History of Costa Rica

From Philippines
Revision as of 14:35, 15 April 2015 by Jasmine75 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "''' History of Costa Rica''' In 1502 Christopher Columbus’s fourth Atlantic voyage brought him to the shores of Costa Rica, where he remained for 18 days refitting his ...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
→ → Go back HOME to Zamboanga: the Portal to the Philippines.

History of Costa Rica

In 1502 Christopher Columbus’s fourth Atlantic voyage brought him to the shores of Costa Rica, where he remained for 18 days refitting his ships. Relations with the native people became friendly enough that they brought him a number of items of gold, possibly prompting Columbus to name the land “Rich Coast,” although there is some dispute over the origin of the name. Other more promising regions forced Spain to neglect the area, however, and the first significant settlement in what is now Costa Rica did not take place until much later. In 1564 the Spanish crown established the village of Cartago in the Valle Central, or Meseta Central, as the first permanent settlement.

Theoretically under the political jurisdiction of the captain general of Guatemala and the spiritual guidance of the bishop of León in Nicaragua, Costa Rica was largely ignored by both administrations. The absence of precious metals meant the collection of few taxes from the ticos, as Costa Ricans are called; consequently Spain provided little help in developing the infrastructure of the province. Compared with other colonies, Costa Rica lacked the large labour force so essential in the Spanish scheme of conquest. The Indian population drastically declined during and immediately following conquest; any survivors resisted capture by disappearing into the forests rather than succumbing to the encomienda, Spain’s usual system of forced labour. Lacking products for a great overseas market, the Costa Ricans eked out a subsistence economy based on cacao (the source of cocoa beans) and tobacco. Hence, most people were small landowners with a close personal interest in local affairs. Historians often give credit to these developments for the growth of the democratic ideals that have become associated with Costa Rica. It should be noted, however, that some persons who became rich established a small finca- (estate-) based oligarchy, which provided political leadership well into the 20th century.

  • Independence

When Mexico declared its independence from Spain in 1821, Costa Rica, with other parts of Central America, joined the short-lived Mexican Empire. In 1823 Costa Rica helped create the United Provinces of Central America but, disenchanted with the strife in the other four states of the federation, severed its ties in 1838. A pattern of isolationism similar to that of the colonial period was reinforced. Indeed, Costa Ricans invariably showed little interest in the many attempts to revive the federation throughout the 19th and most of the 20th century, until their country joined the Central American Common Market in 1962.

Costa Rican leaders soon realized the potential for coffee cultivation and strove to promote coffee planting. From the 1840s a constant stream of oxcarts carried coffee from the Valle Central to Pacific ports and ships bound for Europe. This trade triggered British investment. Unlike sugar and indigo planters, coffee farmers with even small acreage could derive an adequate if simple existence, and Costa Ricans achieved a competitive advantage over coffee farmers in other Latin American countries.

Costa Rica’s policy of isolationism did not completely save it from foreign troubles. In 1825 the province of Guanacaste seceded from Nicaragua and joined Costa Rica, creating an issue that was contended until the boundary treaty of 1896. Political refugees from other Central American countries attempted, and occasionally succeeded, in involving Costa Rica in regional conflicts. Another danger developed when William Walker and his band of filibusters took over Nicaragua in 1856, threatening all of Central America. Costa Rican troops participated in the Central American coalition force that drove Walker out of the region.

Material progress came to Costa Rica during the era of Gen. Tomás Guardia, who dominated the country from 1870 until 1882. His government curtailed liberty and added to the debt, but it also brought increases in coffee and sugar exports as well as widespread construction of schools. A new constitution, adopted in 1871, remained in effect, except for a brief interlude (1917–19), until 1949. The emphasis on agricultural exports strained transportation, and, with mainly British funds, Costa Rica sought to link the Valle Central with the seaports by railway. The chief promoter was an American, Minor C. Keith, who made a fortune with the opening of his rail line between Cartago and Limón. With vast land grants, Keith then entered the banana business. By the late 19th century, bananas were beginning to rival coffee as the chief source of Costa Rican foreign exchange, especially after Keith’s investments were merged with others to form the United Fruit Company in 1899.

The last decades of the 19th century were also marked by a gradual decline in Roman Catholic Church activity in secular affairs. The Jesuits were expelled for a few years, cemeteries were secularized, and public education was expanded. In 1886 free public education became compulsory; public schools, a museum, and a national library were founded. Though the government continued to support the church, the constitution of 1871 provided for religious toleration. Strengthening the tradition of democracy for which Costa Rica was to become famed throughout Latin America was the victory in 1889 of Pres. José Joaquín Rodríguez in what is considered the first entirely free and honest election in all of Central America.

  • Costa Rica in the 20th century

In the early 20th century Costa Rica and four other Central American republics established the Central American Court of Justice, the first international court with wide juridical powers. The headquarters were established in Cartago, but, when the building was destroyed in the 1910 earthquake, the headquarters were moved to San José. One of the court’s landmark cases involved the Bryan-Chamorro Treaty of 1916, which gave the United States permission to use the San Juan River (the border between Nicaragua and Costa Rica) as part of an interoceanic canal route. Costa Rica protested that Nicaragua was violating preexisting treaty rights and that opening a route would threaten Costa Rican security. The claim was brought before the court, which ruled in Costa’s Rica’s favour; however, Nicaragua refused to accept the ruling and withdrew from the court. Because of Nicaragua’s withdrawal and an overall ineffective judicial procedure, the court dissolved in 1918 after 10 years in existence. However, the building in San José, which had been constructed with help from a donation by U.S. philanthropist Andrew Carnegie, became the home of Costa Rica’s Ministry of Foreign Relations.

Costa Rica’s boundary with Panama (originally with Colombia, before Panamanian independence) was also in dispute. Arbitration awards by France and the United States in 1900 and 1914, respectively, had been generally favourable to Costa Rica but were rejected by Panama. In 1921 Costa Rica attempted forcible occupation of this area (on the Pacific coast) but was diverted by the intervention of the United States. Panama then evacuated the region, but relations between the two small states were not reestablished until 1928. In 1941 the governments finally reached an accord over the boundary.

TRANSITION TO DEMOCRACY

Meanwhile, Costa Rica suffered an interruption in its march toward democratic, civilian-controlled government. When the country held an election under direct suffrage for the first time, in 1913, no candidate won a majority, and the Legislative Assembly chose Alfredo González Flores as president. Disgruntled over tax reforms proposed by González, Gen. Federico Tinoco Granados in 1917 led one of the country’s few coups. Tinoco’s despotic behaviour soon cost him his popularity. His administration was also impeded by the refusal of the U.S. government to recognize his regime, and revolts and the threat of U.S. intervention caused him to resign in 1919.

This experiment in dictatorship was not repeated, and Costa Rica continued its tradition of democratic elections and orderly government. A literacy test for voters was adopted in 1920 and the secret ballot in 1925. Costa Rica’s most serious political crisis since 1917 came in 1948. Former president Rafael Angel Calderón Guardia (1940–44) formed an unusual political coalition consisting of members of the communist Popular Vanguard Party and the Catholic Church to bring about significant improvement in workers’ conditions and social security. Some thought the coalition went too far when it tried to prevent the seating of the president-elect, Otilio Ulate, a Social Democrat. José Figueres Ferrer, an outspoken landowner who favoured a greater role for state enterprise, organized local and foreign militia and trained them at his farm. His army, which evolved into the National Liberation Party (Partido Liberación Nacional; PLN), launched a successful rebellion against the government and sparked a brief civil war in which about 2,000 civilians were killed. The war ended after a compromise was reached under which Figueres promised to restore order, to preserve some of Calderón’s reforms, and to then turn over the presidency to Ulate. Figueres led the country for 18 months. A new constitution, promulgated in 1949 by Figueres’s regime, prohibited the establishment or maintenance of an army, established women’s suffrage, strengthened the electoral tribunal, abolished institutionalized racism, nationalized the banking system, and gave great powers to state corporations, known as autonomous agencies. Then, as promised, the junta turned the government over to Ulate. Figueres was elected twice in his own right, in 1953 and again in 1970, establishing his PLN as the dominant group in the Legislative Assembly.

This experiment in dictatorship was not repeated, and Costa Rica continued its tradition of democratic elections and orderly government. A literacy test for voters was adopted in 1920 and the secret ballot in 1925. Costa Rica’s most serious political crisis since 1917 came in 1948. Former president Rafael Angel Calderón Guardia (1940–44) formed an unusual political coalition consisting of members of the communist Popular Vanguard Party and the Catholic Church to bring about significant improvement in workers’ conditions and social security. Some thought the coalition went too far when it tried to prevent the seating of the president-elect, Otilio Ulate, a Social Democrat. José Figueres Ferrer, an outspoken landowner who favoured a greater role for state enterprise, organized local and foreign militia and trained them at his farm. His army, which evolved into the National Liberation Party (Partido Liberación Nacional; PLN), launched a successful rebellion against the government and sparked a brief civil war in which about 2,000 civilians were killed. The war ended after a compromise was reached under which Figueres promised to restore order, to preserve some of Calderón’s reforms, and to then turn over the presidency to Ulate. Figueres led the country for 18 months. A new constitution, promulgated in 1949 by Figueres’s regime, prohibited the establishment or maintenance of an army, established women’s suffrage, strengthened the electoral tribunal, abolished institutionalized racism, nationalized the banking system, and gave great powers to state corporations, known as autonomous agencies. Then, as promised, the junta turned the government over to Ulate. Figueres was elected twice in his own right, in 1953 and again in 1970, establishing his PLN as the dominant group in the Legislative Assembly.

Even more enduring were the country’s economic troubles. Although Costa Rica remained politically stable, Central America’s conflicts discouraged tourism. Economic growth slowed to very near zero when the price of oil became so high that almost all of the country’s coffee crop income was needed to pay for foreign oil. Inflation rates fluctuated sharply, and unemployment rose. Hospital, dock, banana, and railroad workers received small pay raises after staging disruptive strikes. Many years of easy credit, excessive government spending, and unfavourable trade balances brought the country to the brink of economic ruin. Carazo and the bankers failed to reach an agreement and left the problem for the new president, Luis Alberto Monge Álvarez of the PLN, who took office in 1982. In return for extending Costa Rica’s debts, the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank insisted that Monge impose severe austerity measures, including devaluation of the colón, budget and tax cuts, and suspension of some subsidies.

In addition to his economic woes, Monge had to face pressure from the United States to cooperate with the anti-Sandinista counterrevolution based in Honduras, while public opinion pressed for neutrality. Monge opted to declare his country’s official neutrality but secretly cooperated with the United States.

In 1986 Monge was succeeded by another member of the PLN, Óscar Arias Sánchez, who faced many of the same economic problems. Costa Rica continued to be beset by nearly $5 billion in foreign debt, too-rapid urbanization, inadequate housing, unemployment, and adjustments necessitated by privatization of state monopolies. More than one-third of the country’s income was derived from international loans. Civil wars elsewhere in Central America continued bringing thousands of fugitives into Costa Rican exile, and illicit drug traffic imposed new forms of corruption on the land.

Aside from some easing of the debt structure, Arias could accomplish little with these matters, but he created for himself a powerful role in international affairs. A wealthy coffee grower and political scientist educated in England, Arias spent most of his term leading a regional peace movement designed to end the bitter Contra war in Nicaragua and guerrilla conflicts in El Salvador and Guatemala. Because he refused to aid the Contras, he expected and received little support from the United States, but he achieved considerable success in rallying forces in Central America in favour of ending conflict. He did more than any other person to reduce tensions and create machinery to end the bloody Central American struggles. In 1987 President Arias received the Nobel Prize for Peace for his efforts.

Arias, constitutionally ineligible to run in 1990, was succeeded by Rafael Angel Calderón Fournier of the PUSC. Calderón Fournier, son of the reform president of the 1940–44 period, Rafael Angel Calderón Guardia, had lost two previous presidential campaigns. Calderón Fournier had campaigned to expand social welfare programs and to reduce income inequalities, but, faced with a large budget deficit, he instead enacted austerity measures, costing him and his party popularity. As president, he inaugurated the Plaza of Social Guarantees in honour of his father’s establishment of social security. But the 1990s dictated different measures, and Calderón Fournier presided over neoliberal policies, including eliminating protectionist legislation and favouring privatization of banks and other state agencies. These steps and lower petroleum prices helped to improve the country’s economic condition. Peace in Central America helped tourism, but world markets for Costa Rica’s traditional agricultural products slowed the flow of foreign exchange.

In 1994 PLN candidate José María Figueres Olsen (the son of three-time president José Figueres Ferrer) won the presidency, defeating the PUSC’s Miguel Angel Rodríguez Echeverría, though the PLN failed to win an outright majority in the Legislative Assembly. Figueres’s policy prescriptions for Costa Rica’s ailing economy—spending cuts and tax increases—alienated large segments of the public. His government was also hurt by the World Bank’s refusal to grant Costa Rica money to finance its structural adjustment program. The fiscal crisis led to an accord between the PLN and PUSC that enabled the enactment of reforms. In 1996 Costa Rica’s economic difficulties were compounded by Hurricane Cesar, which caused widespread damage, particularly in the southern part of the country.

While Figueres’s presidential campaign indicated that he shared some of his father’s faith and the PLN’s traditional support of statist policies, he spent much of his time courting private enterprise. Although gross national product (GNP) in the 1996–98 period was still low, Figueres could claim credit for reducing inflation by nearly half. By reforming the public pension system and improving tax collection, the Figueres government significantly reduced the deficit as a percentage of the GNP. The Costa Rican government, long considered an example of a bloated bureaucracy, was coming down to size, whether controlled by the PUSC or the PLN.

In 1998 the PUSC’s Miguel Angel Rodríguez, promising to reduce poverty and improve the lives of women and young people, was elected president. With tourism booming and Costa Rica able to attract foreign investment, particularly from high-technology firms, the economy rebounded.


Costa Rica in the 21st century

The 2002 presidential and legislative elections shattered the stable two-party system that the country had enjoyed for several decades. Although the PUSC retained the presidency, its nominee, Abel Pacheco de la Espriella, was forced into an unprecedented runoff, as no candidate garnered at least 40 percent of the vote in the first round. In elections to the Legislative Assembly, the Citizen Action Party (Partido Acción Ciudadana; PAC) won 14 seats, denying an overall majority to either the PUSC or the PLN.

The following year Costa Rica’s Supreme Court annulled the 1969 legislative reform of the constitution that limited a president to a single four-year term, thus reverting to the 1949 constitution, which enabled a former president to seek the presidency again after having been out of office for eight years. The annulment allowed former president and Nobel Peace Prize winner Arias to announce his candidacy for president in 2004. During this time, Pacheco’s administration experienced a growing budget deficit and was scarred by the discovery of funds from his campaign in Panamanian banks. Also, three past presidents of his party, the PUSC, were charged with accepting bribes and placed under house arrest. Moreover, former president Rodríguez was forced to resign as secretary-general of the Organization of American States to return to Costa Rica to respond to these corruption charges.

Arias won the presidency in the 2006 elections, beating Ottón Solís Fallas of PAC by a slim margin. He proposed ending state-run monopolies in electric power, social security, and telecommunications and favoured ratifying the Central America–Dominican Republic Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA–DR) with the United States, despite protests from trade unions and other organizations. Costa Rican citizens voted in favour of the agreement by a narrow margin in the country’s first national referendum, held in 2007. In the process Costa Rica became the last Central American country to ratify the agreement. Also in 2007, President Arias officially established diplomatic relations with China in an effort to promote trade and economic cooperation, breaking off 60 years of formal ties with Taiwan.

On July 13, 2009, the International Court of Justice settled a longtime dispute between Nicaragua and Costa Rica over the latter’s use of the San Juan River. In the ruling, the court granted Costa Rica the right of free navigation on the river not only for commerce but also for tourism.

In February 2010 Costa Ricans elected their first female president, Laura Chinchilla of the PLN. Winning 47 percent of the vote, she easily defeated the second-place candidate, Solís, who had been Arias’s main challenger in 2006. Although some opponents likened Chinchilla to a puppet of the outgoing president, she wooed many voters with her pledge to fight violent crime and drug trafficking.