January 11, 2008

   
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Hitman: Hired by “The Agency,” professional assassin Agent 47 finds himself ensnared in a conspiracy and on the run from international officials as he treks across Eastern Europe. Starring Timothy Olyphant, Dougray Scott, Olga Kurylenko. Directed by Xavier Gens. Opens today at Cariari, Cinépolis, Magaly, San Pedro, San Ramón.

Photo courtesy of DISCINE S.A.

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Moooo vin' In: César Castillo helps construct the 120 fiberglass cows that will make up the Cow Parade, a worldwide traveling art show that will invade downtown San José this March. The parade marks the first time the cows have visited Central America. Today is the last day for artists to submit sketches of their design ideas to the GigantoGrafias offices in the western suburb of Pavas (291-4831, 291-4840).

Ronald Reyes | Tico Times.

Central Bank to Introduce 200 Córdoba Bill in Nicaragua
Perhaps by the end of this year, it won't be so impossible to break your 500 córdoba bill, because the Central Bank plans to introduce a new 200 córdoba bill.
See More...
Costa Rica-Sweden Friendly is Wanchope's Adiós
The friendly soccer game between Costa Rica and Sweden scheduled for Sunday will be Tico striker Paulo César Wanchope's last match in professional soccer.
See More...
Cornell's Wind Ensemble Returns
Last January, the Cornell University Wind Ensemble (CU Winds) visited the country from Ithaca, New York, and embarked on a 10-day concert tour and outreach mission, bringing along more than 50 donated instruments for a small music school in Matapalo, on the central Pacific coast.
Poll: 54.6% of Nicaraguans Disapprove of Ortega
Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega has lost support in his first year back in office and is increasingly seen as authoritarian, according to a recent poll in the daily La Prensa.
Flotsam, Jetsam Theme of Montezuma Art Festival
The eighth annual Chunches de Mar Art Camp Festival is underway near the beach community of Montezuma, on the southern tip of the Nicoya Peninsula.

The Winds of Change
Blowing through INS

As many readers are aware – sometimes painfully so – the National Insurance Institute (INS) is a government-owned monopoly. A law dating back to 1924 states that only INS and its agents are allowed to sell insurance in this country.

 

Central Bank to Introduce
200 Córdoba Bill in Nicaragua

By Blake Schmidt
Nica Times Staff | bschmidt@ticotimes.net

Perhaps by the end of this year, it won't be so impossible to break your 500 córdoba bill, because the Central Bank plans to introduce a new 200 córdoba bill.

“We've realized there's a need for an intermediary denomination,” Central Bank manager José de Jesús Rojas told The Nica Times.

Though there's no date set for the currency to be circulated, Rojas said the bank is in the early stages of planning the bill's introduction, which could happen as soon as the end of the year.

The bill's color and design are yet to be determined.

Rojas said the 200 bill, worth roughly $11, would make ATM withdrawals more efficient, giving consumers a bill larger than 100 but smaller than 500. And it will make for better customer service as it will give clients an alternative to spending a 500 bill on small purchases, according to Rojas. The 500, in effect, will “be left for high-value transactions,” he said.

The bank is in the process of purchasing 131 million notes, which would be introduced over a period of five years. The bank is seeking bidders in North America, South America or Europe to print the bills.

Costa Rica-Sweden Friendly is Wanchope's Adiós

The friendly soccer game between Costa Rica and Sweden scheduled for Sunday will be Tico striker Paulo César Wanchope's last match in professional soccer.

“Chope,” as fans and press affectionately call the second most prolific goal-scorer in the history of the national team, after all-time golden striker Rolando Fonseca, announced his retirement late last year.

He is also known for having played in the late 1990s in England's Premier League, for Derby County and West Ham United, to later be bought up by Spanish team Málaga CF.

Wanchope, 31, told reporters he is excited to once more put on the Costa Rican uniform, known as the Tricolor – like the flag of red, blue and white.

The Swedes arrived Tuesday to begin training for the friendly, which for them actually bears an ounce of antagonism, after the 1990 World Cup in Italy when Sweden fell to Costa Rica 2-1.

Salting the wound, Tico coach Hernán Medford is adored here for having scored the winning goal against Sweden that day in Italy, moving Costa Rica on to the second round.

Swede manager Lars Lagerbäck has brought a team of young-bloods, with 11 players debuting, mainly in defense.

Costa Rica also counts on newbie Marvin Angulo, making his national team debut in place of injured midfielder Cristian Montero.

-EFE

Cornell's Wind Ensemble Returns

Last January, the Cornell University Wind Ensemble (CU Winds) visited the country from Ithaca, New York, and embarked on a 10-day concert tour and outreach mission, bringing along more than 50 donated instruments for a small music school in Matapalo, on the central Pacific coast.

This month, CU Winds returns to Costa Rica for another tour, to revisit the music school for a workshop and concert with students, and to deliver 70 more refurbished instruments to two other schools.

“We believe that giving the opportunity to make music to a young person can change their life for the better. This year, we've doubled our efforts,” said Canadian Cynthia Johnston Turner, conductor of the 49-member ensemble.

The schools receiving instruments are a music conservatory at the National University's San Isidro de El General campus, in the Southern Zone, and the Poás High School in Poasito, northwest of San José, which has an excellent music program but whose instruments are in serious disrepair, Johnston Turner said.

“At the National University conservatory, some of the instruments were donated to the school 50 years ago, and they are still using them,” she added.

Costa Rican composer Eddie Mora wrote a piece for electric violin and winds, and one of Mora's star violin students, Erasmo Solerti, traveled to Cornell last month for the piece's world premiere. The Tico violinist and CU Winds will perform the Costa Rican premiere at a benefit concert Jan. 15 at 7:30 p.m., at the Eugene O'Neill Theater in the eastern San José neighborhood of Barrio Dent. The admission fee is a donation of ¢4,000 ($8) to help schools in poor communities through the Canadian Club Outreach Committee.

-Tico Times

Poll: 54.6% of Nicaraguans Disapprove of Ortega

Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega has lost support in his first year back in office and is increasingly seen as authoritarian, according to a recent poll in the daily La Prensa.

The opinion poll said 54.6% of the Nicaraguan population does not support the Ortega administration, an increase of 18 percentage points from a 36.4 disapproval rating in April.

The poll, by M & R Consultores for the daily La Prensa, was carried out from Dec. 26-30 with 1,600 people in urban, rural and semi-rural areas, with an error margin of 2.5%.

According to La Prensa, the poll constitutes a “significant downturn” in Ortega's rule.

For those who approved, the poll gave the following breakdown: 21.2% have faith in the president and 22.3% support him with reservations. The remaining 1.9% did not give their opinion.

More than 60% said they see Ortega as “an authoritarian official.”

Some of Ortega's most ardent opponents, such as former presidential candidate and Nicaraguan Liberal Alliance leader Eduardo Montealegre, expressed fierce disapproval of the president.

“Instead of advancing, we've fallen behind,” said Montealegre, commenting on Ortega's first year in office.

Montealegre, also a former head of the treasury, pointed out that the country's inflation as of November, 15.41%, was the highest rise Nicaragua had seen in the last nine years and the highest in Central America.

-ACAN-EFE

Flotsam, Jetsam Theme of Montezuma Art Festival

Rob Bartlett
Tico Times Staff | editorial@ticotimes.net

The eighth annual Chunches de Mar Art Camp Festival is underway near the beach community of Montezuma, on the southern tip of the Nicoya Peninsula.

Chunches de mar, “stuff from the sea” in Spanish, is a quintessentially Tico way of referring to the flotsam and jetsam that washes up onto the beach. According to event director Nefertiti Ingalls, the driftwood, rubbish and other items serve to provide a theme for the festival, as artists at the event are encouraged to make use of them in their works.

Many Costa Rican and international artists are in attendance, camping in the nearby Romelia Wildlife Refuge throughout the event. Organizers say they want to “provide the artist with the opportunity to share ideas in an environment that is peaceful and amazingly beautiful.”

The primary aim of the festival is to unite people through art. To this end, participating artists are running workshops to help visitors understand the creative process.

The event will culminate in a party at Montezuma's Hotel Luz de Mono Jan. 26, when pieces produced through the course of the festival will go on display and be available for purchase.

For more information about the festival, visit www.chunchesdemar.com.

The Winds of Change Blowing through INS

As many readers are aware – sometimes painfully so – the National Insurance Institute (INS) is a government-owned monopoly. A law dating back to 1924 states that only INS and its agents are allowed to sell insurance in this country.

Because of its monopolistic status, INS has some drawbacks. With no competition, the products it sells are not exactly on the cutting edge of modernity. The service INS provides its clients is less than the epitome of speed and efficiency. The bureaucracy and paperwork would make gurus of administration pale beneath their tans. And INS is self-regulating – it is not subject to an insurance commission or any regulatory body.

Because it is firmly in the public sector, INS is subject to a lot of legalism and restrictions: the top echelon and directors are political appointees, and do not necessarily know beans about insurance; personnel cannot be hired or fired at will; employees are unionized and can't be asked to dedicate themselves to their jobs as in the private sector; and equipment and supplies can't be purchased without going through a painful bid and tender process.

Not all is negative, however. At INS, no one seems to give a hoot about the bottom line, so INS pays claims quite cheerfully. They make the unfortunate claimants sweat blood producing ritual paperwork – but they do pay. I would not venture to suggest that they do it in order to live peaceful lives, but INS employees often seem to authorize payment of claims as generously as the rule books allow.

Enter the Central American Free-Trade Agreement with the United States (CAFTA). One of the covenants is that the 1924 law must change, and competition must be allowed. Before the market opens up, an insurance regulatory office must be set up, and the Legislative Assembly is already working on this. This writer thinks it will take a year or so, but he may be surprised.

Once the market is opened, it is widely believed that at least three foreign insurance companies will come to Costa Rica. These are companies that have a presence in the rest of the countries of the isthmus, and would want to cover all of Central America.

How will INS respond to the challenge? The winds of change have been blowing for the last few months:

–INS has made it easier for clients to pay their premiums. They used to only accept payment in colones, in cash or by means of checks issued by the insured. Then they allowed checks in dollars from any account. Next, they accepted payments by credit card, but required a stub signed by the cardholder. Now, they no longer need signed stubs, and a telephone call will suffice.

–Until recently, in some cases, when the value of the item being insured was within a limit authorized by INS, insurance agents were able to “accept the risk” and tell the client that his car or house was insured as of the moment the application was signed and the premium received in the name of INS. But then the paperwork was subject to a lengthy scrutiny by INS employees who, like the Pharisees of Biblical times, could “undo” the agent's acceptance if the tiniest legalism was not complied with.

As of early 2008, the agents' limit to accept the risk has been considerably raised. Also, for several types of policies, insurance agencies are going to be able to do the paperwork and issue the actual policies themselves. This will allow most agencies to speed up the paperwork. Maybe the Pharisees within INS will find themselves on the unemployed list. Am I being optimistic?

–At the same time INS is authorizing agents to accept more of the risk and issue policies, it is publishing clear rules as to how rates and premiums are established. In the past, with several types of policies, agents were given a rate sheet with approximate premiums to be quoted to clients, but the rate was always finalized by an INS inspector who, usually after considerable delay and supplication on the part of the agent, would shift his physique from behind his desk and go to eyeball the property, boat or machine for which insurance was being applied. And he would finalize the rate based on his own, sometimes arbitrary judgment – not according to any rules that agents were aware of. The next step will be for the rules to be simplified, though as yet we haven't seen anything in the works.

–Insurance agencies sell INS policies under contract with the insurance company. These contracts have recently been renewed for four more years, and, despite protestations from the agencies, the clauses stipulating that they must sell only INS products have been beefed up and given teeth. So it would appear that INS is going to fight to keep its sales force faithful. Of course, some agencies have sister companies waiting in the wings, ready to sell policies in competition with those offered by INS.

–INS is seeking to increase the number of locations where insurance can be purchased. The main thrust is to allow the state-owned banks to act as agencies. This might be effective for some sectors of the public, but sophisticates realize that most types of policies can be bought over the Internet, with no need for the client/applicant to wait in line or stand in front of a counter.

The writer's purpose is to give you a better understanding of insurance in Costa Rica. The opinions and viewpoints are his, and do not necessarily represent the official position of the National Insurance Institute (INS). For more information, visit www.insurancecostarica.info, call David Garrett at 233-2455 or write david@insurancecostarica.info.

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