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/index.php?action=ajax&rs=GDMgetPage&rsargs[]=LF-52.4Chavez y Block.pdf&rsargs[]=0
__________________________________________________________________
David
Chávez
Salazar
and
Walter
E
.
Block
Haiti
:
Strengths
,
Challenges
and
Paths
to
Development
Introduction
In
1970
,
Haiti
had
an
economic
level
similar
to
that
of
South
Korea
,
Singapore
and
Hong
Kong
(
World
Bank
,
2018a
).
Today
,
almost
fifty
years
later
,
the
Caribbean
nation
is
the
poorest
in
the
Western
Hemisphere
,
while
its
former
Asian
colleagues
are
among
the
most
prosperous
places
on
Earth
.
According
to
Mises
(
2006
)
the
difference
between
the
developed
and
underdeveloped
economies
is
a
“
difference
in
the
supply
of
capital
,
the
quantity
of
capital
goods
available
.
The
amount
of
capital
invested
per
unit
of
the
population
is
greater
in
the
so-called
advanced
than
in
the
developing
nations
.”
Unfortunately
,
in
Haiti
,
there
are
all
too
few
institutions
favorable
to
capital
accumulation
.
This
has
translated
into
miserable
living
standards
for
its
people
.
We
present
our
suggestions
for
improvement
in
three
main
areas
:
I
.
rural
reform
,
II
.
open
markets
and
III
.
government
efficiency
.
In
the
first
part
,
we
address
the
situation
of
the
rural
sector
,
and
identify
three
major
problems
:
the
excessive
fragmentation
of
the
land
that
leads
to
a
tragedy
of
the
anti-commons
,
prohibitions
on
foreign
ownership
and
political
and
economic
uncertainty
.
In
this
regard
,
the
idea
of
a
rural
reform
based
on
the
assembly
of
scattered
property
rights
and
the
lands
market
liberalization
is
outlined
.
In
the
second
part
,
we
explore
why
Haiti
is
such
a
poor
economy
given
that
at
the
same
time
it
is
one
of
the
most
open
in
the
Western
Hemisphere
.
The
answer
is
that
although
there
are
tax
incentives
for
foreign
investment
and
a
relatively
free
trade
,
capital
is
not
invested
in
Haiti
because
the
country
does
not
have
good
infrastructure
conditions
,
the
monetary
system
is
unstable
,
and
it
is
difficult
to
establish
businesses
.
As
alternative
solutions
,
it
is
proposed
to
liberalize
the
port
,
energy
and
monetary
sectors
(
eliminate
central
banking
)
and
end
bureaucratic
obstacles
to
commerce
.
In
the
third
part
,
the
three
most
harmful
actors
of
Haitian
governance
are
characterized
:
state
,
non-governmental
organizations
(
NGOs
)
and
foreign
powers
.
We
offer
a
transition
plan
towards
a
Private
Law
Society
based
on
six
principles
:
respect
for
consent
,
protection
of
fundamental
rights
,
independent
adjudication
,
clear
and
fair
interpretive
rules
,
remedies
..
David
Chávez
Salazar
is
CEO
of
Libertas
Phyle
,
a
think-tank
based
in
Chile
.
Walter
Block
is
Harold
E
.
Wirth
Eminent
Scholar
and
Professor
of
Economics
at
the
College
of
Business
Administration
,
Loyola
University
,
New
Orleans
(
USA
).
Laissez-Faire
,
No
.
52-53
(
Marzo-Sept
2020
):
42-70
/index.php?action=ajax&rs=GDMgetPage&rsargs[]=LF-52.4Chavez y Block.pdf&rsargs[]=1
__________________________________________________________________
for
wrongs
,
and
freedom
of
exit
.
We
offer
a
series
of
reforms
that
could
be
implemented
in
the
country
to
improve
its
situation
in
four
areas
:
property
rights
,
open
markets
,
government
efficiency
and
role
of
the
international
community
.
I
.
Rural
Reform
.
The
Haitian
countryside
is
a
world
of
contrasts
.
On
the
one
hand
,
it
seems
to
be
the
only
country
in
Latin
America
and
the
Caribbean
where
access
to
land
is
not
a
problem
.
While
landless
peasants
abound
in
other
parts
of
the
region
(
Schneider
,
2016
),
in
Haiti
approximately
80
%
of
the
farmers
own
their
plots
and
only
20
%
are
tenants
(
Smucker
,
White
and
Bannister
,
2000
).
Likewise
,
the
skills
and
knowledge
of
these
farmers
(
what
neoclassic
economists
call
“
human
capital
”)
are
not
negligible
.
Most
farms
have
adopted
crop
diversification
and
rotation
techniques
(
Coello
,
Oseni
,
Savrimootoo
and
Weiss
,
2014
),
and
it
is
common
for
them
to
use
an
innovative
and
“
unusual
form
of
farming
called
arboriculture
,”
1
which
has
made
it
possible
to
cope
with
the
difficult
edaphological
conditions
of
the
country
.
Unfortunately
,
these
positives
are
overshadowed
by
two
factors
that
completely
undermine
agricultural
productivity
.
First
is
the
very
high
level
of
technological
backwardness
,
as
farmers
basically
work
with
hand
tools
.
It
is
rare
to
see
animal-powered
vehicles
and
much
less
heavy
machinery
.
2
Second
is
an
extreme
1
Nations
Encyclopedia
(
n
.
d
):
https
://
www
.
na
tionsencyclopedia
.
com
/
Americas
/
Haiti-AGRI
CULTURE
.
html
.
cash
shortage
3
(
Smucker
,
White
and
Bannister
,
2000
).
According
to
several
commentators
(
Lundahl
,
1983
;
Jickling
and
White
,
1995
;
Palsson
,
2018
),
the
lag
in
the
rural
sector
is
the
main
cause
of
the
country
’
s
underdevelopment
,
which
makes
Haiti
a
unique
case
in
the
region
.
Does
rural
poverty
have
to
do
with
the
property
regime
?
With
great
concern
,
Hernando
de
Soto
(
2000
)
tells
us
that
,
in
Haiti
,
“
68
per
cent
of
city-dwellers
and
97
per
cent
of
people
in
the
countryside
live
in
housing
to
which
nobody
has
clear
legal
title
”
(
p
.
20
)
(
italics
added
).
Not
surprisingly
,
this
Caribbean
nation
typically
occupies
a
very
low
position
on
the
International
Property
Rights
Index
.
In
has
an
average
of
1
.
6
tractors
per
100
km
2
of
arable
land
,
while
the
regional
average
for
Latin
America
and
the
Caribbean
is
119
.
While
these
statistics
are
old
,
they
are
the
latest
available
at
the
time
of
this
writing
.
It
is
unlikely
that
the
situation
has
improved
in
the
last
twenty
years
due
to
the
constant
economic
problems
the
country
has
faced
.
However
,
this
cannot
be
anything
like
a
full
explanation
of
the
economic
disarray
in
this
country
,
for
there
are
numerous
jobs
in
first
world
countries
where
machinery
plays
little
or
no
role
.
For
example
,
artists
,
artisans
,
potters
,
hand
weavers
,
botanists
,
masseuses
,
choreographers
,
dancers
,
musicians
,
psychologists
,
teachers
,
policemen
,
lawyers
,
judges
,
interior
decorators
,
chefs
,
the
list
goes
on
and
on
.
It
is
our
contention
,
of
course
,
that
the
underlying
cause
of
poverty
in
this
nation
,
or
,
indeed
,
any
other
,
is
lack
of
free
enterprise
and
secure
private
property
rights
.
3
This
aspect
is
very
interesting
from
the
economic
point
of
view
.
Due
to
the
shortage
of
cash
,
some
functions
of
money
have
been
assumed
by
the
most
abundant
factors
of
production
:
for
example
,
the
land
has
assumed
the
function
of
deposit
of
value
,
and
labor
,
that
of
medium
of
exchange
(
Smucker
,
2According
to
the
World
Bank
(
1998
),
Haiti
White
and
Bannister
,
2000
).
__________________________________________________________________
43
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__________________________________________________________________
2018
she
was
dishonored
with
the
very
last
position
globally
(
125th
)
(
Property
Rights
Alliance
,
2018
).
According
to
De
Soto
,
4
formal
property
titles
is
the
key
to
economic
prosperity
.
Therefore
,
in
his
opinion
,
it
is
up
to
the
government
to
define
private
property
rights
and
defend
them
through
a
robust
judicial
system
.
Allegedly
,
this
legal
support
would
protect
the
owner
“
against
threats
of
eviction
,
grant
him
absolute
freedom
to
alienate
his
assets
”
(
Smucker
,
White
and
Bannister
,
2000
,
p
.
14
)
and
guarantee
investment
security
,
which
would
stimulate
growth
economic
(
De
Soto
,
2009
).
When
property
rights
are
not
well
defined
and
protected
,
as
occurs
in
Haiti
,
two
great
tragedies
come
to
existence
:
the
first
is
the
tragedy
of
the
commons
.
Here
,
as
nobody
knows
clearly
what
belongs
to
whom
,
unlimited
rights
of
use
arise
over
resources
and
very
few
rights
of
exclusion
.
This
leads
to
overexploitation
of
the
resource
(
Hardin
,
1968
).
5
The
second
tragedy
is
the
generation
of
dead
capital
,
6
an
economic
concept
that
is
defined
as
“
a
set
of
assets
that
cannot
be
easily
exchanged
or
given
a
market
value
because
no
one
owns
them
or
has
the
right
to
exchange
them
.
Those
who
use
or
occupy
the
assets
will
have
no
incentive
to
‘
add
4
Also
see
Boserup
(
1965
),
Demsetz
(
1967
),
Faría
and
Montesinos
(
2009
),
and
Besley
and
Ghatak
(
2010
).
5
Ostrom
(
1990
)
denigrates
this
concept
.
For
critiques
of
Ostrom
,
and
defense
of
this
notion
,
see
Jankovic
and
Block
(
2016
).
6
According
to
Hernando
de
Soto
(
2000
),
the
Haitian
economy
has
$
5
.
2
billion
in
dead
capital
,
which
at
that
time
was
equivalent
to
four
times
the
total
assets
of
the
123
largest
value
’
to
these
assets
because
they
cannot
realize
or
unlock
any
capital
gain
”
(
De
Soto
,
2000
,
p
.
8
).
However
,
this
interpretation
is
contested
.
Some
authors
7
suggest
that
,
despite
the
scarcity
of
formal
titles
in
Haiti
,
farmers
are
very
clear
about
their
land
and
even
“
feel
secure
enough
to
…
invest
in
their
land
”
(
Smucker
,
White
and
Bannister
,
2000
,
p
.
19
).
How
,
then
,
can
we
explain
this
apparent
paradox
?
The
first
thing
to
note
is
that
De
Soto
’
s
theory
has
a
strong
statist
accent
.
It
assumes
that
,
if
the
property
is
not
formalized
by
the
government
,
the
owners
(
most
of
them
poor
)
would
not
enjoy
the
protective
mantle
of
the
state
apparatus
and
would
be
at
the
mercy
of
the
many
“
villains
”
who
abound
in
the
black
market
.
In
the
absence
of
a
legal
title
,
they
would
not
hesitate
to
plunder
properties
or
impose
their
terms
on
land
transfers
.
The
weakest
aspect
of
De
Soto
’
s
theory
is
his
claim
that
without
a
formal
property
title
,
the
government
would
not
know
who
the
rightful
owner
of
an
asset
is
and
could
not
tax
him
,
and
without
taxes
,
it
would
be
impossible
to
make
“
decisions
in
health
care
,
education
…
and
environmental
planning
”
(
De
Soto
,
2000
,
p
.
195
).
8
De
Soto
would
be
shocked
to
learn
that
Haitians
rarely
formalize
their
property
titles
because
culturally
they
are
a
society
that
absolutely
disregards
the
state
.
In
two
hundred
years
of
independ-
7
Baland
and
Platteau
(
1998
),
Smucker
,
White
and
Bannister
(
2000
).
8
See
Calzada
(
2004
),
who
demystifies
De
Soto
,
from
a
libertarian
perspective
.
De
Soto
,
properly
,
enjoys
a
reputation
as
a
supporter
of
free
enterprise
(
Freddoso
,
2015
).
But
we
can
see
that
it
is
not
an
unvarnished
one
.
Another
critic
of
De
Soto
,
also
from
a
laissez
faire
formal
companies
in
the
country
.
capitalist
point
of
view
,
is
Ahiakpor
(
2008
).
__________________________________________________________________
44
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__________________________________________________________________
ent
life
,
they
have
managed
to
live
insofar
as
possible
away
from
the
influence
of
the
government
.
Their
efforts
have
been
so
successful
that
different
systems
of
law
coexist
and
interact
there
.
In
the
countryside
,
for
instance
,
a
private
customary
system
rules
,
under
which
virtually
all
land-related
conflicts
are
settled
(
USAID
,
2010
).
Haitian
farmers
deeply
value
their
personal
freedom
.
They
are
aware
that
each
procedure
they
engage
in
with
the
state
means
paying
higher
taxes
.
Better
to
stay
under
the
radar
.
Furthermore
,
they
know
that
public
officials
,
especially
notaries
,
are
usually
unscrupulous
and
can
legally
alter
the
dimensions
of
their
lands
(
USAID
,
2010
).
For
example
,
they
may
register
more
acres
than
a
property
actually
includes
,
to
force
them
to
pay
more
real
estate
taxes
.
This
widespread
distrust
of
the
state
would
ruin
any
massive
titling
program
,
which
is
De
Soto
’
s
prime
solution
for
these
countries
.
Haitian
landowners
are
also
interested
in
minimizing
transaction
costs
.
Formalizing
property
means
choosing
between
five
different
property
regimes
contemplated
in
the
civil
code
,
which
have
the
reputation
of
“
generating
rival
property
claims
”
(
Smucker
,
White
and
Bannister
,
2000
,
p
.
17
).
On
the
other
hand
,
due
to
the
malfunctioning
of
the
judicial
system
(
Gwartney
,
Lawson
,
Hall
and
Murphy
,
2018
)
it
is
almost
impossible
for
a
judge
to
do
anything
to
resolve
a
claim
.
In
fact
,
in
the
mentality
of
the
average
Haitian
,
state
courts
are
the
last
resort
to
be
used
in
a
dispute
.
9Social
capital
can
be
defined
as
“
the
aggre-
recognition
”
(
Bourdieu
,
1986
,
p
.
248
).
__________________________________________________________________
45
individuals
accumulate
.
Thus
,
access
to
land
depends
on
the
social
ties
they
establish
throughout
their
lives
,
which
can
be
based
on
kinship
,
ethnic-religious
factors
or
simple
business
relationships
.
An
important
aspect
of
this
system
is
that
the
agreements
are
self-regulated
(
Smucker
,
White
and
Bannister
,
2000
)
and
are
usually
made
verbally
(
this
is
a
weakness
of
the
system
),
because
in
the
Haitian
peasant
society
a
man
’
s
word
has
more
value
than
a
paper
issued
by
the
state
.
If
a
farmer
formalizes
his
land
,
likely
few
if
any
of
his
fellow
citizens
will
care
.
In
fact
,
land
is
easily
bought
and
sold
without
the
need
for
deeds
and
approximately
95
%
of
sales
are
also
conducted
informally
(
FAO
/
INARA
,
1997
).
Haitians
cannot
be
expected
to
renounce
their
traditional
governance
and
leave
all
their
legal
affairs
in
state
hands
.
Although
it
is
not
perfect
,
customary
law
represents
a
comparatively
superior
alternative
to
formal
law
,
since
,
on
the
one
hand
,
it
“
offers
a
more
manageable
level
of
risk
,”
and
,
on
the
other
,
its
“
arrangements
lower
financial
and
transaction
costs
.
They
are
flexible
and
adapted
to
daily
realities
of
peasant
decisionmaking
”
(
Smucker
,
White
and
Bannister
,
2000
,
p
.
18
).
Unlike
state
law
,
based
on
perverse
incentives
,
Haitian
customary
law
is
predicated
upon
the
social
capital
9
that
The
irrelevance
of
state
certificates
is
such
that
statistics
tend
to
ignore
whether
property
was
acquired
formally
or
informally
.
In
this
regard
,
75
%
of
owners
accessed
their
land
through
inheritance
(
38
%)
or
purchase
(
37
%),
while
the
remaining
25
%
were
accounted
for
through
other
mechanisms
such
as
usugate
of
the
actual
and
potential
resources
which
are
linked
to
possession
of
a
durable
network
of
more
or
less
institutionalized
relationships
of
mutual
acquaintance
or
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