September 27, 2005

Today, unfortunately, I am truly disappointed with FT

Sir, I am absolutely flabbergasted with Andy Webb-Vidal’s report “Chávez puts chocolate factories back on map” and that praises a “cocoa revolution” and concludes that for a “small chocolate factory in the tropics, life has never been sweeter.” I cannot understand how a sophisticated paper like FT would fail to identify that this is but another perfect example of how haphazardly leaders of developing countries, especially when their egos are insufflated by a well endowed checking account fed by the oil, can come to consider themselves as visionary economic planners and perfect substitutes for the decision making process of the private sector. You’d be surprised by how many exact replicas of this chocolate project you could find over the last five decades in Venezuela and, in fact, when we read about “reopen a derelict chocolate factory”, it could very well be referring to a project that might initially have been advanced in exactly the same way, by for instance a Carlos Andres Perez government, 1974 - 1978. It is so sad that you fell for the anecdotal Willy Wonka cuteness of the story, instead of writing it from the perspective of a country in desperate need of some rational economic behavior. The need for a strong and effective government that helps to create a climate propitious for investments cannot be satisfied by a government making the investment themselves.

Sent to FT, September 27, 2005