Cartoons

Oh, Latin America. Why so tempestuous?

Oh, Latin America. Why so tempestuous?

Throughout its history, the former colony has suffered from an obvious political, social, and economic disease that comes knocking from time to time, in between rare cycles of prosperity.

In 2019, after years of Venezuela and Haiti holding the monopoly on crisis, the problem has spread. Argentina is facing its worst economic scenario this century, while Chile has burst into protests against the neoliberal effects on inequality. Bolivia has seen Evo Morales given another term as president after a contested election, Ecuador’s streets were on fire due to a new IMF loan, and Peru almost lost a president due to an institutional disaster (thanks, Odebrecht!). Oh, and Venezuela and Haiti haven’t improved much either.

And what about Brazil? Well, we would need some extra horsemen — at least two, for ideological extremism, and environmental disasters. As the Chilean liberal model faces criticism, we can also compare the recent protests in Santiago to Brazil’s future. Plus, Bolsonaro’s foreign policies have seen the country lose its leading diplomatic role, leaving it to Chile’s under-fire Sebastian Piñera. It’s a huge mess.

Latin America is not a continent for stability. Even the horsemen of the apocalypse should watch out: they don’t want someone to steal their horse, or to hitch it in the wrong place.

Background reading:

TBR Newsroom and Jika

We are an in-depth content platform about Brazil, made by Brazilians and destined to foreign audiences.

Recent Posts

Madonna concert to inject BRL 300 million into Rio economy

The city of Rio de Janeiro estimates that a Madonna concert this Saturday on Copacabana…

2 hours ago

Panama ready to vote as Supreme Court clears frontrunner

Latin America’s trend of banning opposition candidates from elections has caught on in an ever-growing…

2 hours ago

Sabesp privatization edges closer with São Paulo legislation

The São Paulo City Council on Thursday approved legislation authorizing Brazil’s largest city to sign…

5 hours ago

Brazil’s AI regulation gets first draft to guide upcoming debates

The preliminary report on AI regulations presented to Brazil’s Senate last week provides a middle-of-the-road…

6 hours ago

Ayrton Senna, a true Brazilian hero

In 2000, Formula 1 great Michael Schumacher had just racked up his 41st race win,…

23 hours ago

OECD improves Brazil’s GDP growth forecast once again

Overall, the worldwide economic outlook has improved according to the Organization for Economic Co-operation and…

1 day ago