Dean Baker
Al Jazeera America, December 2, 2013
Article Artículo
Uruguay Discusses Withdrawing Troops from Haiti, Creating Waves Throughout the RegionIn late October, Uruguayan president José Mujica announced that he planned to withdraw his country’s troops from Haiti, where they make up 11 percent of the U.N. peacekeeping mission. Citing the long delayed legislative elections, Mujica told the press:
One thing is to try to help the Haitian people build a police force that is in charge of security. That's fine… Another thing is being there indefinitely with a regime that we think is at least dubious in terms of a continuity of democratic renewal.
MINUSTAH, as the U.N. mission is known, has been in Haiti since 2004 following the coup that ousted President Jean-Bertrand Aristide. In October the mission’s mandate was extended by the U.N. Security Council for another year, though a gradual drawdown of troops was also agreed. After his initial statements, Mujica traveled to Brazil where he met with President Dilma Rousseff. Brazil leads MINUSTAH and is the largest troop-contributing country, accounting for 16 percent of the personnel.
After the meeting, Mujica stated that he and Rousseff agreed that the mission should not become a “Praetorian Guard” to protect a government that was not moving forward democratically. On November 20, the U.N. spokesperson for the Secretary General acknowledged that “preliminary and informal discussions have taken place with the Uruguayan representatives in New York regarding the planned withdrawal of a part of their troops,” but that “no formal notification has as yet been exchanged.”
On November 25, before travelling to Haiti for a meeting with President Martelly, Uruguayan Foreign Minister Luis Almagro met in New York with Brazilian and U.N. officials to discuss MINUSTAH’s presence in Haiti. Almagro stated that while Uruguay would only gradually withdraw its troops in line with the Security Council resolution, if “autocratic” tendencies in the Haitian government continued, they would immediately withdraw. Specifically, Almagro conditioned continued Uruguayan support to MINUSTAH on the holding of the overdue legislative elections.
Regional Implications
In June 2012, the Union of South American Nations (UNASUR) met to discuss MINUSTAH and agreed to form a working group “for the purposes of elaborating a scheme on the strategy, form, conditions, stages, and timeline of a Plan of Reduction of Contingents of the Military Component of the Mission.” Though there has been little movement since then, the recent actions by Uruguay may change that.
Jake Johnston / December 04, 2013
Article Artículo
Beyond the So-Called Poverty Line: The Income-Hardship Gradient TodayShawn Fremstad / December 04, 2013
Article Artículo
Economists and Inflation: It's Also Interest Rates, not Just WagesDean Baker / December 04, 2013
Article Artículo
Pension Theft: Class War Goes to the Next StageDean Baker
Truthout, December 4, 2013
Dean Baker / December 04, 2013
Article Artículo
Latin America and the Caribbean
Las elecciones en Honduras empañadas por actos de violencia y acusaciones de fraude: ¿los observadores internacionales avistarán la evidencia?Mark Weisbrot / December 03, 2013
Article Artículo
Latin America and the Caribbean
Honduran Elections Marred by Violence, Fraud Allegations: Will International Observers Look at the Evidence?Mark Weisbrot / December 03, 2013
Article Artículo
Work Sharing: A Win for Both Employees and EmployersIn their new book, Jared Bernstein and CEPR's Dean Baker feature work sharing (a.k.a. short-time compensation) as a way to have more jobs in this economy. They highlight the program's striking success in Germany, where "its unemployment rate has actually fallen by more than 2.0 percentage points from its pre-crisis level, in spite of the fact that its economic growth has been no better than that of the United States."
CEPR and / December 03, 2013
Article Artículo
NYT Says the Republicans Want to Cut Food Stamps by $40 BillionDean Baker / December 03, 2013
Article Artículo
More Bad Mommies in Poverty From Nick KristofShawn Fremstad / December 02, 2013
Article Artículo
Taking Asset Bubbles SeriouslyDean Baker
Al Jazeera America, December 2, 2013
Dean Baker / December 02, 2013
Article Artículo
Everyday Low Wages at Walmart: Brought to You by Government PolicyDean Baker
Truthout, December 2, 2013
Dean Baker / December 02, 2013
Article Artículo
The Post Only Calls It Redistribution When Government Policy Pushes Income DownwardDean Baker / December 01, 2013
Article Artículo
Latin America and the Caribbean
How Big Is Puerto Rico's Economy?Dean Baker / December 01, 2013
Article Artículo
Lack of Unions Is Not a Draw for All Foreign Manufacturers in South CarolinaDean Baker / December 01, 2013
Article Artículo
Long-Term Unemployed Suffer from Discrimination, not Lack of SkillsDean Baker / November 29, 2013