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Viewing cable 10SANJOSE270, Scenesetter for Secretary Clinton's March 4-5 Visit to Costa

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
10SANJOSE270 2010-02-25 21:44 2011-08-30 01:44 UNCLASSIFIED Embassy San Jose
VZCZCXYZ0025
RR RUEHWEB

DE RUEHSJ #0270/01 0562145
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
R 252144Z FEB 10
FM AMEMBASSY SAN JOSE
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 0443
INFO WHA CENTRAL AMERICAN COLLECTIVE
RUEHBR/AMEMBASSY BRASILIA
RUEHSG/AMEMBASSY SANTIAGO
UNCLAS SAN JOSE 000270 
 
SIPDIS 
DEPT FOR WHA/CEN 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: OVIP PGOV PREL ECON EAID CS
SUBJECT: Scenesetter for Secretary Clinton's March 4-5 Visit to Costa 
Rica 
 
1. (SBU) Summary: Embassy San Jose warmly welcomes your visit to 
Costa Rica for the Pathways to Prosperity Ministerial meeting.   We 
encourage you to use your visit here to reinforce constructive 
efforts by Costa Ricans on climate change and energy security. 
President Oscar Arias has set a good course on these issues, and 
President-elect Laura Chinchilla has promised to give them high 
priority in her administration.  The United States also 
collaborates successfully with Costa Rica on citizen security and 
job-producing trade and investment.  Your visit provides an 
opportunity to underscore the United States government's desire to 
continue working in partnership with Costa Rica to make further 
progress in these areas, and our appreciation and expectation of 
Costa Rica's commitment - in money and other resources - to 
initiatives of common interest to our countries. End Summary. 
 
 
 
With Chinchilla, Costa Ricans Choose Continuity 
 
 
 
2. (SBU)  Laura Chinchilla handily won Costa Rica's February 7 
presidential election with just under 47 percent of the vote, 
beating by more than 20 points her nearest rivals.  In electing 
Chinchilla, Costa Ricans voted for continuity and consolidation of 
President Arias' agenda.  Arias has been criticized for setting 
lofty goals without putting in place all of the mechanics to reach 
them.  Politically astute, Chinchilla is carefully straddling the 
Arias era with a forward-thinking agenda and an ability to put in 
place the building blocks necessary to achieve shared goals. 
 
 
 
3. (U)  Chinchilla's major policy goals of promoting job creation, 
citizen security, energy security, and sound environmental 
stewardship are consistent with U.S. foreign policy interests in 
Costa Rica and Central America.  Chinchilla knows that, to create 
jobs, her administration must reduce the hyper-legalistic 
bureaucracy that impedes investment.  She has committed to a clean 
energy agenda and to keeping Costa Rica on its path toward carbon 
neutrality by 2021.  She told the embassy during the campaign that 
she would seek U.S. assistance in her efforts to strengthen citizen 
security, particularly in improving the recruitment and training of 
uniformed police officers. 
 
 
 
4. (U)  Chinchilla brings to the office experience in citizen 
security issues and a significant career in public service, 
including stints as Legislative Assemblywoman, Minister of Public 
Security, and President Oscar Arias' former Justice Minister and 
Vice President (she resigned upon declaring herself a candidate for 
the presidency).  She has strong personal ties to the U.S., having 
earned a Masters in Public Policy at Georgetown on a USAID 
scholarship and worked on judicial reform in Latin America as a 
USAID contractor in the late 1990s.  She will be Costa Rica's first 
female president. 
 
 
 
Arias' legacy 
 
 
 
5. (SBU)  President Arias considers Chinchilla's decisive victory 
to be the Costa Rican people's endorsement of his - at times 
controversial - agenda.  One of his greatest legacies is the 
U.S.-Central American-Dominican Republic Free Trade Agreement 
(CAFTA-DR).  Ratified in a national referendum, it opened Costa 
Rica's economy to free trade and ended state monopolies in key 
sectors.  (Costa Rica's legislature still must pass the final bill 
required to bring its legislation into compliance with CAFTA-DR, 
and the government must also reach agreement with USTR on related 
to intellectual property rights.)  On the international front, 
Arias feels disappointed by the international community's failure 
to get Micheletti to comply with the Tegucigalpa-San Jose Accords. 
He remains critical of his Latin American counterparts for 
continuing to exclude Honduras from the fold (while at times 
including Cuba).  At home, the Arias administration also has 
supported social welfare programs, including a successful program 
of cash payments to poor mothers who keep their children in 
secondary school.  Arias' government almost doubled the public 
security budget of the past two years; however, his 
administration's statements suggesting that crime is not a serious 
problem earned the ire of citizens deeply affected by crime. 
 
 
U.S. PRIORITIES IN COSTA RICA 
 
 
 
Our Work Advances Economic Growth in the U.S. and Costa Rica 
 
 
 
6. (U)  A key area of common interest is job creation.  U.S. 
exports to Costa Rica create jobs at home, as do Costa Rican 
purchases of U.S. goods.  The Foreign Commercial Service actively 
promotes both of these activities by facilitating trade missions of 
U.S. businesses to Costa Rica and vice versa.  In 2007, the most 
recent year for which statistics are available, 8,084 U.S. 
exporters - of which 83 percent were small and medium sized 
enterprises - shipped products valued at $4.1 billion to Costa 
Rica.  In the past year, U.S. businesses exported $4.7 billion 
worth of goods and service to Costa Rica, while imports from Costa 
Rica totaled $5.6 billion.  The U.S. Food and Drug 7. 
Administration (FDA) is working to get Costa Rican authorities to 
recognize FDA's approvals of medical devices, so Costa Ricans can 
purchase U.S.-made devices without having to obtain additional 
approvals here. 
 
 
 
8. (U)  We also help create jobs at home through programs that help 
reduce costs for U.S. exporters.  For example, since entry into 
force of CAFTA-DR, USAID has conducted numerous training sessions 
for working level officials on matters such as rules of origin. 
This training has helped the officials improve the speed and 
efficiency of customs processing. 
 
 
 
9. (SBU)  We are currently encouraging the Costa Rican government 
to purchase U.S.-made container scanners for placement at its land 
and sea points of entry.  This equipment would increase vastly the 
speed and thoroughness of Costa Rica's checks of cargo entering the 
country, a boon to business and security.  The sale of the 
equipment itself would be a multi-million dollar deal for a U.S. 
company.  Meanwhile, in a joint project, U.S. Department of 
Treasury and Chilean government experts are advising the Costa 
Rican government on financing infrastructure projects through 
public-private partnerships, thereby helping develop $3 billion in 
concessions. 
 
 
 
10. (SBU)  Reducing cumbersome bureaucracy is a priority for U.S. 
investors, who account for 60% of Costa Rica's foreign direct 
investment.  The World Bank's 2009 "Doing Business" index ranks 
Costa Rica 117th out of 181 countries overall, and 24th out of 31 
in the region.  Costa Rica earns particularly low ranks in the 
areas of ease of starting a business and protecting investors. 
 
 
 
Advancing our Shared Agenda on Climate Change and Energy Security 
 
 
 
11. (U)  Climate change and clean energy are other areas where the 
actions of Costa Rica and its neighbors impact U.S. citizens. 
President Oscar Arias committed Costa Rica to becoming Carbon 
Neutral by 2021.  This has sparked a new generation of activists 
and entrepreneurs in Costa Rica to push for changes aimed at 
enhancing Costa Rica's investment climate for clean energy.  If 
Costa Rica can achieve such a dramatic reduction of emissions, it 
will have a small impact in addressing the global problem and a 
large impact in setting an example for other countries. In 
addition, Costa Rica's investment in clean energy almost certainly 
will create "green" jobs both in Costa Rica and the U.S. 
 
 
 
12. (SBU)  So far the Arias administration has failed to turn much 
of its rhetoric on the environment into action, and President-elect 
Chinchilla recognizes that it falls to her administration to 
implement concrete measures to achieve such goals.  An early 
challenge will be the passage through the Legislative Assembly of a 
long-overdue energy bill, which her administration could use to 
reform the energy sector to effectively promote clean energy. 
 
 
13. (SBU)  Despite having perhaps the world's greatest renewable 
energy potential, Latin America and the Caribbean capture less than 
3% of global investments in clean energy. Costa Rica has done well 
on energy security to date, but it will face serious challenges in 
the next ten years unless it increases efficiency and improves the 
market incentives for renewable energy.  The Arias administration 
asked to join Petrocaribe in 2008, in a move it defended at the 
time as "economic pragmatism" given high fuel prices and 
Venezuela's role as Costa Rica's major supplier (87 percent) of 
crude oil.  Given the lower oil and energy costs since, and some 
Costa Rican concerns about the potential "political price" 
associated with joining, this initiative has languished. 
 
 
 
14. (U)  The State Department's regional environmental hub has 
proposed projects that will demonstrate ways to cut barriers to 
investments in clean energy and show the advantages of instituting 
"smart grids" now.  Funding may be available this year to implement 
pilot projects that demonstrate these advantages and to engage 
regulators and legislators in expert exchanges.  Also the U.S. 
Department of Energy is funding the establishment of an Energy 
Efficiency Center here in Costa Rica that will serve as a knowledge 
platform for other countries in the region.  The U.S. government 
currently supports programs to assist Costa Rica in addressing 
other environmental issues, for example by providing technical 
expertise to a laboratory that monitors water quality and clean 
production training for the private sector through the 
environmental component of CAFTA-DR. 
 
 
 
15. (SBU)  In stark contrast to some other Latin American 
countries, Costa Rica was a constructive participant in the climate 
change negotiations at Copenhagen, and it is one of the few from 
the region that put forward commitments in associating itself with 
the Copenhagen Accord.  In contrast to President Arias, 
President-elect Chinchilla until now has focused primarily on 
domestic issues.  We intend to emphasize to her the importance of 
continuing Costa Rica's leadership on climate change, and we 
encourage you to deliver the same message. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Strengthening Citizen Security Helps Costa Rica, the Region, and 
the U.S. 
 
 
 
16. (U)  Due in large part to a rise in drug trafficking through 
Costa Rica, crime has increased dramatically here in recent years. 
Although there was a small drop in some crime statistics from 2008 
to 2009, in one out of every four homes there is at least one 
person who has been a victim of crime in the last four months. 
 
 
 
17. (SBU)  Chinchilla has promised to add an additional $100 
million per year for police funding.  (She hopes to obtain this 
funding through a two percent tax on casinos.)  These resources are 
definitely needed, as the police here generally are underpaid, 
understaffed, and poorly trained and equipped.  In comparison with 
the rest of the region, corruption in Costa Rica's security forces 
is relatively low.  That said, the uniformed police in particular 
continues to struggle with criminal elements in its ranks. 
 
 
 
18. (U) Efforts to stem crime in Costa Rica benefit not only more 
than 50,000 Americans living here and close to one million U.S. 
citizens who visit the country each year but also those who live in 
the U.S.  The U.S. government estimates that approximately 60-75 
percent of the drug flow from South America to Mexico and the 
United States runs through Costa Rican territory or national 
waters.  Costa Rica seized nearly 20.6 metric tons of cocaine in 
2009, keeping it from reaching the streets in the United States. 
(U.S.-Costa Rican joint narcotics operations made possible by a 
bilateral maritime agreement contributed to this result.) 
 
 
19. (U)  The U.S. will be able to assist with police 
professionalization thanks to resources provided through the Merida 
Initiative.  U.S. government agencies are helping strengthen 
citizen security in this region in a number of other ways. 
*         In February, Costa Rican police discovered drugs in a 
hidden compartment using equipment and training provided by the 
U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency in January. 
*         U.S. Customs and Border Protection officials just 
completed assessments of Costa Rica's land borders, which are key 
choke points for contraband heading north or south.   They have 
conducted similar assessments throughout the region. 
*          U.S. Treasury officials are looking at the possibility 
of helping the Government of Costa Rica design a means of paying 
for the upgrades required at the most significant border crossing 
on the Inter-American Highway. 
*         This year a U.S. Treasury official based at the Costa 
Rican Finance Ministry will advise the host government on ways to 
improve enforcement of laws against money laundering and other 
financial crimes. 
*         U.S. Southern Command is funding a communications node 
that will enable Costa Rican maritime and land law enforcement 
officials to share information in real time with each other and 
with U.S. Joint Inter-Agency Task Force - South, which monitors 
movements of suspect vessels throughout the region. 
*         The State Department is providing radios and bullet-proof 
vests to the poorly equipped uniformed police. 
*         Two advanced interceptor boats will be donated this 
summer. 
By helping Costa Rica and the region in these ways, we help protect 
our own borders from transnational crime. 
 
BACKGROUND ON COSTA RICA'S ECONOMY 
 
20. (U) The impact of the economic crisis on Costa Rica was shorter 
and less severe than in many other countries.  Costa Rica posted 
real GDP growth of +2.6 per in 2008 which was well below the +8.8 
percent rate of 2007.  First quarter 2009 was the low point of the 
global crisis for Costa Rica when economic activity posted a 
decrease of -4.5 percent.  However, by fourth quarter 2009, the 
economy grew by +1.9 percent.  For all of 2009, the economy 
contracted by -1.3 percent.  The telecom, services and insurance 
sectors, together with parts of the manufacturing sector, are 
expected to lead the recovery into 2010.  The anticipated telecom 
and insurance sectors activity is directly related to the entry 
into force of CAFTA-DR, which opened both sectors to competition. 
 
21. (U) Inflation reached 13.9 percent at the end of 2008, but 
dropped during 2009 to 4.0 percent by end-year due to the Central 
Bank's tight monetary policy, sagging commodity prices, and lower 
consumer demand.  The Central Bank targets inflation within the 
range of 4 to 6 percent for 2010 with private forecasters pegging 
the rate somewhat higher at 7 percent. 
 
 
22. (U) Toward the end of 2009, forecasters estimated the 
unemployment rate at just less than 7 percent, a significant 
increase from the 2008 end-year figure of 4.9 percent.  Exports 
continue to lead growth, with traditional agricultural products 
(coffee, pineapple, sugar cane and bananas) doing fairly well. 
Value added goods and services are also doing well, including 
microchips from Intel (which generates 20 percent of Costa Rica's 
export earnings alone).  Intel's Costa Rican manufacturing site 
benefitted from Intel's 2009 decision to shutter three plants in 
East Asia.  Costa Rica exports worldwide tallied $8.2 billion in 
2008. 
 
 
 
23. (U) U.S. business presence includes many blue chip companies 
that have chosen Costa Rica as a regional back-office operations 
site.  Sykes, Western Union, Proctor and Gamble, and 
Hewlett-Packard are several of the key firms that operate human 
resources, accounting, finance, and technical support services in 
Costa Rica.  The medical device sector has grown steadily over the 
past twenty years as Baxter (initially), Hospira, and Boston 
Scientific all expanded operations in Costa Rica. 
ANDREW