Costa Rica History

While the United States may still be the richest nation on Earth, it can’t claim to be as happy as Denmark or Finland. In fact, according to a new analysis of data provided by the Gallup World Poll, the relationship between overall life satisfaction and wealth may not be as straightforward as previously thought.

Looking at data collected across 132 countries, the Gallup Organization based their marks — released this month in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology — on representative samples of more than 136,000 people in each country. Respondents were asked how they would rate their lives on a scale from zero (worst possible) to 10 (best possible), as well as answering a series of questions on positive or negative emotions.

See Gallup’s top 15 countries, each with a mean score between 7.0 and 7.7, HERE

  • Share/Bookmark
0 Comments

Love her or hate her, the election of doña Laura Chinchilla as the first woman president of Costa Rica signifies the majority’s choice for both the continuation of current policies, and the change in cultural perspective that her presidency represents.  She officially takes power on May 8th with support from other women in the government who now represent 23 of 57 public posts.

Not only has Costa Rica elected its first woman president  (only the 5th in Latin America, but one of more than 50 the world over since 1960), they have done it by a landslide, as Chinchilla nearly doubled the percentage of her nearest contender, Ottón Solís.

In my local neighborhood of Atenas, there was a marked air of festivity surrounding this year’s election.  The area was draped in the green and white of Chinchilla’s PLN party; caravans and parades would follow.  Costa Ricans who I spoke to said they had never seen such voter turnout and enthusiasm.  While Americans were screaming at their TVs during the Super Bowl, the same level of emotion could be observed by Costa Ricans in front of their TVs:  arguing, debating, and speculating, but fully absorbed by the event.

Doña Laura has been criticized by some as being a puppet-like extension of former President Arias, serving as another “president for the wealthy.”    Since the do-nothing presidency of Abel Pacheco, however, Costa Rica has been observably transformed.  Many were fearful of the swift action proposed by Arias after 4 years of sloth by Pacheco, which produced a very thin victory for Arias in the last election.   But, it seems that an objective look at the state of the nation by most Costa Ricans has led to the conclusion that the current development and change that is taking place will indeed benefit nearly all Costa Ricans.  Moreover, the policy extension can be seen as a willingness to walk the fine line of luring and placating all-important foreign investment, corporate business interests, tourists, and retirees.   If Costa Rica can continue to walk this fine line between the fast-changing modern world, and the slower, Pura Vida-defined world of its heritage, it will continue to be a shining example on the world stage.

Chinchilla has extolled the policies of President Arias, and certainly has not indicated any change in direction to what she cites as, “solid growth and development.”  She intends only to “propel them forward.”  She has also responded to polls that overwhelmingly show the concerns of most Costa Ricans:  crime, insecurity, drugs, and domestic violence.   She promises tighter border control, improved police equipment, and not to shrink from addressing some of the underlying “Machista” attitude taking place behind closed doors.  She believes that by reducing poverty and focusing on the needs of women (with a possible nationalized daycare system), empowerment will follow as opportunities are equalized.

Perhaps the largest gap between perception and reality is with the country’s ailing infrastructure.  The new San Jose-Caldera highway opened under fanfare and media attention, and now provides the ability for people to sail along on a straight, flat road.  However, it is also true that many key bridges, roads, and the nation’s ports remain in poor condition – the president-elect would do well to shore up those lacking areas, lest she encounter more accusations of putting the interest of foreigners, businesses, and the wealthy ahead of the average citizen.

It is a momentous time for the small country of Costa Rica.  As a foreign resident myself, I cannot identify as intimately as Costa Rican citizens with what is at stake, culturally, but I am overwhelmed by the courage and involvement of the people of Costa Rica in coming to such a historic vote.

Michael Anthony

  • Share/Bookmark
0 Comments

Costa Rica President Elect: Laura ChinchillaSAN JOSE, Costa Rica — Costa Ricans have elected their first woman president as the ruling party candidate won in a landslide after campaigning to continue free market policies in Central America’s most stable nation.

With most of the votes from Sunday’s election counted, Laura Chinchilla held a 22-point lead over her closest rival. Her 47 percent share of the vote was well beyond the 40 percent needed to avoid a run-off.

The 50-year-old protege of the current president, Nobel Peace Prize laureate Oscar Arias, promised to pursue the same economic policies that recently brought the country into a trade pact with the U.S. and opened commerce with China.

“Today we are making history,” said Chinchilla, who will be the fifth Latin American woman to serve as president when she takes office in May. “The Costa Rican people have given me their confidence, and I will not betray it.”

The closest contender, Otton Solis of the Citizens Action Party, got 25 percent of the votes. He and the other main rival, Libertarian Otto Guevara, quickly conceded defeat.

It was unclear, however, whether Chinchilla’s National Liberation Party would gain a majority in congress.

Analyst Heather Berkman of the Eurasia Group said coalition building without a majority would likely delay or derail controversial fiscal reforms to shore up government finances and energy deregulation.

The third-place candidate, Guevara, congratulated Chinchilla as “our president,” but he also pointed out the new political muscle of his tax-bashing Libertarian Movement Party. He won 21 percent of the vote.

Arias’ economic policies helped insulate Costa Rica from the world economic crisis as he kept a high profile on the world stage as a negotiator in Honduras’ political crisis after a coup deposed President Manuel Zelaya in June.

Read Entire Article Here

  • Share/Bookmark
0 Comments
nytimes.com

by Nicholas D. Kristof

Hmmm. You think it’s a coincidence? Costa Rica is one of the very few countries to have abolished its army, and it’s also arguably the happiest nation on earth.

There are several ways of measuring happiness in countries, all inexact, but this pearl of Central America does stunningly well by whatever system is used. For example, the World Database of Happiness, compiled by a Dutch sociologist on the basis of answers to surveys by Gallup and others, lists Costa Rica in the top spot out of 148 nations.

That’s because Costa Ricans, asked to rate their own happiness on a 10-point scale, average 8.5. Denmark is next at 8.3, the United States ranks 20th at 7.4 and Togo and Tanzania bring up the caboose at 2.6.

Scholars also calculate happiness by determining “happy life years.” This figure results from merging average self-reported happiness, as above, with life expectancy. Using this system, Costa Rica again easily tops the list. The United States is 19th, and Zimbabwe comes in last.

A third approach is the “happy planet index,” devised by the New Economics Foundation, a liberal think tank. This combines happiness and longevity but adjusts for environmental impact — such as the carbon that countries spew.

Here again, Costa Rica wins the day, for achieving contentment and longevity in an environmentally sustainable way. The Dominican Republic ranks second, the United States 114th (because of its huge ecological footprint) and Zimbabwe is last.

Maybe Costa Rican contentment has something to do with the chance to explore dazzling beaches on both sides of the country, when one isn’t admiring the sloths in the jungle (sloths truly are slothful, I discovered; they are the tortoises of the trees). Costa Rica has done an unusually good job preserving nature, and it’s surely easier to be happy while basking in sunshine and greenery than while shivering up north and suffering “nature deficit disorder.”

After dragging my 12-year-old daughter through Honduran slums and Nicaraguan villages on this trip, she was delighted to see a Costa Rican beach and stroll through a national park. Among her favorite animals now: iguanas and sloths.

(Note to boss: Maybe we should have a columnist based in Costa Rica?)

What sets Costa Rica apart is its remarkable decision in 1949 to dissolve its armed forces and invest instead in education. Increased schooling created a more stable society, less prone to the conflicts that have raged elsewhere in Central America. Education also boosted the economy, enabling the country to become a major exporter of computer chips and improving English-language skills so as to attract American eco-tourists.

I’m not antimilitary. But the evidence is strong that education is often a far better investment than artillery.

In Costa Rica, rising education levels also fostered impressive gender equality so that it ranks higher than the United States in the World Economic Forum gender gap index. This allows Costa Rica to use its female population more productively than is true in most of the region. Likewise, education nurtured improvements in health care, with life expectancy now about the same as in the United States — a bit longer in some data sets, a bit shorter in others.

Rising education levels also led the country to preserve its lush environment as an economic asset. Costa Rica is an ecological pioneer, introducing a carbon tax in 1997. The Environmental Performance Index, a collaboration of Yale and Columbia Universities, ranks Costa Rica at No. 5 in the world, the best outside Europe.

This emphasis on the environment hasn’t sabotaged Costa Rica’s economy but has bolstered it. Indeed, Costa Rica is one of the few countries that is seeing migration from the United States: Yankees are moving here to enjoy a low-cost retirement. My hunch is that in 25 years, we’ll see large numbers of English-speaking retirement communities along the Costa Rican coast.

Latin countries generally do well in happiness surveys. Mexico and Colombia rank higher than the United States in self-reported contentment. Perhaps one reason is a cultural emphasis on family and friends, on social capital over financial capital — but then again, Mexicans sometimes slip into the United States, presumably in pursuit of both happiness and assets.

Cross-country comparisons of happiness are controversial and uncertain. But what does seem quite clear is that Costa Rica’s national decision to invest in education rather than arms has paid rich dividends. Maybe the lesson for the United States is that we should devote fewer resources to shoring up foreign armies and more to bolstering schools both at home and abroad.

In the meantime, I encourage you to conduct your own research in Costa Rica, exploring those magnificent beaches or admiring those slothful sloths. It’ll surely make you happy.

  • Share/Bookmark
0 Comments

Costa Rica ranked the 8th most stable country in the world ! A March 2009 study by The Economist (magazine) Intelligence Unit in collaboration with George Mason University has identified the most politically and economically stable countries amid the global economic meltdown.  Using 17 measures that encompass social structures, economic statistics, political structure and history, the report was formed from a comprehensive study of 164 countries.

Top 10 Most Stable Countries:

  1. Norway
  2. Denmark
  3. Canada
  4. Sweden
  5. Finland
  6. Switzerland
  7. Mauritius
  8. Costa Rica
  9. New Zealand
  10. Luxembourg

Other notable rankings include; USA is 56th, Nicaragua is 77th, Mexico is 87th, and Panama is ranked 131st.

http://a330. g.akamai. net/7/330/ 25828/2009031819 5802/graphics. eiu.com/specialR eport/manning_ the_barricades. pdf

  • Share/Bookmark
0 Comments

esparza4

By Pamela Wiens

History
Few people (even Costa Ricans) know that Esparza is the second oldest city in Costa Rica; it was founded by the Spanish in 1574 (the oldest is city is Cartago, founded in 1562). Even fewer people seem to know where Esparza is located. This is about to change. San José and many areas of the country will now connect to Esparza just a short distance away via the new Caldera highway. As the new visitors arrive they will discover an amazing city steeped in history and poised to become a highly-sought after location in which to live and invest.
Esparza’s interesting history reveals that the original site chosen by the Spanish for Esparza was situated on a bluff overlooking the Nicoya Peninsula. However, after the streets were laid out in the typical grid pattern, the Spanish abandoned this site in favour of the current location, as it was further inland and therefore less likely to be attacked. The original streets of the first site in the pueblo of Chumical are still there, and one can wander these streets through rolling hills with stunning views of the Gulf of Nicoya and the city of Puntarenas. Within this province is also the Port of Caldera, an important cargo and cruise ship port founded in 1577.

p1010030p1010018p1010032

Location and Natural Beauty
Natural beauty abounds as the countryside is one of rolling hills, deep river valleys, and mountain views. With a population of approximately 25,000, Esparza is situated on the central Pacific coast within the province of Puntarenas. It is 80 kilometres west of San José on the Pan-American Highway, with the new Caldera-to-San José highway projected to be just minutes away. The Nicaragua border is 2 1/2 hours, while the Panama border is 4 hours.
Esparza has begun to attract several new small- to medium-sized housing developments, currently under construction. The question that begs to be answered is “Why live in Esparza?”

• Ideal location: there is quick access to San José, beaches, and 2 international airports (San José and Liberia).
• Lower prices for land and homes than areas closer to the Pacific or Central Valley.
• The climate is comfortably warm year-round due to its elevation of about 1,000 feet. Summers (December through April) are dry with temperatures in the mid 80s and cooling breezes. Winters (May through November) have sunny mornings, rains nearly every afternoon and temperatures in the mid 80s.

Attractions
The following areas can be enjoyed, all within a 30 minute drive:
• The Original Canopy Tour, located in one of the few protected preserves of Mahogany trees.
• Carara National Park has one of the largest populations of Scarlet Macaws in the country. This park is a also a popular destination of international “birders.”
• Tárcoles River with its resident crocodiles (some of the largest in the world).
• Adventure Park Río Barranca with canopy tours rappelling, ATV quad tours, superman flight tours, night time canopy tours and hiking.
• Playas Doña Ana for swimming and surfing, Caldera, Tivives and Mata Limón.
• Turu Ba Ri Park with cable cars, canopy tours, “superman” zip line and botanical gardens.
• PANACA, an educational and interactive farm with more than 2,000 domestic animals
• The historic Puente de las Damas (Bridge of the Women) over the Jesús Maria River where the locals enjoy swimming.
• Ferry to Nicoya Peninsula.
• The daily fruit markets of Orotina.
• Kayaking in the mangroves at Mata Limón.
• Mountain biking.
In less than 60 minutes, it is possible to participate in:
• World-class surfing.
• Golfing.
• Deep-sea fishing.
• Scuba diving.
• Dancing under the stars at El Mirador Restaurant and Bar in Estanquillos de Atenas.

Restaurants
There are excellent restaurants in the area for those who enjoy fine dining. To name a few: River View in Esparza, Las Candelillas in San Mateo, Costa del Sol in Mata Limón, Villa Caletas in Herradura.

Shopping
Esparza provides shops for all the basic needs of daily living. On Saturday, there is a fresh fruit and vegetable market with very reasonable prices. For North American food items, the Automercado in Herradura is 40 minutes away. The ferreterías offer a wide range of building materials, including higher end products.

Schools
Esparza offers a selection of excellent schools, both public and private. In fact, Esparza was the first community to offer computer courses in its schools. There is a branch of the National University in Puntarenas.

Health Care
There are several physicians, both general practitioners and specialists and dentists in Esparza. The provincial hospital is located in the city of Puntarenas.

Esparza real estate currently does not reflect the value of this exciting area, given the natural and modern features to be found. However, it should not be long before tourists, retirees and savvy investors all begin to take notice of this historic and dynamic Costa Rica town.

p1010022p1010027p1010028
For more information about Esparza:
www.explorecostarica.com
www.canopytour.com/mahogany.html
www.govisitcostarica.com (Doña Ana Playa, adventure tour)
www.lascandelillas.com
www.panacacostarica.com
www.costarica-nationalparks.com/cararanationalpark.html
http://www.nicoyapeninsula.com/general/boat.html (ferry schedule)

  • Share/Bookmark
0 Comments