January 16, 2008

   
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Imminent departure: It's official. The U.S. Ambassador to Nicaragua Paul A. Trivelli has told his host government he will get off the diplomatic hot seat this year, probably in July, marking the end of a row-filled run that began to stumble during the 2006 Nicaraguan presidential election and, upon a Sandinista victory, continued thereafter.

Tim Rogers | Nica Times.

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Fiesta in Palmares: Soccer matches, horse shows, Tico-style bullfights and live music by the likes of Mexico's Molotov and Colombia's Aterciopelados will draw the crowds to the coffee town of Palmares, northwest of San José, for its annual fiesta starting today at 6 p.m. and running through Jan. 28.

Shannon Mendes | Tico Times.  

New high-speed service available to businesses in Costa Rica
The Costa Rican Electricity Institute (ICE) plans to offer a new variety of super high-speed, high-volume Internet connections to companies in the Central Valley.
See More...
Third CAFTA bill gets initial green light  
Costa Rica moved one step closer to entering a free-trade agreement with the United States this week.  
See More...
Nicaragua's U.S. ambassador to leave his post in July
The U.S. Ambassador to Nicaragua Paul A. Trivelli has sent official word to President Daniel Ortega's government of his departure in July, the Foreign Ministry said yesterday.  
Uribe opens new home on the range for tourists  
Colombian President Alvaro Uribe yesterday visited San Mateo, a town 30 kilometers northeast of San José, to cut the ribbon of the new Parque Natural de la Cultura Agropecuaria (PANACA), a twist on theme parks, which, instead of rides and junk food, boasts some 600 species of domestic and agricultural animals.  

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.

 

New high-speed service
available to businesses in Costa Rica

The Costa Rican Electricity Institute (ICE) plans to offer a new variety of super high-speed, high-volume Internet connections to companies in the Central Valley.

Known as the Red Metro Ethernet (Metro Ethernet Network), the service will offer connections of between 6 megabits per second and 1 gigabit per second. (By comparison, ADSL and cable Internet connections for a home operate between 128 kilobits and 1.5 megabits per second.)  

ICE said it will begin offering 3,800 of the high-volume connections this year, though the agency has yet to set a start date. ICE has invested about $5 million in the service, according to a press statement.

-Tico Times

Third CAFTA bill gets initial green light  

By Gillian Gillers
Tico Times Staff | ggillers@ticotimes.net

Costa Rica moved one step closer to entering a free-trade agreement with the United States this week.  

Lawmakers approved the third of 11 bills required, in some form, to put the country in compliance with the Central American Free-Trade Agreement with the United States (CAFTA), approved by referendum in October.  

The controversial law, a rallying point for the treaty's opponents, would give developers of new plant varieties the exclusive right to market them for up to 25 years. Lawmakers applied a fast-track process to the bill in October and passed it in an initial debate Monday.  

The Citizen Action Party (PAC), which opposes the treaty, plans to challenge the bill before the Constitutional Chamber of the Supreme Court (Sala IV), in a process that could take up to a month. For the bill to become law, the assembly must approve it a second time, and President Oscar Arias must sign it.  

The bill's final passage would block efforts by three environmental groups to hold a referendum on the proposal. The Supreme Elections Tribunal (TSE) gave a green light last month to the environmentalists to begin collecting signatures for a referendum.   

Monday's vote is a triumph for President Oscar Arias' administration, which has been pushing CAFTA for months. Still, several lawmakers said they doubt that all 11 CAFTA bills can be passed by a Feb. 29 deadline.  

Arias will decide in the coming weeks whether to ask for an extension from the treaty's other signers – the United States, Honduras, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Guatemala and the Dominican Republic.

Nicaragua's U.S. ambassador
to leave his post in July

The U.S. Ambassador to Nicaragua Paul A. Trivelli has sent official word to President Daniel Ortega's government of his departure in July, the Foreign Ministry said yesterday.  

Trivelli, who started the job in Managua in the fall 2005, taking the reins from Barbara Moore, did not give an exact date but told Foreign Minister Samuel Santos that he would step down as ambassador probably in July – turning the page of another rocky chapter in the relations between the embassy and its Sandinista host.  

The ambassador sparked controversy for his remarks about the 2006 Nicaraguan presidential election, expressing the U.S. administration's preference for seeing the conservative parties unite behind a single candidate and even offering to help finance a joint primary election.  

Warning against the outcome of a re-elected Sandinista government, Trivelli also threatened to cut off millions of dollars in U.S. aid.  

Then, in July, President Ortega accused the embassy of holding secret meetings with opposition groups, manipulating the media and paying demonstrators in a conspiracy to “discredit the Sandinista Front.” Trivelli denied the accusations.  

The United States did not take kindly to such claims, nor did it appreciate Ortega's outburst before the U.N. General Assembly in October in which he snared that the superpower to the north is “the biggest and most impressive dictatorship” in history.  

“Certainly the rhetoric is not helpful, particularly for investment,” Trivelli said in an interview in the fall with The Nica Times, a publication of The Tico Times (NT, Nov. 23).  

“Capital tends to go where the people feel that the risk is manageable,” he added. “And when they hear rhetoric they start to worry about and measure their risk.”  

And yet, despite the icy moments, Trivelli described ties between the United States and Nicaraguan as “satisfactory.”  

“We have a broader U.S.-Nicaragua relationship that, to me, is extremely deep,” he said.  

Born in 1953, Trivelli entered the U.S. Foreign Service in 1978 and for most of his career has served as an Economic/Commercial Officer. He has been posted in such Latin American cities as Quito, Mexico City and Panama City.  

The embassy has not yet named a successor.  

The announcement, coupled with the imminent changeover at the embassy in San José, Costa Rica, marks a further step toward fresh U.S. faces in diplomacy with Central America.  

Trivelli's counterpart here, Mark Longdale, who arguably had an easier time engaging in diplomacy with his hosts, leaves at the end of the month.

-Tico Times

Uribe opens new home on the range for tourists  

Colombian President Alvaro Uribe yesterday visited San Mateo, a town 30 kilometers northeast of San José, to cut the ribbon of the new Parque Natural de la Cultura Agropecuaria (PANACA), a twist on theme parks, which, instead of rides and junk food, boasts some 600 species of domestic and agricultural animals.  

Colombian company PANACA started the theme park craze in its home country 10 years ago and, later opened a park in Puebla, Mexico. It has become a hit, growing the company's worth to $14 million.  

However, this new park sets out to be its own Costa Rican creation. “This is not PANACA Colombia in Costa Rica. This is Costa Rica's PANACA,” Jorge Ballen, the company's founder and CEO, told The Tico Times in an interview in November.  

Inside the nearly 300-hectare park, a two-kilometer path will take visitors from station to station, where they will see different animal exhibits and shows. Beyond the wildlife, though, San Mateo townspeople are hoping the attraction will breathe new life into its economy. “We are desperately in need of some kind of investment, something to put us on the tourist map. This is the answer,” said Mayor Erwin Masís (TT, Nov. 9).  

For President Uribe, the park is a feat for Colombia, too.  

“We congratulate all the shareholders and all the employees for this great concept that in Colombia has been met with huge enthusiasm,” he said yesterday.  

And he thanked the Ticos.  

“Thank you for the hospitality to these Colombians who in such fateful, violent times … have found warmth in this country.”  

Costa Rican President Oscar Arias, also present for the inauguration, wasted little time on the park concept, favoring a chance at congratulating Uribe, “an exceptional Colombian,” for struggling to bring peace to his country in the face of a hostage crisis.  

“Today, Colombia can dream again, and it can again feel it is possible to build a country where the sound of gunshots does not echo through the jungle or the sound bombs through the city, a country in which families are not separated by kidnappings...,” Agence-France Presse reported Arias saying.

-Tico Times

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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