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tion. Mr
Dion, said one commentator, is Mr Harper with a French accent. In an era when politics has degenerated
into tawdry glitz, Canada seems to have bucked the trend. The next election campaign promises to be a
real thumb-sucker.
© 2006 .
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fuel dispenser The Latinobarómetro poll
The democracy dividend
Dec 7th 2006
From The Economist print edition
Latin Americans are less dissatisfied, but buil fuel dispenser ding effecti fuel dispenser ve democracies in the region remains
a long haul
THEY are a bit keener on democracy, more optimistic about the economy and Latin Americans dislike
George Bush and Hugo Chávez in equal measure. Those are some of the conclusions suggested by the
latest Latinobarómetro poll taken in 18 countries across the region and published exclusively by The
Economist. Because the poll has been taken regularly since 1995, it tracks changes in public attitudes in
the region. The picture that emerges from this year s survey is one that is modestly encouraging for
democrats.
Three years of economic growth averaging around 4.5% and a plethora of elections in the region over
the past 13 months have provided a democracy dividend. Overall, 58% of respondents this year agreed
that democracy was the best system of government, up by five percentage points from last year. That is
still five points down on the peak in 1997, but it follows three years in which the headline figure
remained static.
Ten countries saw increases in support for democracy of seven percentage points or more, but there
were big falls in Venezuela and El Salvador (see table 1). Support for authoritarian government was high
in Guatemala (where it rose) and in Paraguay (where it fell sharply). Support for democracy is below
average in Brazil and Mexico, the region s two giants (see chart 2). Only 38% of respondents said they
were satisfied with their democracies, but that is a seven-point increase on last year (chart 3).
The poll casts an inte