Bolivia's Defeat Of Socialism Signals A Continental Realignment

Bolivia's Defeat Of Socialism Signals A Continental Realignment

Authored by Emmanuel Rincon via the https://thedailyeconomy.org/article/bolivia-breaks-from-socialism-following-latin-american-trend-toward-freedom/

,

It took 20 years https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CUCR51sIH-E

(MAS) in Bolivia through elections.

Two decades of political battle lines, along with a so-called “cultural war,” run deep in the region.

MAS rose to power thanks to the financing https://www.cato.org/development-policy-analysis/corruption-mismanagement-abuse-power-hugo-chavezs-venezuela

into campaigns across almost every country in the continent. For a long stretch, he and his allies virtually took control of South America—except for Colombia.

The Venezuelan crisis left them exposed, however. Not only did the money used to fund political campaigns run out, but the https://thedailyeconomy.org/article/what-a-dictator-does-to-an-economy/

the economy at the same time.

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On August 17, it wasn’t just that the https://theconversation.com/bolivia-election-voters-bring-two-decades-of-leftist-politics-to-an-end-263238

in Argentina.

The Electoral Collapse of the Socialist Option

The name of Bolivia’s next president is still unknown; Opposition figures Rodrigo Paz and Tuto Quiroga advanced to the runoff scheduled for Oct. 19. The ruling MAS, by contrast, https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/aug/20/bolivia-presidential-election-socialism?utm_source=chatgpt.com

from 75 seats to just one. This collapse was also fueled by internal divisions.

Evo Morales, the party’s historic leader, had initially backed Luis Arce. Once in office, though, Arce began to distance himself from Morales, partly due to Morales’ https://www.americasquarterly.org/article/in-bolivia-an-intense-battle-between-arce-and-morales/

his “indigenous praetorian guard.”

But politics alone can’t explain MAS’s downfall. Bolivia was experiencing one of its https://www.cfr.org/backgrounder/venezuela-crisis

in decades.

Many factors contributed, including:

Collapse of the energy sector: Gas production, the country’s main revenue source, https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0301420724004112

from 60 million cubic meters per day in 2014–2015 to just 28 million in 2025. Mismanagement and lack of maintenance slashed exports and so, foreign trade.

Depleted reserves: In 2014, Bolivia held $15 billion in international reserves, but by 2025 that figure had dropped to under $2 billion. This left the government unable to maintain subsidies or import fuel normally.

https://apnews.com/article/bolivia-fuel-crisis-economy-arce-president-gas-b43cff9dcfebdca40d35aad6911f055f

in cryptocurrency to import fuel.

https://www.reuters.com/world/americas/everything-is-so-expensive-bolivians-tighten-belts-new-inflation-reality-bites-2025-04-07/?utm_source=chatgpt.com

hovering between 17–24 percent.

Widespread poverty: According to the https://documents.worldbank.org/pt/publication/documents-reports/documentdetail/099515404212531525

.

https://www.imf.org/en/Countries/BOL

, while the fiscal deficit surpassed seven percent of GDP, leaving no fiscal margin.

Ordinary Bolivians felt this collapse firsthand: endless gas station lines, skyrocketing food prices, and the impossibility of accessing dollars as their local currencies became worthless. That combination eroded whatever support MAS still had left.

The Milei Factor

Meanwhile, next door in Argentina—a country that had faced a similar crisis years earlier—a wild-haired libertarian was steering the nation onto https://archive.is/2ilCg

, “Long live freedom, damn it!”

At first, few took him seriously. But within two years, he became an international phenomenon. https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-67470549

against all odds and began implementing exactly what he promised by shrinking the state and freeing the economy.

Milei inherited Argentina with 211.4 percent annual inflation in December 2023. By May 2025, the consumer price index rose only 1.5 percent—the lowest in https://www.france24.com/en/live-news/20250331-falling-inflation-drives-down-poverty-in-argentina-statistics-agency

. A country once seen as doomed to hyperinflation and misery began to rapidly recover.

Bolivians took notice. Both Rodrigo Paz and Tuto Quiroga—the candidates who made it to the runoff—have pledged to cut public spending and reduce the size of the state. This shift has already become a regional trend.

The Rightward Turn in Latin America

Before MAS’s defeat in Bolivia, Ecuador had elected Daniel Noboa, https://www.americasquarterly.org/article/latin-americas-rightward-shift/

and more distant from the region’s socialist regimes. Around the same time, Argentina’s Javier Milei had secured his own victory. Now it’s Bolivia. Step by step, the political map of the region is shifting.

In the coming months, https://www.as-coa.org/content/guide-2025-latin-american-elections

rather than China, Russia, or Iran.

Not all of them can be described as “libertarians” or as followers of Hayek’s economic thought, like Milei. But they are far removed from the region’s recent enmeshment in statism, repression, and narcotrafficking cartels. They also appear willing to cooperate with Washington on regional security, migration, and economic matters.

What’s remarkable is how the Argentine phenomenon has shifted the regional dynamic.

In a Latin America long accustomed to government handouts, presidential candidates no longer compete to offer more subsidies and social programs. They now compete to promise deeper cuts, less government, and greater individual freedoms.

The cry of “Long live freedom, damn it!” began in Buenos Aires, echoed in La Paz, and the rest of Latin America now awaits its turn at the ballot box, to join the libertarian wave that seems to be reshaping the continent’s political landscape.

https://cms.zerohedge.com/users/tyler-durden

Sun, 09/07/2025 - 23:20

https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/bolivias-defeat-socialism-signals-continental-realignment

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