps. Third, The “Proceso
8000”, the legal investigation to the events that happened in the middle-1990s,
when the president of Colombia, Ernesto
Samper, was accused of receiving money from drug
lords for his electoral campaign.
And, the Colombian parapolitics
scandal which was basically the discovery of many links between Colombian
politicians and paramilitaries (Corruption in Colombia, 2011). Moreover, due to
this problem in the country there has been multiple cases where constructions
all over the country have stopped because of “lack of budget” but actually what
happens is that few people keep the money from the public contracts and the
building sites are not completed. This causes a chaos on the streets of the
main cities (Otis, 2010).
The main consequences of political corruption
in the economic field are many. Firstly, Corruption reduces public revenue and
increases public spending. Thus, it contributes to larger fiscal deficits, making
it more difficult for the government to run a descent fiscal policy. Secondly,
corruption is likely to increase income inequality because it allows
well-positioned individuals to take advantage of government activities at the
cost of the rest of the population. Thirdly, it reduces the ability of the
government to impose necessary regulatory controls and inspections to correct
for market failures. The government is not able to regulate satisfactorily
public institutions such as banks, hospitals schools, among others. Also, It
reduces expenditure on education and health, which does not lend itself easily
to corrupt practices on the part of those who make budgetary decisions. It
increases public investment because public investment projects lend themselves
easily to manipulations by high-level officials to get bribes. It reduces tax
revenue, mainly because of the impact that it has on the tax administration and
on customs, thus reducing the ability of the government to carry out needed
public expenditure. Finally, corruption is likely to increase poverty because
it reduces the income earning potential of the poor (Tanzi, 1998).
In the case of Colombia, corruption
has brought with it a high collaboration between the drug dealer’ cartels and
the public officers who try to get money from the business (El Gammal, 2011).
Also, because of the security problem that the armed conflict has brought with
it, there is much more investment in security and military than in education or
social welfare. The allocation of resources is not fair and the inequality rate
becomes higher every year. The corruption has cost Colombia around 10 billion
pesos during the last 20 years, that is around 5 million dollars. Taking into
account that with just 1 billion pesos you can: built around 40.000 houses for
poor people, built around 1.000 km in roads, pay during 20 years the
functioning of a public hospital, give every day 3 meals to around 40 million
people during a year and built around 25 parks in a year. The cost has been
really high (Restrepo, 2010).
It is true what Kenji said in his
conference, Colombia has many ways to develop economically; we just do not
realize what we have. In addition, the effect of corruption in the country has
led a huge mark in economy and in people. With all this money being stolen by
public workers, politicians and organizations, the country has become a sort of
chaos that even the most important resources, like emeralds and oil, are being
sold for such a little price that allows to developed countries to buy our
resources and sell them to us again by a much higher price. For Example,
emeralds are sold as rocks but them they a sold to Colombians as jewelry.
Also, people have lost their faith
in Colombian government and democracy. All of you can listen on the radio and
TV is that the country is experiencing this sort of situation and you start
thinking, why should I go to vote if they are just going to keep stealing the
money? Should I just vote for the one I think is going to steal the least? And it becomes a vicious circle where people
do not believe in institutions and institutions do not make any effort for
people to believe in them. Then, what is the point of living in one of the
richest places in the world (in resources) when the government has made
Colombians feel like we need from outside countries more than what we actually
do.
It is true that public corruption
has existed worldwide for thousands of years. And it is also true that Colombia
is not the only country in the world suffering the consequences of it. But,
because of the corruption problem in the country many people have lost their
family, land, and money. Also, the few industries that are actually working
into the economic growth of the country are owned by either foreigners or
people from the government (Or relatives) which still gain from people working
the whole time for small salaries because “We are a poor country” when that is
actually not true. The rules of the “El vivo vive del bobo” – a Colombia
traditional idiom use to refer that smart people usually live well because of
the brainless people – is the one that governs the country.
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