Mr. Vice President, Ambassadors from our sister Republics,
members of the OAS, the nine wise men upon whom so much depends, Members
of the Congress, whom I am very glad to see here today - on whom we depend
so much in guiding and supporting and stimulating and directing our policies
in this Hemisphere - Ambassador Moscoso, the Coordinator o f the Alliance
for Progress, gentlemen:
One year ago, on a similar occasion,
I proposed the Alliance for Progress. That was the conception, but the
birth did not take place until some months later, at Punta del Este. That
was a suggestion for a continent-wide cooperative effort to satisfy the
basic needs of the American people for homes, work, land, health and schools,
for political liberty and the dignity of the spirit.
Our mission, I said, was "to
complete the revolution of the Americas - to build a Hemisphere where all
men can hope for a suitable standard of living - and all can live out their
lives in dignity and freedom."
I then requested a meeting of
the Inter-American Economic and Social Council to consider the proposal.
And, seven months ago, at Punta del Este, that Council met and adopted
the Charter which established the Alianza para el Progreso and declared,
and I quote, "We, the American Republics, hereby proclaim our decision
to unite in a common effort to bring our people accelerated economic progress
and broader social justice within the framework of personal dignity and
individual liberty."
Together, the free nations of
the Hemisphere pledged their resources and their energies to the Alliance
for Progress. Together they pledged to accelerate economic and social development
and to make the basic reforms that are necessary to ensure that all would
participate in the fruits of this development. Together they pledged to
modernize tax structures and land tenure - to wipe out illiteracy and ignorance
- to promote health and provide decent housing - to solve the problems
of commodity stabilization - to maintain sound fiscal and monetary policies
- to secure the contributions of private enterprise to development - to
speed the economic integration of Latin America. And together they established
the basic institutional framework for this immense, decade-long development.
This historic Charter marks
a new step forward in the history of our Hemisphere. It is a reaffirmation
of the continued vitality of our Inter-American system, a renewed proof
of our ability to meet the challenges and perils of our time, as our predecessors
met these challenges in their own days.
In the late eighteenth and early
nineteenth century we struggled to provide political independence in this
Hemisphere.
In the early twentieth century
we worked to bring about a fundamental equality between all the nations
of this Hemisphere one with another - to strengthen the machinery of regional
cooperation within a framework of mutual respect, and under the leadership
of Franklin Roosevelt and the Good Neighbor Policy that goal was achieved
a generation ago.
Today we seek to move beyond
the accomplishments of the past - to establish the principle that all the
people of this Hemisphere are entitled to a decent way of life - and to
transform that principle into the reality of economic advance and social
justice on, which political equality must be based.
This is the most demanding goal
of all. For we seek not merely the welfare and equality of nations one
with another - but the welfare and the equality of the people within our
nations. In so doing we are fulfilling the most ancient dreams of the founders
of this Hemisphere, Washington, Jefferson, Bolivar, Marti, San Martin,
and all the rest.
And I believe that the first
seven months of this Alliance have strengthened our confidence that this
goal is within our grasp.
Perhaps our most impressive
accomplishment in working together has been the dramatic shift in the thinking
and the attitudes which has occurred in our Hemisphere in these seven months.
The Charter of Punta del Este posed the challenge of development in a manner
that could not be ignored. It redefined the historic relationships between
the American nations in terms of the fundamental needs and hopes of the
twentieth century. It set forth the conditions and the attitudes on which
development depends. It initiated the process of education without which
development is impossible. It laid down a new principle of our relationship
- the principle of collective responsibility for the welfare of the people
of the Americas.
Already elections are being
fought in terms of the Alliance for Progress. Already governments are pledging
themselves to carry out the Charter of Punta del Este. Already people throughout
the Hemisphere - in schools and in trade unions, in chambers of commerce,
in military establishments, in government, on the farms - have accepted
the goals of the Charter as their own personal and political commitments.
For the first time in the history
of Inter-American relations our energies are concentrated on the central
task of democratic development.
This dramatic change in thought
is essential to the realization of our goals. For only by placing the task
of development in the arena of daily thought and action among all the people
can we hope to summon up the will and the courage which that task demands.
This first accomplishment, therefore, is essential to all the others.
Our second achievement has been
the establishment of the institutional framework within which our decade
of development will take place. We honor here today the OAS Panel of Experts
- a new adventure in Inter-American cooperation - drawn from all parts
of the continent - charged with the high responsibility - almost unprecedented
in any international cooperative effort - of evaluating long-range development
plans, reviewing the progress of these plans, and helping to obtain the
financing necessary to carry them out. This group has already begun its
work. And here, today, I reaffirm our government's commitment to look to
this Panel for advice and guidance in the conduct of our joint effort.
In addition, the OAS, the Economic
Commission for Latin America and the Inter-American Bank have offered planning
assistance to Latin American nations - the OAS has begun a series of studies
in critical development fields - and a new ECLA Planning Institute is being
established to train the young men who will lead the future development
of their countries. And we have completely reorganized in our own country
our assistance program, with central responsibility now placed in the hands
of a single coordinator.
Thus, within seven months, we
have built the essential structure of the institutions, thought and policy
on which our long-term effort will rest. But we have not waited for this
structure to be completed in order to begin our work.
Last year I said that the United
States would commit one billion dollars to the first year of that Alliance.
That pledge has now been fulfilled. The Alliance for Progress has already
meant better food for the children of Puno in Peru, new schools for people
in Colombia, new homes for campesinos in Venezuela - which I saw myself
during my recent visit. And in the year to come millions more will take
new hope from the Alliance for Progress as it touches their daily life
- as it must.
In the vital field of commodity
stabilization I pledged the efforts of this country to try to work with
you to end the frequent, violent price changes which damage the economies
of so many Latin American countries. Immediately after that pledge was
made, we began work on the task of formulating stabilization agreements.
In December 1961 a new coffee agreement, drafted by a committee under a
United States chairman, was completed. Today that agreement is in process
of negotiation. I can think of no single measure which can make a greater
contribution to the cause of development than effective stabilization of
the price of coffee. In addition the United States has participated in
the drafting of a cocoa agreement; and we have held discussion about the
terms of possible accession to the tin agreement.
We have also been working with
our European allies - and I regard this as most important - in a determined
effort to ensure that Latin American products will have equal access to
the Common Market. Much of the economic future of this Hemisphere depends
upon ready availability of the markets of the Atlantic Community, and we
will continue these efforts to keep these markets open in the months ahead.
The countries of Latin America
have also been working to fulfill the commitments of the Charter. The report
of the Inter-American Bank contains an impressive list of measures being
taken in each of the eighteen countries - measures ranging from the mobilization
of domestic resources to new education and housing programs - measures
within the context of the Act of Bogota, passed under the administration
of my predecessor, President Eisenhower, and the Alliance for Progress
Charter.
Nearly all the governments of
the Hemisphere have begun to organize national development programs - and
in some cases completed plans have been presented for review. Tax and land
reform laws are on the books, and the national legislature of nearly every
country is considering new measures in these critical fields. New programs
of development, of housing, of agriculture and power are underway.
These are all heartening accomplishments
- the fruits of the first seven months of work in a program which is designed
to span a decade. But all who know the magnitude and urgency of the problems
realize that we have just begun - that we must act much more rapidly and
on a much larger scale if we are to meet our development goals in the months
and years to come.
I pledge this country's effort
to such an intensified effort. And I am confident that having emerged from
the shaping period of our Alliance, all the nations of this Hemisphere
will accelerate their own work.
For we all know that no matter
what contribution the United States may make, the ultimate responsibility
for success lies within the developing nation itself. For only you can
mobilize the resources, make the reforms, set the goals and provide the
energies which will transform our external assistance into an effective
contribution to the progress of our continent. Only you can create the
economic confidence which will encourage the free flow of capital, both
domestic and foreign - the capital which, under conditions of responsible
investment and together with public funds, will produce permanent economic
advance. Only you can eliminate the evils of destructive inflation, chronic
trade imbalances and widespread unemployment. Without determined efforts
on your part to establish these conditions for reform and development,
no amount of outside help can do the job.
I know the difficulties of such
a task. It is unprecedented. Our own history shows how fierce the resistance
can be to changes which later generations regard as part of the normal
framework of life. And the course of rational social change is even more
hazardous for those progressive governments who often face entrenched privilege
of the right and subversive conspiracies on the left.
For too long my country, the
wealthiest nation in a continent which is not wealthy, failed to carry
out its full responsibilities to its sister Republics. We have now accepted
that responsibility. In the same way those who possess wealth and power
in poor nations must accept their own responsibilities. They must lead
the fight for those basic reforms which alone can preserve the fabric of
their societies. Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make
violent revolution inevitable.
These social reforms are at
the heart of the Alliance for Progress. They are the precondition to economic
modernization. And they are the instrument by which we assure the poor
and hungry - the worker and the campesino - his full participation in the
benefits of our development and in the human dignity which is the purpose
of all free societies. At the same time we sympathize with the difficulties
of remaking deeply rooted and traditional social structures. We ask that
substantial and steady progress toward reform accompany the effort to develop
the economies of the American nations.
A year ago I also expressed
our special friendship to the people of Cuba and the Dominican Republic
and the hope that they would soon rejoin the society of free men, uniting
with us in this common effort. Today I am glad to welcome among us the
representatives of a free Dominican Republic; and to reaffirm the hope
that, in the not too distant future, our society of free nations will once
again be complete.
But we must not forget that
our Alliance for Progress is more than a doctrine of development - a blueprint
of economic advance. Rather it is an expression of the noblest goals of
our society. It says that want and despair need not be the lot of free
men. And those who may occasionally get discouraged with the magnitude
of the task, have only to look to Europe fifteen years ago, and today,
and realize the great potential which is in every free society when the
people join and work together. It says in our Hemisphere that no society
is free until all its people have an equal opportunity to share the fruits
of their own land and their own labor. And it says that material progress
is meaningless without individual freedom and political liberty. It is
a doctrine of the freedom of man in the most spacious sense of that freedom.
Nearly a century ago Jose Hernandez,
the Argentine poet, wrote, "America has a great destiny to achieve in the
fate of mankind . . . One day . . . the American Alliance will undoubtedly
be achieved, and the American Alliance will bring world peace . . . America
must be the cradle of the great principles which are to bring a complete
change in the political and social organization of other nations."
We have made a good start on
our journey; but we have still a long way to go. The conquest of poverty
is as difficult if not more difficult than the conquest of outer space.
And we can expect moments of frustration and disappointment in the months
and years to come. But we have no doubt about the outcome. For all history
shows that the effort to win progress within freedom represents the most
determined and steadfast aspiration of man.
We are joined together in this
Alliance as nations united by a common history and common values. And I
look forward - as do all the people of this country - to the day when the
people of Latin America will take their rightful place beside the United
States and Western Europe as citizens of industrialized and growing and
increasingly abundant societies. The United States - Europe - and Latin
America - almost a billion people - a bulwark of freedom and the values
of Western civilization - invulnerable to the forces of despotism - lighting
the path to liberty for all the peoples of the world. This is our
vision - and, with faith and courage, we will realize that vision in our
own time.
Thank you.