Haiti's Fault Lines: Made in the
U.S.A.
by Marie Kennedy and Chris Tilly
www.dollarsandsense.org/
The mainstream media got half the story
right about Haiti. Reporters observed that Haiti's stark poverty
intensified the devastation caused by the recent earthquake. True:
hillside shantytowns, widespread concrete construction without
rebar reinforcement, a grossly inadequate road network, and a
health-care system mainly designed to cater to the small elite
all contributed mightily to death and destruction.
But what caused that poverty? U.S. readers
and viewers might be forgiven for concluding that some inexplicable
curse has handed Haiti corrupt and unstable governments, unproductive
agriculture, and widespread illiteracy. Televangelist Pat Robertson
simply took this line of "explanation" to its nutty,
racist conclusion when he opined that Haitians were paying for
a pact with the devil. But the devil had little to do with Haiti's
underdevelopment. Instead, the fingerprints of more mundane actors-France
and later the United States-are all over the crime scene. After
the slave rebellion of 1791, France wrought massive destruction
in attempting to recapture its former colony, then extracted 150
million francs of reparations, only fully paid off in 1947. France's
most poisonous legacy may have been the skin-color hierarchy that
sparked fratricidal violence and still divides Haiti.
While France accepted Haiti once the government
started paying up, the United States, alarmed by the example of
a slave republic, refused to recognize Haiti until 1862. That
late-arriving recognition kicked off a continuing series of military
and political interventions. The U.S. Marines occupied Haiti outright
1915-34, modernizing the infrastructure but also revising laws
to allow foreign ownership, turning over the country's Treasury
to a New York bank, saddling Haiti with a $40 million debt to
the United States, and reinforcing the status gap between mulattos
and blacks. American governments backed the brutal, kleptocratic
two-generation Duvalier dictatorship from 1957-86. When populist
priest Jean-Bertrand Aristide was elected president in 1990, the
Bush I administration winked at the coup that ousted him a year
later. Bill Clinton reversed course, ordering an invasion to restore
Aristide, but used that intervention to impose the same free-trade
"structural adjustment" Bush had sought. Bush II closed
the circle by backing rebels who re-overthrew the re-elected Aristide
in 2004. No wonder many Haitians are suspicious of the U.S. troops
who poured in after the earthquake.
Though coups and invasions grab headlines, U.S. economic interventions
have had equally far-reaching effects. U.S. goals for the last
thirty years have been to open Haiti to American products, push
Haiti's self-sufficient peasants off the land, and redirect the
Haitian economy to plantation-grown luxury crops and export assembly,
both underpinned by cheap labor. Though Haiti has yet to boost
its export capacity, the first two goals have succeeded, shattering
Haiti's former productive capacity. In the early 1980s, the U.S.
Agency for International Development exterminated Haiti's hardy
Creole pigs in the name of preventing a swine flu epidemic, then
helpfully offered U.S. pigs that require expensive U.S.-produced
feeds and medicines. Cheap American rice imports crippled the
country's breadbasket, the Artibonite, so that Haiti, a rice exporter
in the 1980s, now imports massive amounts. Former peasants flooded
into Port-au-Prince, doubling the population over the last quarter
century, building makeshift housing, and setting the stage for
the current catastrophe.
In the wake of the disaster, U.S. aid
continues to have two-edged effects. Each aid shipment that flies
in American rice and flour instead of buying and distributing
local rice or cassava continues to undermine agriculture and deepen
dependency. Precious trucks and airstrips are used to marshal
U.S. troops against overblown "security threats," crowding
out humanitarian assistance. The United States and other international
donors show signs of once more using aid to leverage a free-trade
agenda. If we seek to end Haiti's curse, the first step is to
realize that one of the curse's main sources is...us.
Marie Kennedy and Chris Tilly are present
and past board members of Grassroots International (grassrootsonline.org),
which has worked with Haitian partners for nearly 20 years (including
on current relief). Both are affiliated with UCLA; Tilly is also
a Dollars & Sense Associate.
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