Cablegate: Assistant Ustr Eissenstat's Visit to Peru - Scenesetter
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DE RUEHPE #3426/01 2411941
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
R 291941Z AUG 06
FM AMEMBASSY LIMA
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 2067
INFO RUEHBO/AMEMBASSY BOGOTA 3834
RUEHBU/AMEMBASSY BUENOS AIRES 2561
RUEHCV/AMEMBASSY CARACAS 9749
RUEHQT/AMEMBASSY QUITO 0648
RUEHLP/AMEMBASSY LA PAZ AUG SANTIAGO 0816
RUEHGV/USMISSION GENEVA 0465
RUCPDOC/DEPT OF COMMERCE WASHINGTON DC
RUEATRS/DEPT OF TREASURY WASHINGTON DC
RHEHAAA/NATIONAL SECURITY COUNCIL WASHINGTON DC
UNCLAS LIMA 003426
SIPDIS
SENSITIVE
SIPDIS
DEPT FOR WHA/AND, WHA/EPSC, EB/OMA, EB/TPP
COMMERCE FOR 4331/MAC/WH/MCAMERON
USTR FOR EEISSENSTAT, BHARMAN AND MCARRILLO
GENEVA FOR USTR
E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: ETRD ECON EINV OTRA PE
SUBJECT: ASSISTANT USTR EISSENSTAT'S VISIT TO PERU - SCENESETTER
Sensitive But Unclassified, please handle accordingly.
1. (SBU) I welcome your August 30-September 1 visit to Peru to
discuss the U.S.-Peru Trade Promotion Agreement (PTPA) with the
Peruvian government, the local American and Peruvian business
communities and members of civil society. The agreement is an
important element of newly-elected President Alan Garcia's foreign
and domestic policy priorities, and the government and the private
sector are eager to secure passage by the U.S. Congress. The new
administration took office on July 28, and has pursued an active
agenda which focuses on both commercial and political outreach to
important partners and a desire to spread more evenly the benefits
of Peru's impressive economic growth over past years. These efforts
include a plan for bringing commerce to the highlands ("Sierra
Exportadora"), an expansion of Peru's trade agreement with Chile,
interest in a trade agreement with Mexico, greater participation in
APEC, and a vision to bring more small businesses into the formal
economy so that they can also benefit from free trade. President
Garcia has named renowned development economist Hernando de Soto to
both implement the more participatory vision of free trade and to
lead the GOP's effort to obtain passage by the U.S. Congress of the
PTPA. Garcia, who speaks French but not English, is anxious to
achieve early, positive results in order to help his APRA party fare
well in the November regional and local elections. Despite a strong
economy, Peru suffers from a weak and fractured political system.
Continued U.S. engagement will be critical to the Garcia
government's efforts to overcome political, economic and social
challenges.
Free Trade to Reduce Poverty
----------------------------
2. (U) President Garcia is committed to further trade liberalization
and has prioritized passage of the PTPA by the U.S. Congress,
expanding trade ties with Chile, and increasing commercial links
with Asia. In addition to naming university rector Felipe Ortiz de
Zevallos as Peru's new Ambassador to Washington, Garcia asked
renowned economist Hernando de Soto to be his personal
representative for the PTPA. De Soto will spend most of September
in Washington promoting PTPA passage. De Soto will also advise the
GOP on reforms necessary to bring more Peruvians into the formal
economy, thereby expanding the number of Peruvians that are able to
access the opportunities created by the PTPA.
3. (U) For both economic and political reasons, the GOP seeks to
strengthen its ties with neighboring South American countries. Peru
and Chile signed an expansion of their 1998 Economic Complementation
Agreement on August 22, 2006. The GOP also shares the Chilean
government's desire to deepen trade between the Andean countries and
Asia, and Peru will host the APEC ministerial and summit in 2008.
Now that Peru has concluded a trade agreement with Chile, the Trade
Ministry's negotiators are focusing on a deal with Mexico.
Strong Economic Growth and Macroeconomic Achievements
--------------------------------------------- --------
4. (U) The Garcia Administration has inherited one of the strongest
economies in Latin America, and the country is entering its 19th
quarter of sustained economic growth. The current expansion began
in 2001, following the political crisis that ended the Fujimori
Administration, and has gained momentum over the last several years.
GDP growth in 2005, at 6.7 percent, was the fastest since 1997.
The economic expansion has continued into this year, despite the
uncertainty created by the presidential elections. Analysts
recently began raising their estimates for growth in 2006 from 5
percent to 5.5-6 percent. The 12-month average growth ending in May
was 6.5 percent.
5. (U) The strong growth has been propelled by increased private
investment, an export boom (triggered initially by the Andean Drug
Eradication and Trade Promotion Act (ATPDEA) and aided later by high
mineral prices), prudent fiscal management, and, more recently,
strong domestic consumption and construction. Exports will have
tripled by the end of this year compared to when President Toledo
took office, rising from $7 billion in 2001 to an estimated $21
billion. Minerals make up just over half the exports, but
non-traditional goods like textiles, apparel and agricultural
products have grown significantly.
6. (U) The sustained economic expansion and, in particular, the
agricultural export boom, have led to a moderate but significant
reduction in poverty. The poverty rate - those living on less than
$2 per day - declined from 54 percent in 2001 to an estimated 48
percent today. Extreme poverty - those living on less than $1 per
day - declined more dramatically, from 24 percent to 18 percent, a
25 percent drop in four years. The areas that have seen the
greatest reductions in poverty have been those participating in the
agricultural export boom, (such as Ica where companies are reporting
a labor shortage), and those that have been areas of focus for USAID
programs. Analysts expect unemployment, underemployment and poverty
to decline at a faster pace in the near-to-mid term as the expansion
continues.
7. (U) Inflation has been tame despite the economic expansion, 1.5
percent in 2005 and an annualized rate of 2.5 percent in May 2006.
The Toledo Administration lowered the debt-to-GDP ratio from 50
percent to 38 percent. The federal government will likely have a
small surplus in 2006, due to fiscal restraint, greater tax revenues
generated by the economic expansion and increased efficiency in tax
collection.
Despite Past Record, the Country Is Optimistic
--------------------------------------------- -
8. (SBU) When Garcia was last elected President in 1985 at the age
of 35, the government was weak, the terrorist war with the Shining
Path was spreading, inflation was rampant, and the international
debt burden was very high. Garcia's policy decisions made matters
worse - he restricted international debt payments to 10 percent of
exports earnings, attempted to nationalize Peruvian banks and
insurance companies and launched large public works projects without
adequate financing. By the end of his term, inflation had gone from
87 percent to 7,649 percent, per capita income had dropped to below
the 1960 level, the GDP had fallen 20 percent, poverty had grown
from 41 percent to 55 percent, and the Shining Path was staging
attacks in the capital.
9. (SBU) Despite this record, the business community and the
population as a whole continue to express cautious confidence in
Garcia's ability to manage the country and the economy during this
second presidency. The President and his ministers understand that
this confidence is tenuous, and some skeptics are concerned about
Garcia's reliance on populist gestures. He has sent some reassuring
signals to the business community that he will respect contracts,
show macroeconomic discipline, and welcome public-private
partnerships for infrastructure needs. His center-left APRA party
has intentionally tried to cast a wide net to bring in people from
the center and center-right. Amongst Garcia's challenges as
President will be keeping this informal coalition intact.
10. (U) Garcia's near term priorities include promoting agricultural
modernization in the Andes through his "Sierra Exportadora" program
and improving water quality and delivery. These programs were
launched shortly after the inauguration, and if seen as credible,
will help APRA leaders in the upcoming November regional and
municipal elections. In the medium term, Garcia is looking to
maintain macroeconomic growth while encouraging new investment.
Early Challenges
----------------
11. (SBU) The recent election results (52.6 percent for Garcia and
47.4 percent for leftist/nationalist Ollanta Humala) show a clear
fracturing of the vote between those areas that benefit from
international commerce and those that have thus far been excluded
from national and global markets. In the coming months, President
Alan Garcia will face greater pressure to strike a careful balance:
to reassure foreign investors that his policies can sustain the
current macroeconomic boom and improve Peru's investment climate,
while winning over the pro-Humala opposition with tangible results
of his poverty reduction policies. Specifically:
-- Garcia must implement a credible program to attack the high
levels of poverty.
-- Given that the Peru Trade Promotion Agreement (PTPA) has not been
approved by the U.S. Congress, Garcia must assume full
responsibility for ratification of an agreement negotiated by the
outgoing government. The President has tried to suggest that he
could have gotten a better deal, but he realizes that PTPA is
central to many of his proposed economic programs (e.g., "Sierra
Exportadora").
-- The naming of renowned development economist Hernando de Soto,
well-known in Washington and other capitals, is a sign that Garcia
is committed to engaging pragmatically with the U.S. Congress. But
is it also a sign that he is serious about expanding the "domestic
FTA" agenda, i.e. expanding trade and export possibilities for a
broader cross-section of the Peruvian economy.
Issues That the GOP or Press May Raise
--------------------------------------
12. (SBU) Your GOP and press interlocutors may raise with you:
-- President Garcia's appreciation for President Bush's invitation
to visit the White House on October 10, and topics for that visit.
-- The GOP's urgent focus on poverty and the desire for 1) increased
U.S. assistance in linking sierra and jungle producers to
international markets, and 2) increased assistance for priority
initiatives like clean drinking water programs.
-- The role that the U.S. can play in helping build and maintain
investor confidence in the economy and in the Garcia
administration.
-- The need for a contingency plan if the U.S. Congress does not
pass PTPA by year's end. The GOP and the business community want to
avoid a spike in U.S. tariffs if ATPDEA preferences expire before
the PTPA enters into force, and will likely ask for an extension of
ATPDEA to cover any gap. Papers have already begun to note the drop
off in the growth rate of textile exports to the US, ascribing this
slow-down to uncertainty among US importers of ATPDEA renewal. A
key exporters association has the GOP propose a USD 100 million fund
that would assist exporters and cover the costs of a temporary
tariff spike. Reportedly, Peruvian exporters have had to sign
contracts guaranteeing that they would pay US duties if these were
to be levied starting in January 2007.
-- Peruvian media have also noted that Vietnam seems to have "moved
up the list" in terms of US Congressional consideration of trade
bills. There may well be questions concerning the priority the USG
places on the PTPA, and why other trade arrangements (e.g. Colombia)
seem to be moving through the ratification process faster than
Peru.
Important Messages to Deliver
-----------------------------
13. (SBU) Your visit at this time is crucial to both reminding the
Garcia Administration of its commitment to the agreement and
encouraging the government to make a critical effort on
implementation. You and your team will also be able to consult and
advise the private sector groups that are engaging with their U.S.
counterparts and directly with Congress. We believe you should:
-- Remind the GOP that implementation is a key process that should
be the focus of their activities;
-- Remind the GOP that the labor commitments are essential to
passage of the PTPA in the U.S. Congress; and
-- Encourage the GOP to speak with one voice on the PTPA, and to
coordinate, to the extent possible, its message in the U.S. with the
private sector.
STRUBLE