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Readers know I’m no fan of revolutionary humanist movements, but I do believe corporations have a responsibility to their fellow men and to nature.  There’s an article on MiMundo (in English) about the Canadian GoldCorp operation here in Guate, which those in the know tell me is pulling out more than $350 million a year in gold.  I won’t say they’re obligated to give some of that to the locals-I assume they are heavily taxed by the government who has the responsibility of promoting the common good-but it would be prudent and noble to try to return some of that water to the environment in a sanitary fashion.  If they don’t, it’s the responsibility of the government to correct it.  Your thoughts?

El Blogador hasn’t been blogging as often recently, perhaps because he’s spending time in Tapachula instead of London or Antigua:

But a couple of days ago I went to buy a medium-sized cup of iced coffee in the shop within this nicely rennovated bandstand in Tapachula, and was asked to pay 27 pesos for it ($2). It would have cost roughly the same in London, capital of soi disant ‘Rip-off Britain’. But this was Chiapas, which in many other respects still seems to offer the most sensible prices in Central America.

Still, I’ve kind of grown used to rip-off prices in Guatemala, even if I don’t quite understand them. A cup of capuccino or a pizza from Domino’s costs approximately 20% less than it would in London, but I can’t think of any overheads affecting the restauranteur which could mount up to anything like 80% of their UK equivalents.

The killer in London is the cost of renting a retail unit suitable for a coffee shop. Any building in the centre which doesn’t cut it as a locus for shopping can relatively easily be switched to alternative, more rentable uses such as office space or car parking. The owner of the building will generally go for the most profitable usage. Wages are also considerably higher in the UK, with the national minimum set at roughly $9 an hour.

So why is a lot of restaurant food (especially the faster sort) so expensive in Antigua? Can’t be the ingredients (mostly local), the property rent or the labour costs. Maybe red tape is a major overhead here, but then Guatemalan businesses aren’t paying anything like the same sort of corporation tax.

And bear in mind that the average middle class consumer is also earning a lot less (though arguably also paying less to the banks and the government), and so if the pizza seems pricey to me…

Maybe it’s because there’s scarcity, but on the demand side: the number of people able to pay X for a Domino’s pizza in Antigua is as small as the number of affluent tourists in Tapachula and so the price of X has to go up to cover reduced volume. Hmmm, maybe I am economically naive after all.

El Blogador is in Chiapas and is wondering why his iced coffee costs so much when other goods are relatively inexpensive.  Note that he is buying an iced coffee (and we can assume it’s good coffee), not tortillas and beans, and that he’s buying it from a nicely renovated shop.  This hints give us a preliminary understanding of why the coffee is relatively expensive, at least to other goods in Tapachula.

The drink he ordered is not a common one in Tapachula.  Locals don’t drink a lot of iced coffee.  They do eat a lot of tortillas and beans and don’t care how well renovated the eatery is.  They certainly wouldn’t willingly pay more just to eat at a nice eastablishment.  So in the cost ingredient of the coffee we have built in both an exotic product (if not because the coffee itself is exotic because of the relative scarcity of the availability in the aforementioned form), and also a nicer establishment from which to buy the product.  Both of these issues contribute to higher overhead, driving the price higher.  The exotic product requires a greater investment in bringing it to the market and there is a greater risk that it will go unsold.  When you are a bean merchant in Mexico or Guatemala, there’s not much risk of demand evaporating; in Tapachula they have many reasons to worry that foreigners might stop showing up, or at least in as great numbers (Swine Flu, regional violence, economic crisis, etc).

Next El Blogador considers Antigua prices and the overhead, surmising that although prices in Antigua are generally lower than London, the latter’s prices can be somewhat justified when considering overhead.  As we discussed before, overhead is a factor, and although Antigua commercial rents are quite high (you can rent a place in Phoenix at a lower price per square foot), this alone doesn’t justify the price.  (You’ll have to wait for my dissertation on Antigua real estate prices).

Just as in Tapachula the product offering was an exotic one, this also is the case in Antigua.  Whether it is Dominos or a cappuccino, the product is essentially an import.  Yes, I know they make coffee here but the coffee the locals drink and the coffee I get in my cappuccino is not the same, and I’ve seen coffee bags around town that have been imported from the US.  It wouldn’t surprise me to discover the coffee was grown here, shipped to the US, packaged and shipped back.  Even if it remains here and is manufactured and marketed for local consumption, the buyer of that coffee is not the common man, but a wealthy local, extranjero or tourist.  More goes into the packaging, marketing and sales of the product than the actual ingredients.  Don’t fall into the temptation of thinking this isn’t ‘fair’; most products are this way (and life isn’t fair, just ask my teenager).

This means that the market for the product is greatly reduced.  Normally a smaller market means lower prices, because small markets often have corresponding small demands (in the aggregate), but occasionally this is not true.  There is a small market for a Ferrari, but the price remains high because it is an exotic product and the small market has the ability to pay for it.  Ferrari wouldn’t make money selling at half the price, and probably wouldn’t want to sell a product half as valuable, and so at a greatly reduced price the Ferrari would not be available.  It is the same with pizza and lattes in Antigua.  The demand, in the aggregate, is small, but within the market it is quite high.  I suspect prices for coffee and Dominos pizza could go up by 30% and there would be very little change in volume, because the demand-though limited-is intense, and further, the demand is for good coffee.

This deserves an additional consideration.  How are prices determined?  El Blogador considers overhead, and market forces, but neglects to mention the primary motive for setting prices:  profit.  The merchant must cover all of his costs, he must cover the cost of his own time, he must put a value on the risk his capital is taking, and finally he must set prices to provide a profit.

If the price of the product does not cover all these things, then the business will fail.  You see this daily around town as businesses are closing up because at a given volume they could not adequately meet all those objectives.  Where there is not profit, there will not be a lasting, profitable business.  (In this country many will survive but will not be profitable).  In Venezuela we have recently seen why socialism always fails, why it must fail, because prices are subsidized to promote a political ideology instead of allowing to work, which brought about scarcity and eventually a currency devaluation.  That too will have to wait for another time.

Another factor is the government.  El Blogador and other promoters of substantial government involvement in society (also known as Marxists), point to the benefits of governmental involvement and would cite regulations that benefit the consumer, strong infrastructure, etc.  Naturally there are costs that come along with that, first and foremost a high tax rate, secondly the drain on economic growth that comes with government taxation and regulation, and finally the infringement of personal and economic freedoms.  Most importantly when the government consumes money it returns to the economy less than it takes in, whereas private businesses return more through the creation of value, through innovation, etc.

In Guatemala the government is so dysfunctional you have both the presence of taxes and regulation, though they are widely subverted, and you have the lack of the societal benefits or infrastructure that is normally the product of government’s involvement.  For all my complaints about governements in general, the streets in the US are generally well constructed, well maintained, and traffic lights work, etc.  But here in Guate the streets are a mess, there is inadequate parking, buildings are crumbling, and genrally infrastructure is insufficient.  In addition you have the violence, a poorly trained work force, and high rates of crime.

The whole point of this is that there are substantially greater risks to the entrepreneur and his capital here than elsewhere.  If you invest in London or NYC, you do so without a great deal of fear about certain risks to your capital, whereas here you must protect your capital like a pioneer might who was headed west in 19th century America. Those risks keep a lot of businesses out of the market, which reduces the supply of products and services.  This forces prices higher.  (It also means the opportunity for those of us who are here is greater).

As with all prices, the market determines them.  In this case El Blogador’s willingness to ‘overpay’ for that iced coffee is itself a testament to why the price is so high, just as I am willing to pay 16Q for a cappucino at the park or 100Q for a Cohiba or 150Q for a good pizza (not Dominos).  There is a concentration of people like El Blogador and Don Marco in this town, which is why the prices are so high (for everything from real estate to cheese).

So in conclusion, prices in Antigua tend to be high, relative to the economy and the region.  They are high because the goods in question are unique/exclusive, because there are relatively few of them and because the risks to the merchant and his capital are great, and because the demand, while small, is intense.  The next time you find yourself wondering at prices in Antigua (or Atitlan), apply this approach and you’ll find the answer.

Governments almost always do exactly the wrong thing.  This is because they are not accountable in any real way.  Sure, there might be elections in a few years, but since you can fool most of the people most of the time, re-election really has little to do with job performance.  Of course, that’s not even considering the relative scarcity of common sense.

Anyway, some of you may remember that the little trade war the US got involved with in the late 1920s contributed to the severity of the Great Depression.  It makes sense that if you make something more expensive, you’ll get less of it.  Of course, that lesson is lost on bureaucrats who care little for the lessons of history or the laws of economics, which is why in the middle of the worst economy in 80 years the Messiah has started a little trade war with this minor financial partner of ours we call China.  Apparently they own so little of our debt and are so inconsequential financial partners with us that we can give them the bird.  Or maybe it just has to do with the Congressional elections in 2010 and trying to lessen what appears to be a political tsunami coming at the Democrats.

I was reminded of all this when reading a post by Jim, the PCV.  You’ll remember that Jim and Emily are committed lefties, and so I was really surprised to see an insinuation on their blog (you can insinuate but not state the truth when you’re a PCV) that the Guatemalan government is stupid.

Of course, if the Guatemalan government really cared about helping their people, they would give incentives to businesses and NGOs to import goods, not tax them so as to make it prohibitive.  But we’re talking about government here…

Now to a portion of Jim’s story, which basically involves getting people to donate their old computers in the US so poor children in Guatemala can use them and how government gets in the way:

Things are changing in Guatemala, and their government just changed its taxation approach to humanitarian aid. Starting this month, a new $16 import duty is to be charged on each computer. That’s if everything goes right. What’s worse, though, is that some international humanitarian aid is being held indefinitely.So, Don wants to know how Pedro feels about paying half up front and sharing the risk, since there is now the possibility that the computers will cost more than quoted… and they might never even arrive. Sigh. I don’t even want to ask Pedro. On the one hand, from the perspective of a former businessman, I understand the idea of risk sharing and don’t feel his request is unreasonable. But in this specific circumstance, the locals here have no extra money to gamble with. A good example is tiendas (little streetside stores): every tienda has three others next to it selling exactly the same thing, because it was a proven idea and to take a risk on selling something different is just too darn dangerous. A failure might mean starvation. To further complicate matters, Emily and I are the first Peace Corps volunteers in this entire part of Huehuetenango. The Mayans here have struggled under decades (centuries?) of broken promises and and being taken advantage of, and I want them to know that they can always trust the Peace Corps to deliver on whatever we say we’re going to do. If I took half of Pedro’s money and something went wrong and he got nothing, I (and the Peace Corps) would become just another name on that long list.

Update:  China has responded to Obama’s ‘protect the unions at all cost’ ploy.

Adopting in Guate used to be a big deal; it was relatively easy and cheap.  However, the lack of government oversight led to a lot of problems, the worst of which was stealing children and selling them to their new US parents.

So, the government stepped in, passed a new law, and of course made things worse.  Now the process is lengthy, expensive and fails the children.  Children languish in orphanages, sometimes for years.  Adoptive parents are put through a hellish experience, often flying back and forth and, hard as it may be to believe, getting the run around from government bureaucrats whose rules change constantly but whose ‘fees’ always go up.

The Miami Herald has an article relating the story of at least one adoptive couple in Ohio, and reports that an organization has actually been created to lobby on behalf of US parents wanting to adopt.  Looking to Washington for solutions is, ahem, unlikely to work.  Prospective Mommies and Daddys, come spend some time and money here greasing the skids-I think you’ll get more ‘bang’ for your buck and get to spend the time with your kid as well.

I suspect some loyal readers will have a lot to say on this point.

The mindless bureaucracy and senseless lack of humanity that is present in so many institutions in the US, but best exemplified by the federal government, is one of the things I don’t miss about life in the states.   There are bureaucracies here as well, and certainly a fair amout of insanity, but one thing you won’t encounter is this kind of heartless, arrogant government:

He sleeps under a bridge, washes in a public bathroom and was panhandling for booze money 11 months ago, but now Larry Moore is the best-dressed shoeshine man in the city. When he gets up from his cardboard mattress, he puts on a coat and tie. It’s a reminder of how he has turned things around.

In fact, until last week it looked like Moore was going to have saved enough money to rent a room and get off the street for the first time in six years. But then, in a breathtakingly clueless move, an official for the Department of Public Works told Moore that he has to fork over the money he saved for his first month’s rent to purchase a $491 sidewalk vendor permit.

“I had $573 ready to go,” Moore said, who needs $600 for the rent. “This tore that up. But I’ve been homeless for six years. Another six weeks isn’t going to kill me.”

The bureaucrat told Moore that she found out about his business after reading about his success in this paper.

The reporter goes on to detail how this man has worked hard to get himself cleaned up and develop a loyal following.  Some of his customers had even pitched in to help him get a home.  The worthless local government employee apparently had nothing better to do than require this guy to get a $491 permit.

The economy is in ruins, unemployment is at 25 year highs, local government tax revenues have fallen precipitously and this is what government employees are doing.  California, in particular, is suffering unprecedented deficits, and apparently they still have too many employees.

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