An active role for development
Comité de Base Juana Ramírez la Avanzadota, Frente Continental de Mujeres, Red Popular de Usuarias del Banco de Desarrollo de la Mujer
The programmes designed to strengthen the so called “endogenous development model” and to fight poverty continue to give priority to the cooperative organization of work, distribution of subsidized food, literacy programmes, housing credits and agricultural conversion based on reclaiming land for rural inhabitants and members of cooperatives. As regards gender equity, the Women’s Development Bank stand out, offering small credits with the aim of encouraging women to take a leading role in society.
Since Hugo Chávez was elected president in 198, profound changes have been
included in the Constitution;
the Outlines of the National Plan 2001-2007, the 49 decrees passed in 2001, the
socio-productive programmes known as “Missions”, the boosting of the
micro-financial public system and the strategic objectives formulated by the
President of the Republic at the end of 2004.
The intention is for these changes to agree with the international commitments
to fight poverty and to achieve equal opportunities for the world’s citizens
made by the country at several summits and conferences. Their aim is to create
capacities so that all Venezuelans realize their human right to quality of life.
This intention of equity is reflected in the new Constitution’s text beginning
with the Preamble, which declares that it is the intention of the people of
Venezuela to “rebuild the Republic to establish a democratic, participative and
active, multiethnic and multicultural society”. Article 3 of the Charter
establishes as essential State objectives “the defence and development of
individuals, and respect for their dignity, the democratic exercise of the
people’s will, the construction of a fair, peace-loving society”, and specifies
that “education and work are the fundamental processes to attain these
objectives”.
Likewise, the Constitutional Law on Hydrocarbons (one of the decrees of 2001)
regulates the activities aimed at “promoting the integral organic and sustained
development of the country, paying attention to the rational use of this
resource and to the preservation of the environment”. The law points out that
“the income the Nation might receive from hydrocarbons will be mainly assigned
to finance health, education, the building of macroeconomic stabilization funds
and investment in production”.
National programmes to fight poverty
Legislation has been put into effect through specific programmes and measures
aimed at fighting poverty which, according to 2002 data, affects 48% of the
population, including 22% indigents.
To guarantee people’s right to food, the national Government created the Mercal
Mission in 2003, a food distribution network which sells more than four thousand
tons of food daily. Since April 2005 the plan has had a monthly subsidy of USD
24 million which enables network price stabilization and ensures savings of up
to 35% in the purchase of quality food. Currently, there are 13,563 shops which
supply food to more than 10 million people throughout the country without having
modified any prices.
The programme to fight illiteracy (Robinson Mission) is aimed at eradicating a
problem which affects 6.9% of adults in Venezuela.
According to data provided by the Ministry of Education and Sports, since July
2003 more than 1.4 million Venezuelans have completed this programme, a figure
that is very close to the goal of 1.5 million. Almost 700,000 people, among them
disabled persons, indigenous people and senior citizens, take advantage of the
programme, which takes offers them up to sixth grade of primary school and is
implemented in 81,000 venues under the supervision of 87,377 facilitators.
As regards housing, state credits are being provided to community organizations
that have been fighting for many years for dignified housing and already have
land and developed projects. The State becomes a facilitator of technical,
credit and material aspects through the New Constructive Model plan, based on
the use of popular organization and knowledge, and on collective and shared
work. Another phase of the housing programmes, together with Urban Land
Committees (popular organizations led mostly by women), provides land for people
to build their homes in working-class neighbourhoods.
A
profound agrarian transformation is underway, through the consolidation of what
is known as endogenous development, which includes reclaiming land in diverse
regions of the country with the aim of giving it to rural inhabitants and
members of cooperatives, providing them with technical assistance, credit and
aid for product commercialization. At the same time, the Ministry of Agriculture
and Land (MAT) and the Ministry of Science and Technology are working on a
National Seed Plan. The MAT and the Ministry for Popular Economy (MINEP) are
making progress in the National Winter Planting Plan with the objective of
favouring farmers and achieving food sovereignty.
Endogenous development
The strategic horizon defined by the Government for 2005-2006, to which
President Chávez has given the name the Leap Forward or Revolution within the
Revolution, proposes 10 basic objectives to direct the actions of all
institutional, social and political actors:
·
Advance in the configuration of a new social structure.
·
Articulate and optimize a new communicative strategy.
·
Advance rapidly in the construction of a new model of democratic popular
participation.
·
Accelerate the creation of a new institutionalism within the State.
·
Activate an efficient strategy to fight corruption.
·
Accelerate the construction of a new productive model, moving towards the
creation of a new economic system.
·
Continue the implementation of the new territorial structure.
·
Accelerate the configuration of the new national military strategy.
·
Continue to promote the new multi-polar international system.
Linked to the seventh objective is the creation of MINEP in September of 2004.
The task of the Ministry, in coordination with other national, regional and
local government agencies, is the implementation of a new development model.
“Its cross-cutting objective is the consolidation of the Vuelvan Caras
Mission,
as well as the direction of policies linked to the transition towards a new
model of endogenous development”
This new form of development has as its dynamic socio-economic focus the Nuclei
of Endogenous Development, which gives priority to the cooperative organization
of labour. The authorities consider that cooperatives should be much more than a
mere organizational form of productive labour, and become a life project in
which “the individual must abandon behaviours, attitudes and expectations
learned in a society that rewards competitiveness and individual action”.
Various autonomous institutions that had depended on other ministries were
linked to the MINEP, among these are; the Sovereign People’s Bank, the
Micro-financial Fund, the Women’s Development Bank (Banmujer), the Development
Fund for the Promotion of Agriculture and Fishing, the National Institute for
Small and Medium Businesses, the Industrial Credit Fund, the Institution for
Cooperatives Supervision, the Institute for Rural Development and the National
Institute of Educational Training (INCE).
MINEP created a decentralized agency in the 23 federated states and the Capital
District, with representatives from all the associated entities and a
coordinator designated by MINEP. These agencies promote the certification of
“lanceros” and “lanceras” (facilitators) from the Vuelvan Caras Mission,
after they complete a one-year training course with INCE and Nuclei of
Endogenous Development. With the aid of consultants MINEP also promotes the
creation of cooperatives and an investment project for obtaining assets and
financing. The Vuelvan Caras Mission is presently at this stage. Primary
data indicate that 63% of cooperative members are women and 37% men.
Promotion of gender equity
The INCE training plan incorporates a gender module and MINEP, sensitized to
questions of gender inequality, will possibly attach a budgetary item to
projects that promote equity between men and women. On the Gender-related
Development Index, Venezuela ranks 58th among 144 countries. Although
in some indicators, such as life expectancy and literacy, there are no great
differences, in others there are clear disparities. The case of empowerment, for
example, shows that only 9.7% of members of Parliament and 27% of top official
and management level positions are occupied by women. In the area of economic
activity, 43.9% of women are economically active, as opposed to 54% of men.
Diligent work is being carried out to coordinate follow-up on cooperative
members, taking into account culture, identity, existing gender relations and
ethnic background, among other elements.
The creation of Banmujer is one of the principal measures for promoting equity.
Through the financing of micro-businesses, women’s economic autonomy and an
active role in society are made possible. The project involves combating extreme
poverty and its feminization. In 2002 the rate of female poverty was 18.8% while
the rate for men was 14.4%. In homes where women are heads of household (28.8%)
the poverty rate is 48%, while in homes run by men (71.2%) the rate is 41%.
Table 1. Some data related to gender equity
Source: ECLAC. “Gender Statistics. Venezuela”.
Banmujer
As a public micro-financial agency attached to MINEP, in 2005 Banmujer published
a Guide to Forming Cooperatives. According to the Guide the Government
has created a new economic model based on humanism and solidarity, promoting “a
strategy for democratization of the economy, an alternative development model
that contemplates gender equity and a new project for the country. It is a
popular economy that promotes local development and creates the conditions for
the active participation of women and men, of all the enterprising and creative
working people…”
According to the Guide, the popular economy includes “productive and
self-managing activities, joint micro-businesses, cooperatives and Associative
Economic Units in general”, favouring the participation of women, who are
generally excluded from public policy and strategic development plans”.
In the section on cooperatives and gender equity it states that in Venezuela,
70% of the poor are women, a percentage registered in the country’s statistics,
which also recognize the increasing feminization of poverty. Also noted is the
fact that women have traditionally been disadvantaged given their conditions of
subordination and are therefore unprepared to face the economic world and the
job market, resulting in increased poverty rates.
Alternatively, the Government empowers the social economy incorporating
traditionally excluded sectors like popular communities and women affected by
poverty, unemployment and informal employment.
The Guide ends by pointing out that in cooperatives financed by Banmujer, women
tend to be a majority and occupy the main management positions.
Banmujer is financed with resources from the National Treasury together with
special resources provided in national and multilateral agreements. The
financial and non-financial services that it offers favour the economic and
social roles of women and stimulate their active role in the creation of a new
society with gender equity and justice. At the same time, it supports the
Vuelvan Caras, Plan Café, Handicrafts for Export and Seed Capital
programmes. Banmujer has agreements with the Ministry of Labour and the Mercal
Mission, supports the Bandes-Banmujer Agreement, Mission Guaicaipuro (for
indigenous peoples) and gives help to women of African descent in the Barlovento
area as well as to disabled women, among others.
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