Background on Central American Politics. “Land of Volcanoes and Earthquakes”

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Background on Central American Politics

“Land of Volcanoes and Earthquakes”

Rainforests in Costa Rica and Guatemala

Mangroves in coastal Costa Rica, near Puerto Limón

Demographics of Central America

Population density

Central America 114.6 per km²

South America 14.3 per km²

United States 28.6 per km²

Population growth rates

Central America 2.1% El Salvador 2.7%

South America 1.7%

Consequences of Demographic Trends

Pressures on environment and natural resources

Pressure for Access to Farm Land2. Pressure for access to farm lands

% economically active Hectares per farmpopulation in agriculture family member

El Salvador 52 0.2Guatemala 56 0.4Nicaragua 45 1.2United States 2 36

Agricultural holdings less than 5 hectares as % of farmsEl Salvador 87Guatemala 87Nicaragua 51United States 7

Quality of LifeIncome Levels

Central America $1010 GNP per capitaSouth America $3050 GNP per capita

Adult LiteracyCentral America 83% Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua 70%South America 92%

Under-5 Infant MortalityCentral America 160 per 1,000South America 136 per 1,000

20th Century Power Groups (Guatemala, Nicaragua, El Salvador)

1. Large Land Owners – hacendados

2. Military

3. Workers – rural and urban

4. Catholic Church

5. Middle Sectors

6. External Actors – esp. U.S. government

Hacendados (Large land owners)

• Created an oligarchy under Liberal Party rule• Cash crops for export and concentration of land

ownership

El Salvador (1970s) -- 20% pop. owned 60% landNicaragua – Somoza family (1930-79) owned

25% of landGuatemala – ownership of 92% land by UFCO

and large coffee plantations by 1926

Sam “the Banana Man” Zemurray, United Fruit Company entrepreneur

Military• Military assistance from U.S. government,

beginning in 1930s

• Attracted poor and middle class ladinos

• Officers come from military academies

WorkersRural Workers• Peasants, seasonal laborers

Urban Workers • Early 20th century rural-urban migration

Rural Population 18.2 millionUrban Population 17.4 million

Catholic Church

“If a grain of wheat falls to the ground and dies, it bears much fruit” Matthew 12:24 (commemorating deaths of Salvadoran priests and lay workers)

Middle Sectors• Political role varies

• Supply shock troops to military

• Supply universities with students

“The teacher who is

fighting is also teaching”

El Salvador

External Actors

1910s-50s Using Central America to increase

power and increase corporate wealth

1960s-80s Involvement linked to Cold War

concerns

--Military aid and training

--Intelligence gathering for U.S.

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