
AP piece in the LA Times (10/14/19)
Bernie Sanders tweeted an Associated Press article in the LA Times (10/14/19) about Ecuador’s recent protests, in which eight protesters were killed in 11 days. “Economic elites keep pushing austerity worldwide, making life unbearable for working people,” Sanders declared. Unfortunately, that AP piece was itself a good example of how elites push for austerity.
Under the headline “Ecuador Deal Cancels Austerity Plan, Ends Indigenous Protest,” the article claimed that former President Rafael Correa—in office from January 15, 2007, until May 24, 2017—left Ecuador “deeply in debt.” AP’s Michael Weissenstein and Gonzalo Solano said Ecuador’s current president, Lenín Moreno, had agreed to work with indigenous leaders to “reduce Ecuador’s unsustainable budget deficits and public debt.”
In fact, Ecuador’s government does not have a high debt load. The table below shows the Ecuadorian government’s gross debt-to-GDP ratio compared to various other countries that (like Ecuador) cannot issue their own currency. (Ecuador adopted the dollar as its currency in 2000, after its entire financial sector collapsed after decades of imposing the right-wing economic policies that the IMF “recommends” to developing countries; the other countries in the table below are part of the Eurozone.)

Source: IMF
Note that Ecuador’s debt to GDP ratio has continued to increase under Moreno, because he has implemented the policies that Ecuador’s elite always liked—and which are the exact opposite of what he promised on the campaign trail in 2017. That said, Ecuador’s public debt is not high now, and was even less so when Correa left office.
Another AP report that was published by the New York Times (10/15/19) stated that Ecuador has a $64 billion public debt and a “budget shortfall” of $10 billion. The IMF, which is hardly inclined to underestimate these figures, says the government’s gross debt will be $53 billion in 2019 and its budget deficit $37 million. (AP appears to have included in its “shortfall” estimate all the principal and interest due on Ecuador’s foreign bonds this year—which is not how governments calculate their budget deficits. Governments almost always “roll over” their bonds—pay off principal by issuing new bonds.)
Oil prices collapsed in the last quarter of 2014 and stayed low for years. That hurt Ecuador badly because about half its export earnings had been coming from oil. Ecuador was also hit by a massive earthquake in April 2016, the most destructive in decades. A significant rise in the value of the US dollar since mid-2014 also hurt Ecuador’s competitiveness, because Ecuador (unlike countries that have their own currency) cannot devalue to help the prices of its exports stay competitive. Those external shocks did cause an increase in public debt in Correa’s last two and a half years in office.

Source: IMF
But Correa did not impose austerity measures, nor did he run to the IMF (as Lenin Moreno has) for one of its infamous “structural adjustment” loans, where spending cuts, attacks on workers’ rights, central bank independence and privatization are all part of the “deal.”

FAIR.org (2/4/18)
By the time Correa left office, poverty was cut by about one-third, and extreme poverty by about one-half. The homicide rate was dramatically reduced. Vast and long overdue improvements had been made to Ecuador’s public infrastructure. Eight hydroelectric plants were built, and roads drastically improved throughout the country. That’s why Lenin Moreno was able to run his successful 2017 presidential campaign as a staunch Correa loyalist (FAIR.org, 2/4/18).
The AP deceptively stated that
Moreno served Correa as vice president before he became president, and the two men went through a bitter split as Moreno pushed to curb public debt amassed on Correa’s watch.
The AP here buries Moreno’s remarkable cynicism. The “bitter split” happened very shortly after the votes were counted in 2017. Within weeks of taking office, Moreno went completely over to the side of the rich and, what amounts to the same thing, the side of the private media barons who had always vilified Correa. Moreno quickly made changes to Ecuador’s public media to ensure that they followed suit. In a nationally televised interview in January 2018, both public and private media journalists reinforced Moreno’s attack lines against his former allies (Counterpunch, 1/21/18).
Armed with that media monoculture, Moreno attacked his former allies with wild allegations that the media spread uncritically. That was key to saddling his former allies with criminal charges and investigations. He has accused Correa of spying on him from Belgium (where Correa lives with his Belgian wife) through a hidden camera in Ecuador’s presidential palace, and alleged that Correa improved Ecuador’s roads in order to facilitate drug trafficking.
Moreno knows that no charge is too outlandish, provided it reinforces what the powerful and their media outlets want to hear. Moreno accused WikiLeaks’ Julian Assange of smearing feces on the walls of Ecuador’s embassy in London, where Assange had been granted asylum by the Correa government. One of Moreno’s ministers said she found it suspicious that journalists in Ecuador working for Russian state media covered the recent protests.
It’s important to note that oil prices (chart below) recovered significantly since Moreno took office on May 24, 2017. They have, on average, been about 25% higher under Moreno than they were in Correa’s last two years. Ecuador has not been hit by a major natural disaster since Moreno took office. So why has Moreno, who is supposedly deeply preoccupied with reducing the public debt, increased it instead?

Source: St. Louis Federal Reserve
He has done it by implementing policies the elite always wanted, for both ideological and self-serving reasons: giving tax cuts to the rich, giving away revenue to transnational oil and mining companies, making it illegal for the government to finance itself internally (therefore forcing it to turn to the private sector) and refusing to impose import tariffs. Incidentally, import tariffs were crucial to Ecuador avoiding austerity or a deep recession during Correa’s last two years in office.
The AP article said that:
Foreign Minister José Valencia told the Associated Press on Sunday that the Moreno administration believed Correa, Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro and Colombia’s far-left FARC and ELN guerrillas are working to destabilize Ecuador. He offered no proof beyond the fact that a handful of Correa loyalists and some Venezuelan nationals had been detained during the protests.

The Moreno administration arrested Paola Pabon, the governor of Ecuador’s second-largest state, with virtually no English-language media attention. (cc photo: National Assembly of Ecuador)
Surely the fact that a government has arrested some of its political opponents should not be taken as any kind of “proof” of foreign subversion. Among the political arrestees referred to offhandedly by AP as “a handful of Correa loyalists” is Paola Pabón, the governor of of Pichincha, the second-most populous province in Ecuador. Yofre Poma, a member of the National Assembly, was also arrested, as was the former mayor of the canton of Duran, Alexandra Arce, along with Magdalena Robles, an online journalist who supports Correa.
Another sitting National Assembly member, Gabriela Rivandeneira, and former assembly member Virgilio Hernandez took refuge in the Mexican embassy after police broke into their houses.
Unlike President Nicolás Maduro in Venezuela, Moreno is not confronting a US-backed opposition that briefly seized power in one military coup and then attempted five others (FAIR.org, 5/20/19). The Western media would be overflowing with outrage over Moreno’s abuses, long before these protests, if he had not tightly embraced Washington’s agenda.
Seven right-wing governments in Latin America immediately backed Moreno’s claim that Venezuela was behind the protests in Ecuador. US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said on October 11 that the US
supports President Moreno and the government of Ecuador’s efforts to institutionalize democratic practices and implement needed economic reforms. We are aware and monitoring claims of external actor involvement in these demonstrations.
By “external actor involvement,” Pompeo didn’t mean the IMF, effectively an extension of the US Treasury Department in developing countries. Moreno is jailing elected political rivals and has authorized lethal tactics precisely to impose his deal with that external actor.
Messages to Associated Press can be sent to info@ap.org (or via Twitter @AP). Please remember that respectful communication is the most effective.
Featured image: Ecuador protesters (photo: Voice of America)





The AP has been an insidious “external actor” for US interests for donkey’s years.
The acronym may as well stand for “American Propaganda”.
“FAIR is the national progressive media watchdog group, challenging corporate media bias, spin and misinformation. We work to invigorate the First Amendment by advocating for greater diversity in the press and by scrutinizing media practices that marginalize public interest, minority and dissenting viewpoints. We expose neglected news stories and defend working journalists when they are muzzled. As a progressive group, we believe that structural reform is ultimately needed to break up the dominant media conglomerates, establish independent public broadcasting and promote strong non-profit sources of information.” That statement is demonstrative of the misrepresentation you continue to assert. I have yet to read any article, post or commentary, from Fair, that provides any original insight, you copy cat Information that has been reported already and some of the news sites you plagiarize are from 10 years ago. You are delusional if you believe you are any type of threat to any corporation, established news sources, or the majority of the American people. You are overtly extreme left and you have asserted, rather strong armed, your readers to either agree with your self serving agendas or they will be censored. You don’t have any authority to backup your empty threats, and you can’t create a leftist dictatorship over the American people. If you ever attempt to take away the freedoms from the American people you will not only fail miserably but you will also discover that you and your minority pseudo liberals, will be choking down an obscene amount of humble pie. Probably the wake up call that you not only need and deserve, but will enable you to be self aware, and then you will learn what it means to be a contribution
“That statement is demonstrative of the misrepresentation you continue to assert. I have yet to read any article, post or commentary, from Fair, that provides any original insight, you copy cat Information that has been reported already and some of the news sites you plagiarize are from 10 years ago. ”
Provide EVEN ONE SINGLE example of this to back up your deranged diatribe
“You are delusional if you believe you are any type of threat to any corporation, established news sources, or the majority of the American people.”
FAIR is an asset to the American people, not a threat.It has never threatened by word or deed anyone (except corporate media credibility by exposing its massive falsifications and gaping, yawning omissions )
” If you ever attempt to take away the freedoms from the American people you will not only fail miserably but you will also discover that you and your minority pseudo liberals, will be choking down an obscene amount of humble pie. Probably the wake up call that you not only need and deserve, but will enable you to be self aware, and then you will learn what it means to be a contribution”
You really sound like the next mass shooting perp..I hope the bourgeois surveillance state you hold so dear is keeping a close watch.
This is the most interesting and factual economic article I have read so far. How would you feel travelling to Ecuador in November now that the protests have stopped? Do you think that the political climate is still at risk of exploding again soon?
As long as Moreno and his political apparatus is still in power p its probably risky to travel there
Apparently not unless you plan to be traveling near the border of NARCO death squad state and US ally Columbia
https://www.gov.uk/foreign-travel-advice/ecuador
Yes, the IMF-imposed financial deregulation could eventually lead to another banking system implosion. The government just passed a law enshrining more deregulation and tax giveaways. That, combined Moreno government’s inability to deliver a anything but spin, makes continued backlash from the population likely.
Anyone who publicly supports Correa and has interviewed (as I have) any of the politicians Moreno has had arrested, or the lawyers representing them, should not entirely discount the possibility of arrest by Moreno’s government. It is completely without scruples and backed by the (also unscrupulous) US government and the propaganda apparatus that serves it.
Excelente articulo, me alegro que se
de a conocer al Mundo LA verdad acerca de lo ultimos acontecimientosen mi paid.
why do you not show comments ?
You didn’t mention that the Galapagos Islands have been assaulted physically and militarily by Mike Pompeo, he installed a military base there, the Galapagos were protected. The USA hates Correa, the USA has been working with Moreno to persecute all the Correistas and anyone who raises any criticism. The USA never forgave Correa for expelling the USA MILITARY BASE FROM Manta. You don’t mention that Moreno sent the elected vice-president Jorge Glas to jail, there is no proof. Law fare as an strategy is being used to send people to prison. Moreno is involved with the INA papers, no body is talking about that anymore. People are too worried about this whole situation, I learned that Humberto Fierro, a WELL KNOWN CATHOLIC LEADER WAS ALSO IN JAIL.
Bernie Sanders is the last person you want to take financial advise from.
And then the NY Times reports it. That should tell you that the reality is the exact opposite of what those two are telling you #fakenews.