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| [Reprinted from The
Gargoyle, March 1977] |
At the time of this essay,
David Simmons was Director Institute de Estudios Ibero Americanos,
Saltillo, Coahuila, Mexico. Mr. Simmons was a former Associate
Director of the Henry George School in Los Angeles, Calif., and
for 27 years a resident of Mexico.
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The situation in Mexico is much more complicated than the
article in the January Gargoyle would lead one to believe. One
of the reasons for the comparative stability of Mexico during the past
50 years has been the fact that almost all of the large estates and
haciendas have been broken up and distributed to the peasants. However
because Mexico has one of the highest birthrates in the world there is
now a whole new generation of peasants clamoring for land, and very
little left to be distributed. It has been calculated that if all the
land of Mexico were divided up equally each person would receive a
plot just barely large enough to be buried in. Since it is not
possible for everyone to have a piece of land, it is only fair that
those who have possession of the land should pay for this privilege by
means of a tax on land value. This of course should apply not only to
agricultural land, but to land in the cities as well. With the revenue
that such a tax would provide, the government would have ample funds
to help those people who really wanted to work but were unable to find
jobs.
The last president of Mexico, Luis Echeverria, actually encouraged
people to take over by force land that was already in production. The
insecurity in the possession of land caused many . farmers who
otherwise would have made much needed investments in agriculture to
put their capital to other uses. _Often the squatters were not even
real peasants or people in need, but professional agitators.
On Dec. 1st Jose Lopez Portillo took office as president of Mexico,
and he immediately started making important changes. To begin with he
established cordial relations with the United States. These relations
had deteriorated considerably under the anti-Americanism of the former
president. The government is now working with businessmen to solve the
problems of the country, instead of just insulting and harassing them
as was the custom of Echeverria. In addition the government is being
reorganized along more efficient lines, and the number of employees on
the government payroll is actually being reduced.
Land in the state of Sonora which was illegally taken away from its
rightful owners by the former president was returned to them by Lopez
Portillo. It should be noted that these owners were not speculators.
They were hard working farmers who had taken bare desert land and made
it the bread basket of Mexico for the past fifty years. In order for
the new president to restore confidence in the government it was
necessary to take this step. However he is most certainly not unaware
of the problems existing in regard to the land. Actually a large
portion of the land distributed to peasants under previous regimes is
now lying idle. The present government is currently taking a census of
this land, and plans to redistribute it to peasants willing to
cultivate it, rather than breaking up farms now in production.
Dividing up the land of Mexico has been disastrous as far as
production is concerned. Mexico, which at one time was an exporter of
agricultural products has recently had to import in large quantities
such basic commodities as corn, wheat, vegetable oil, etc. just two
years ago they were an exporter of sugar, but this year they will have
to import it. Practically any older person in Mexico can tell you
about large farms he knows of which were once fertile and productive,
but after they were divided up and given to the peasants they stopped
producing and are now abandoned. Statistics show that the
comparatively few small property owners left in Mexico produce by far
the major portion of the agricultural production of the country. The
ejidos, which make up the vast majority of the agricultural land in
Mexico, produce a very small percentage.
Mexico faces many serious problems, and there are some economists who
believe that it will not be possible for her to overcome these
problems unless she sells most of the 740 different state enterprises
she owns (as Chile is doing), the majority of which are being operated
at a loss. Nevertheless it is important to put these problems into
perspective. When Americans compare the standard of living in Mexico
with that in the U.S. they assume that the poor Mexicans must be
seething with revolt. However the important thing is to compare
conditions in Mexico with what they were 10 or 20 years ago. During
this period of time much progress has been made - greater educational
opportunities, better medical services, water for drinking and
irrigation, highways, industry, etc. During the regime of Echeverria
there was a danger of communism being forced upon the people by the
government. However there is little chance that the people of Mexico
would actually choose communism.
As a lifetime Georgist it is obvious to me that the solution to many
of Mexico's problems would be to collect a tax on land values and
eliminate the many taxes now in existence which discourage production
and cause inflation. The stimulus to construction, agriculture,
industry, and business of all kinds would probably be so great that
there would be a labor shortage in Mexico, and the braceros would find
better jobs at home than in the U.S.
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