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As Goes Colombia, So Goes Latin America? May 11 2021, 3:55 AM May 10 2021, 2:30 PM May 11 2021, 3:55 AM (Bloomberg Opinion) -- When Colombians voted in a 42-year-old development wonk as president in 2018, they knew it was a leap of faith. But what Ivan Duque lacked in political adroitness (heâd served a single term as a senator), the argument went, he would finesse as an internationally accredited emerging market technocrat. (Bloomberg Opinion) -- When Colombians voted in a 42-year-old development wonk as president in 2018, they knew it was a leap of faith. But what Ivan Duque lacked in political adroitness (heâd served a single term as a senator), the argument went, he would finesse as an internationally accredited emerging market technocrat.
Thereâs No App to Beat Covid in Latin America Apr 16 2021, 10:41 PM April 16 2021, 2:30 PM April 16 2021, 10:41 PM (Bloomberg Opinion) -- Whether itâs standing up to corporate tobacco, pioneering the rainbow agenda or branding Big Marijuana, Uruguayâs public-policy chutzpah stands out in the Americas. So it was little surprise when this nation of 3.4 million joined the worldâs pacesetters in vaccine rollout. Some 28 of every 100 Uruguayans have had at least one anti-Covid-19 shot, the best record in the continent after Chileâs, and nearly triple ... (Bloomberg Opinion) -- Whether itâs standing up to corporate tobacco, pioneering the rainbow agenda or branding Big Marijuana, Uruguayâs public-policy chutzpah stands out in the Americas. So it was little surprise when this nation of 3.4 million joined the worldâs pacesetters in vaccine rollout. Some 28 of every 100 Uruguayans have had at least one anti-Covid-19 shot, the best record in the continent after Chileâs, and nearly triple the jabs per capita of its richer neighbors Brazil and Argentina.
Venezuela's Refugees Are an Asset, Not a Problem bloombergquint.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from bloombergquint.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Latin America's Economies Need About a Billion Jabs in the Arm bloombergquint.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from bloombergquint.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
In lockdown Brazil, everyone is watching 'Big Brother' lmtonline.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from lmtonline.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Venezuelaâs Covid Toll Is About to Surge Feb 18 2021, 6:25 AM February 16 2021, 3:30 PM February 18 2021, 6:25 AM (Bloomberg Opinion) -- Venezuelans had rare occasion to celebrate last week when a government directive cleared the way for hundreds of thousands of their compatriots in harmâs way to receive doses of Covid-19 vaccines. (Bloomberg Opinion) -- Venezuelans had rare occasion to celebrate last week when a government directive cleared the way for hundreds of thousands of their compatriots in harmâs way to receive doses of Covid-19 vaccines. Oh, wait. The compatriots in question were immigrants, having exited their failing homeland to make a new life abroad. The government was Colombian, whose directive to protect expatriate Venezuelans emanated not from the caudillo in Caracas but his arch-critic over the border, Colombian President Ivan Duque. Better yet, the vaccine offer is part of a broader arrangement to grant temporary protected status to Venezuelans living irregularly in Colombia â opening the door for nearly 1 million displaced neighbors to legally reside, work and access public health in their adoptive home.
As the autocratic Nicolas Maduro entrenches himself, his democratic opponents need some pragmatic wins to recover their mojo. When a Venezuelan patrol boat intercepted a Guyanese fishing trawler late last month, the third such blue-water confrontation in a matter of weeks, investors, diplomats and the government in Georgetownwere understandably alarmed. Was Venezuela poised to invade its neighbor and seize a stake in the world's Not a chance. Yes, Venezuela has long chafed at its eastern border on the conceit that the line drawn by big power arbitration 121 years ago was theft; recovering the purportedly purloined territory has been part of Venezuelan national lore, gospel for its school kids and a perennial pretext for harassing the Guyanese. Yet President Nicolas Maduro is nothing if not a master of the political head fake, eager to