January 15, 2008

   
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BUY ¢494.86 SELL ¢500.54

Enter Alvaro: Latin American leaders including Costa Rican President Oscar Arias and Foreign Minister Bruno Stagno gathered in Guatemala yesterday to show support for Alvaro Colom, seen in the photo after he was sworn in as the new Guatemalan president. Colom, trained as a Mayan priest, and Vice President Rafael Espada, a heart surgeon, aim to do some healing in a nation still torn by a civil war that ended in 1996, poverty and discrimination against its indigenous people – half the country's population of 16 million.

Roberto Escobar | EFE

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Fuming over CAFTA: As the Costa Rican government prepared to push back the deadline for approving Central America's free-trade agreement with the United States (CAFTA), the treaty's opponents, such as Jesús González (left), 63, would like to see the law stopped dead in its tracks. He decries what he believes is an oligarchy led by President Oscar Arias, his brother, Presidency Minister Rodrigo Arias, and 38 lawmakers. Outside the Legislative Assembly yesterday morning, González held a sign that said “The rich have support from the Arias (brothers) and 38 traitors. Us poor people (are backed by) the protestors. What a vast difference? No to the 13 laws of treason!”

Ronald Reyes | Tico Times.

Worldwide oil woes spark gas hike request
The Costa Rican Refinery (RECOPE) has requested another hike in the price of fuel due to record-high oil prices worldwide.
See More...
National Parks boost entrance fees
Add “wad of cash” to your list of essentials to bring to Costa Rica's national parks.
See More...
Rats, famine and illness plague indigenous communities in Nicaragua
The Mayangna peoples in north-Caribbean Nicaragua are suffering from famine and serious illnesses, and their land is threatened with rat infestations and possible forest fires, according to community members.
First big bust of the year yields 100 kilos of cocaine
Police seized 100 kilos of cocaine hidden in a van that was heading for the Nicaraguan border in Costa Rica's first major drug bust of the year, the Public Security Ministry said.

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.

 

Worldwide oil woes spark gas hike request

By Peter Krupa
Tico Times Staff | pkrupa@ticotimes.net

The Costa Rican Refinery (RECOPE) has requested another hike in the price of fuel due to record-high oil prices worldwide.

Pending approval by the Public Services Regulatory Authority (ARESEP) the price of regular, super and diesel will go up ¢9.44 ($0.019), ¢10.73 ($0.022) and ¢3.14 ($0.01), respectively.

In a release, RECOPE cited several international factors for the upward pressure on oil prices, including continuing pressure in the Middle East and the growing certainty that the U.S. economy is approaching a recession.

One factor, however, may not be the source of so much worry: Oil's short-lived jump above $100 per barrel. Press reports from the United States say the historic price might have been a gimmick, accomplished by a mystery trader who bought 1,000 barrels of oil for $100,000. The trader then immediately sold them at a loss of $600.

National Parks boost entrance fees

By Dave Sherwood
Tico Times Staff | dsherwood@ticotimes.net

Add “wad of cash” to your list of essentials to bring to Costa Rica's national parks.

Entry fees will jump 67% in 2008, the nation's environment ministry recently announced.

The modest Tico and foreign resident (with cédula ) fare jumped from 600 colones (about $1.20).to 1,000 (about $2) – but foreign tourists will see the price increase between $3 and $15, depending on the park.

According to the Environment and Energy Ministry (MINAE), the average price of entry into a national park will be $10 for foreign tourists, up from $7 last year.

By comparison, entrance fees to the world-famous Yellowstone National Park in the United States were $12 per person on foot, bike or skis, or $25 per automobile.

The increase in Costa Rican parks compensates for inflation, which hovers around 65%, according to Environment Minister Roberto Dobles.

Who told the daily La Nación that the Finance Ministry had agreed all funds raised be directed into the park system, where it can be used for maintenance and staffing.

In the past, he said, fee increases found their way into other ministries and uses.

Chirripó National Park saw its fees double this year – the sharpest increase of any park. Tourists must now cough up $15 a day per person, up from $7.50 last year. For those hiking Chirripó, the country's highest peak at 3,820 meters, the typical three-day stay required to summit the mountain will now cost $45.

Other popular parks – including Tortuguero, in the northeast Caribbean, and Poás, the park and volcano that hover over the Central Valley, saw fees rise $3, to $10.

There are nearly 200 protected areas in the country – ranging from indigenous reserves to wildlife refuges and national parks.

Costa Rica's national park system has won worldwide admiration. Parklands and refuges now cover upward of 25% of the national territory.

Rats, famine and illness plague
indigenous communities in Nicaragua

The Mayangna peoples in north-Caribbean Nicaragua are suffering from famine and serious illnesses, and their land is threatened with rat infestations and possible forest fires, according to community members.

Econayo Taylor Francisco, president of the Association of Indigenous Communities Mayangna Sauni As, told journalists in Managua that these problems have worsened since the Sept. 4 Hurricane Felix.

Rats are eating away at just sprouting crops and spreading diseases among the natives.

“We're faced with serious problems,” said the representative of more than 800 families, or 6,783 inhabitants, spread out in 16 communities in the villages of Bonanza, Siuna and Waspam in an area called the Autonomous Region of the Northern Atlantic.

Forest fires could spark in the Bosawas Biosphere Reserve after Felix razed acres of its trees, the indigenous leader said. Environmental groups have criticized the Nicaraguan government for not taking swifter measures to reforest such areas as Bosawas, a 1.8 million acre tropical forest designated in 1997 as a UNESCO biosphere reserve.

-ACAN-EFE

First big bust of the year yields 100 kilos of cocaine

Police seized 100 kilos of cocaine hidden in a van that was heading for the Nicaraguan border in Costa Rica's first major drug bust of the year, the Public Security Ministry said.

The van's driver, last name Suárez, 37, was arrested during the crackdown by the national Narcotics Police (PCD) in Peñas Blancas, the first of its kind in the northern Costa Rican border town, the ministry said in a statement.

“To find the drugs, PCD officers had to carry out a detailed search of the van, which was carrying a load of iron beams to the Nicaraguan town of Tipitapa,” the police report said.

Suárez faces up to 20 years in prison if found guilty for international drug trafficking.

-ACAN-EFE

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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