Policy : Challenging Neoliberalism or Consolidating State Power in Ecuador

Core countries, including the United States, and global financial institutions have exerted an unmatched power to define and implement neoliberal policies, globally. These policies conceive of development as strictly economic in nature and call for a reduction in the size of the state and increasing privatization to guarantee growth. In this paper I examine Ecuador’s adoption of ‘Buen Vivir’ to understand how the state can challenge the neoliberal agenda and how its power is redefined in the process. Buen Vivir is an indigenous Andean philosophy that emphasizes community well-being, reciprocity, solidarity, and harmony with Pachamama (Mother Earth). I analyze public government documents to investigate how policies based upon buen vivir have served to solidify an antisystemic position in a direct challenge to traditional neoliberal notions of economic prosperity, growth, and material accumulation. Through a review of how the state has sought to reposition itself as well as some of the contradictions in the implementation of Buen Vivir, I contend that the state exercises both dominating and transformative power. The case of Ecuador provides insight into the distinguishing role the state can play in resisting neoliberal development and in effect decentering global capitalism.

jwsr.org | DOI 10.5195/JWSR.2018.629 In the 1980s and 1990s Latin America was used as a laboratory for neoliberal reforms (Sader 2008).International financial institutions dangled loans with deleterious conditionalities in a promise that the reforms would result in economic growth.Yet, not long after implementation, the painful realities of neoliberalism launched historic levels of resistance from leftist social movements fighting for political changes.The social movements represented peoples who experienced increasing inequality and poverty during periods of right-leaning governments, and often relied on support from transnational networks (Stahler-Sholk, Vanden, and Kuecker 2008;Postero and Zamosc 2004).By the early 2000s, movements of indigenous, campesinos, landless, and the unemployed propelled political leaders into office who questioned the role of the United States and the capitalist world economy (Grandin 2006).Most notably, the 'pink tide' of Presidents Chávez in Venezuela, Morales in Bolivia, and Correa in Ecuador used their newfound popularity to call for an end to US corporate and military interests in the region (Robinson 2008;Chase-Dunn 2011;Chase-Dunn and Morosin 2013).From public protests to supporting left-wing political leadership, these movements elevated transformative ideas that galvanized counterhegemonic struggles.
The demands of social movements and criticism of U.S. hegemony by South American movements and political leaders opened a political space to question the assumption that all countries should follow one path to become 'developed.'Alternative positions about development, capitalism, and global power are being explored, raising important questions about the role of the state (Schulz 2015).What state policies and practices are indicators that a challenge to the capitalist paradigm is emergent?What challenges does the state face when adopting new definitions and goals for development that test the hegemonic global capitalist system?I adopt a world-systems perspective to analyze the case of one state in the global context, where the state is one of many actors vying for control and influence.Ecuador, a peripheral state, sought to challenge global capitalism by redefining development, incorporating the indigenous philosophy called buen vivir in state policy beginning in 2008.Buen vivir emphasizes community well-being, reciprocity, solidarity, and harmony with Pachamama (Mother Earth).This political change in Ecuador is significant for three key reasons.First, social development is not incorporated in the state's plans as conditional to the achievement of economic growth, but rather as a primary goal of social policy, development plans, and in the Constitution.Secondly, having resisted colonization for centuries, indigenous peoples and their philosophies are valuable connections to a variety of pre-capitalist and non-capitalist cultures.Indeed, their very existence reminds us that there are alternatives to capitalist globalization (Hall and Fenelon 2009).Finally, it is Ecuador's peripheral status in the world economy that makes this re-positioning of the state and challenge to Western notions of progress-defined by capital accumulation and privatization-all the more noteworthy (Boatca 2006).The contemporary crisis in the world-system is fertile ground for jwsr.org| DOI 10.5195/JWSR.2018.629radical shifts; antisystemic movements are challenging core powers and linking national struggles to global system failures (Chase-Dunn 2013; Panitch 2013).The power of antisystemic movements to shape structures and policies of states holds the potential to alter the balance for social and economic justice (Reifer 2013).
I analyze public government documents, including the Constitution and three national development plans, to examine how the adoption of buen vivir solidified the state's direct challenge to traditional neoliberal notions of economic prosperity, growth, and material accumulation and contributed to broader antisystemic mobilizations.This research contributes to the discussion of alternatives to neoliberal capitalism by grappling with how states may reformulate power by serving as a counterhegemonic entity in the world-system (Subramaniam 2015).My analysis reveals that while policy changes in Ecuador were counterhegemonic and incompatible with western notions of development, they did not change the reality of capitalist production.I then review the internal and external obstacles the state faced while implementing antisystemic policies to provide a nuanced understanding of the state's multiple forms of power.
In many ways this Ecuadorian experiment was flawed; nevertheless, it offers an alternative model of development from the Global South that may inspire other counterhegemonic projects.1

The State and the Global Capitalist System
World-systems analysis positions the state within the global context where it is one of many actors-including global bodies, financial institutions, social movements, NGOs, and multinational corporations-vying for control and influence.Peripheral countries are considered to have less power to act as independent entities; core countries alternately wield an enormous power to define and deploy policies that shape the political-economic realities of non-core countries (Subramaniam 2015).Moreover, the world-systems approach highlights the globalhistorical trajectory of capitalism.Scholars contend that the current crisis of global capitalism combined with the hegemonic decline of the United States has created space for alternatives (Wallerstein 2004;Chase-Dunn 2013;Reifer 2013).These alternative perspectives may wield enough power to influence the state, altering its level of involvement in the capitalist enterprise.
Indeed, the state is continuously shaped "neither wholly from above nor wholly from below, but in a crucible of social struggle and changing social relations and interests" (Smith 2009: 3).In this section I discuss criticisms of neoliberalism, counterhegemonic and antisystemic efforts in the current global political economic context and the role of the state therein.
Since World War II, core nations and hegemonic institutions have had an extraordinary power jwsr.org| DOI 10.5195/JWSR.2018.629over the economies of peripheral nations.Their ability to influence the adoption of neoliberal policies effectively worked to create a capitalist world-economy (Wallerstein 1974;Chase-Dunn 2001).The World Bank and IMF offered loans to a host of Global South countries, in return for the state's adoption of austerity packages and opening to trade and finance.These policies were designed to decrease the role of the state by reducing public spending across all sectors and increasing the role of private capital.State sovereignty over capital flows and democratic participation were reduced as the global market was prioritized (Harvey 2005;Barra and Dello Buno 2009).In neoliberalism the state is important, but its "only legitimate role…is to establish the conditions necessary for a market to operate" (DuRand and Martinot 2012: 28).For example, in 1995 the then Director-General of the WTO Renato Ruggiero astutely noted: "We are no longer writing the rules of interaction among separate national economies.We are writing the constitution of a single global economy" (DuRand and Martinot 2012: 22).Neoliberal policies are premised upon the assumption that the economy can function autonomously, distinct from government (Polanyi 2001; see also Block and Somers 2014).
Critics of neoliberalism define it as neo-colonialism (Grandin 2006;Harvey 2005) and dependency (de la Barra and Dello Buono 2009) while others contend that economic dimensions like growth and income per capita outweigh human development needs within neoliberal agendas (Sen 1999).Additionally, neoliberal policies limit nature exclusively to its exchange-value, while the rights of communities and cultural heritage is ignored (Escobar 2012;Walsh 2010;Shiva 2005).The policies contribute "not only to the degradation of the physical environment but also to the social environment, as various groups are systematically excluded from the tools of progress and their benefits" (Chaney and Schmink 1980:176).These criticisms acknowledge the neoliberal assumption that every society considers the individual as the basic actor, neglecting cultural variations in terms of values, traditions, and emphases on collectives, community, and relationships with the environment that shape all aspects of life (Sen 1999;Escobar 2012;Da Costa 2010;Hall and Fenelon 2009).
Regionally, Latin America embraced neoliberal reforms at a far greater rate than any other region with "ambiguous" results (Escobar 2010).Resistance to these reforms in the region called for a re-examination of the neoliberal paradigm (Wallerstein 2004;Escobar 2012;Robinson 2008;Le Quang 2013).Globally this resistance, both antisystemic and counterhegemonic, has found a home in a variety of social movements, alliances, social forums, worker cooperatives and unions, only some of which call themselves movements against neoliberal capitalism (Smith and Wiest 2012;Hall and Fenelon 2009;Ballve and Prashad 2006;Smith 2014).Counter-hegemonic movements resist the "dominant state actor in the world-system…and are a subset of the larger collection of antisystemic movements" (Smith and Wiest 2012:184).These actors work to challenge their governments and coordinate with other grassroots and national-level organizations jwsr.org| DOI 10.5195/JWSR.2018.629 to effect change transnationally (Tarrow 2005;Smith 2014).Antisystemic movements oppose neoliberal policies and assert that democracy and equality can only be achieved in a 'transformed world' (Wallerstein 1990).Both counterhegemonic and antisystemic movements can be powerful enough to influence the state's position within the global capitalist paradigm.They can shape institutions, including the state and global inter-state bodies, and such institutional change alters the context in which the movements operate.
Counterhegemonic and antisystemic movements are strongly influenced by their local and historical contexts.Latin American social movements have responded differently to the withdrawal of the state and its provision of social services (Rénique 2006).For example, the urban labor movement led the anti-neoliberal cause in Argentina, the Zápatistas formed autonomous municipalities in Chiapas, and the indigenous movement ushered in the anti-neoliberal efforts in Ecuador (Silva 2009;Sawyer 2004).Through a variety of means, social movements resisting neoliberalism have sought to shape the priorities of the state within the global capitalist system (Petras and Veltmeyer 2005).This is precisely what occurred in Latin America; inspired by the antisystemic movements that brought left-of-center administrations to power, a regional wave or 'pink tide' appeared united in its demands to reorganize the global economy (Robinson 2008).In Ecuador, the pressure from social movements and the election of a left-leaning administration created an opening for the state to assume a counterhegemonic stance.
As U.S. hegemony wanes, new opportunities for anti-systemic challenges are opening (Robinson 2008;DuBoff 2003;Arrighi and Silver 1999;Smith 2014).Peripheral and semiperipheral countries experiencing industrial growth are exercising more influence, with an increasing ability to destabilize the balance of centralized power in the Global North.Despite the rise of new challenges to state power (Sassen 1996) states remain the principal institutions in global politics; and as such, regional cooperation among counter-hegemonic forces provide space for states to implement alternatives to global capitalism (Smith and Wiest 2012).
The potential for some states to challenge the neoliberal paradigm is crucial to our understanding of strategies of resistance (Subramaniam 2015).In order to implement a counterhegemonic agenda, a state may experiment with differing notions of power.Internally, the state maintains a dominating power (by controlling institutions, for example).However, the traditional notions of power as solely dominating/coercive may be insufficient.I draw on differing notions of power and argue that the state may exercise multiple forms of power.For instance, Pearce found evidence of a non-dominating power that "nurtures cooperation and capacity to act but which also impacts and generates change" (2013: 641).This kind of power can be transformative, wherein we build "models for a new society based on power understood as energy and initiative" (2013: 651).Wainwright (2016:11) also writes about the transformative capacity of power and notes that this kind of power was "discovered by social movements as they move [d] jwsr.org| DOI 10.5195/JWSR.2018.629beyond protest to proposing practical, prefigurative solutions."A state may access or create space for the emergence of transformative power by rejecting neoliberalism and creating something new.Indeed, Wainwright (2016:13) notes that dominating and transformative power may work together where power as domination supports a transformative power: "For example, a change in the balance of power in society…can lead to progressive control over the state or progressive shifts within governing parties, which can in turn lead to some form of governmental support for a transformative movement."If the point of departure of radical transformative politics is indeed national (Gramsci 1971), how the state reformulates power in the process of moving beyond neoliberal capitalism is critical.I turn now to examine how Ecuador has pursued this via the state's adoption of buen vivir.

Case Background: Ecuador
Ecuador is the smallest Andean country geographically and in population; it is home to 15 million people and 14 distinct indigenous nations.The majority self-identify as mestizo (of Spanish and indigenous descent) followed by indigenous, white, and an Afro-Ecuadorian.The national Census reports that 7% self-identify as indigenous (INEC 2011), while the national indigenous organization CONAIE contends that indigenous peoples represent more than 25% of the population.Mainstream Ecuadorian culture is predominantly mestizo culture, which accounts for the fact that Spanish is the first language of 90% of Ecuadorians (INEC 2011).
The oil boom of the 1970s helped to propel Ecuador's economic growth.Foreign companies began exploration in the Amazon region a decade prior, but changes in the global price of oil during the 1970s demonstrated the important resource that crude could play for the small agrarian nation (Sawyer 2004).Crude oil remains Ecuador's most important export, accounting for nearly half of government revenues (Lewis 2016).
Ecuador capitalized on the returns from oil while transitioning from years of military rule in the 1970s.Democratic elections brought the left-leaning populist Jaime Roldós to power in 1979.
Two years later he was killed in a plane crash, with suspected U.S. involvement; subsequent presidents represented more centrist or center-right political stances (Perkins 2004).In the mid-1980s, the global pressures to conform to the neoliberal development paradigm were high, and Ecuador followed suit.Resistance to the state's neoliberal turn has been unceasing, and indigenous peoples' resistance has been most intense (Widener 2011;Rice 2012).indigenous movement remains an important political voice in Ecuador (Zamosc 2007;Becker 2011).Through the 1990s and 2000s, the Ecuadorian indigenous movement was widely considered the most active indigenous movement in all of Latin America (Yashar 2005;Zamosc 2007).
Similar to indigenous movements in other countries, the movement's relationship with the state fluctuated between opposition and support (Yashar 2005;Postero and Zamosc 2004).While the government drew on indigenous philosophy to position its development plans, the indigenous movement faced more pressure from Correa than previous presidencies and again mobilized its opposition (Becker 2012;Martinez 2013).

Buen Vivir: Philosophy and Policy in Ecuador
In this section I review the buen vivir philosophy highlighting its fundamental orientation to community rather than the individual, the connection between humans and nature, and notions of development.Then, I address how the philosophy has informed Ecuadorian state policy.

Philosophy of Buen Vivir
The Andean region of South America is home to a philosophy that is an alternative model to capitalist modes of development.2While there is no English terminology that captures the sentiment of buen vivir to its fullest, many translate it as 'good living' (Cunningham 2012).In this section I elaborate three of the defining characteristics of buen vivir and then analyze them within Ecuadorian policy.
First, buen vivir is a philosophy focused on the community.Western forms of development take the individual as the basic social unit, while 'good living' is defined within the community, as a community.This forces an acknowledgement of how the context of the community mediates or influences the experiences and wellbeing of everyone.A community-centered understanding of life is deeply rooted in indigenous Andean traditions where kinship systems, relationships with the natural world, and social obligations of reciprocity are significant and longstanding (Mendoza and Zerda 2011).
Second, buen vivir conceives of a profound relationship between humans and the natural world.Humans are not separate from the Earth, rather they are one element of the biosphere and as such have responsibilities to nurture Pachamama's vitality (Figueroa-Helland and Raghu 2017).
The connection between people and the environment is inseparable from the definition of community.For instance, "The grandparents of the ancestral peoples cultivated a culture of life inspired in the expression of the multiverse, where everything is connected, interrelated, and nothing is outside but rather 'everything is part of…'; the harmony and equilibrium of one and all jwsr.org| DOI 10.5195/JWSR.2018.629 is important for the community" (Haunacuni Mamami 2010:15).Indeed, these characteristics of communal living in harmony with nature are the foundation for indigenous ways of living and resistance for over five hundred years (Gudynas and Acosta 2011).
Finally, buen vivir is not related to economic prosperity, growth, consumption, or material accumulation (Le Quang 2013).In the West, development is defined as a linear process, where a society moves from under-or limited development to more complex systems that prioritize economic growth.In contrast, a linear notion of development traditionally has not existed in indigenous Andean communities (Acosta 2008;Radcliffe 2012;Walsh 2010).Buen vivir invokes other non-materialist values: "knowledge, social and cultural recognition, codes of ethical and spiritual behavior in the relationship with society and nature, human values, the vision of the future, among others" (Acosta 2008, see also Smith 2017).Buen vivir is built on reciprocity, solidarity, cooperation, and harmony with Pachamama and is fundamental to the cosmovision of Andean indigenous communities (Walsh 2010).
Within this paradigm, buen vivir is a principle of equity for daily living that transcends all else; the goal of living is not to have more than one's neighbor but for everyone to have enough.
Quality of life is not reduced to consumption and property, nor is it measured through competition and accumulation of material goods.It is a holistic approach that requires the reformulation of development and definitions of progress in terms of both individual and communal well-being (Le Quang 2013).It is evident that buen vivir is fundamentally at odds with neoliberalism.In essence, this is the transformative power of buen vivir; it offers alternative ways of living, knowing, and relating with the living world that challenge colonial and capitalist paradigms.There are limited examples of states enacting policy that challenges capitalist hegemony and even fewer that make policy based in indigenous philosophy, thus our need to study these examples is vitally important. 3

From Philosophy to State Policy
Buen vivir was introduced to the national political conversation with the election of Rafael Correa.Correa's campaign promised to re-orient state policy to address the demands of Ecuadorian citizens rather than submit to international pressure.Despite not personally emerging from social movement organizing, his platform was largely embraced by a population that was highly critical of the neoliberal policies previous administrations instituted, including the dollarization of the

Buen Vivir in the Constitution
The 2008 Constitution marked an important transition by officially acknowledging the indigenous roots of Ecuador.Defining the state as plurinational in the Constitution occurred after years of indigenous activism (Becker 2012).The Constitution also signaled the state's commitment to buen vivir as a new direction for state policies; in other words, activating the state's capacity for transformative power.In accordance with a move toward decolonization, the Constitution uses the Kichwa words 'sumak kawsay' in policy, highlighting ideas written within their original cultural reference points. 4uen vivir is not defined in the Constitution, yet it appears throughout including in the Preamble: "We hereby decide to build a new form of public coexistence, in diversity and harmony to achieve buen vivir, the sumak kawsay…" The fundamental rights of buen vivir are mentioned 25 times, with specific attention in Section 2: Rights (Rights to Buen Vivir), Section 6 the Regime of Buen Vivir, and Section 7 the Regime of Development.It is within Section 2 that the state clarifies its role in providing for buen vivir.For example, Section 1 Article 3.5 notes: "The state's duty includes planning national development, eliminating poverty, and promoting sustainable development and the equitable redistribution of resources and wealth to enable buen vivir."The Rights to Buen Vivir articulate the rights to food, a healthy environment, water, social communications, education, housing, and health.In a move away from focusing solely on the individual level, these rights are granted the same standing as those provided to individuals, communities, and nationalities.Moreover, the emphasis on the collective is noted in Section 2 Article 83.7 where citizens are informed that they are "to promote public welfare and give precedence to general interests over individual interests, in line with buen vivir." The Regime of Buen Vivir includes rights related to inclusion, equity and rights focused on jwsr.org| DOI 10.5195/JWSR.2018.629model: "the development regime is the organized, sustainable and dynamic set of economic, political, social, cultural, and environmental systems that guarantee the attainment of buen vivir…."Article 275 also outlines the responsibilities and rights to 'live well': "Buen vivir requires that people, communities, towns, and nationalities effectively enjoy their rights and exercise responsibilities within a framework of interculturalism, respect for diversity, and harmonious co- The deeper meaning of the Plan is its conceptual break with the Washington Consensus ideology, with its stabilization policies, structural adjustment and reducing the state to a minimum.This Plan is a break with the neoliberalism applied in Creole version that caused a weak political and institutional system and deep socio-economic crisis.The Plan recovers a vision of development that favors the pursuit of buen vivir...This necessarily implies a change in the way the state recovers its management skills, planning, regulation, process of redistribution and deepens the process of devolution, decentralization and citizen participation (SENPLADES 2007:6).
The PNBV 2009-2013 was designed to usher the beginning of long-term structural change (CONDENPE 2011) and is guided by a set of 12 objectives (See Table 3).
The most recent PNBV (2013-2017) defines buen vivir as "the style of life that enables happiness and the permanency of cultural and environmental diversity; it is harmony, equality, and solidarity.It is not the quest for opulence of infinite economic growth" (SENPLADES 2013:14).
The plan emphasizes Ecuador's focus on the following themes: equity, cultural revolution, territory, urban revolution, agrarian revolution, knowledge revolution, and excellence.The focus is on the role structural change will play in improving the individual and collective experiences in society.Accordingly, this PNBV establishes that economic growth is not an end in itself; rather it is a tool for the creation and enhancement of the abilities and capabilities of the public.Like its jwsr.org| DOI 10.5195/JWSR.2018.629worldwide and Latin American integration All three development plans articulate antisystemic positions relative to the global capitalist world-system.The plans clearly set a path to challenge capitalist notions of development by prioritizing, through adoption of buen vivir as policy, the creation of a more equitable society for all.As the philosophy suggests, a symbiotic relationship between humans and the environment, the development plan articulates how living well must occur in harmony with cultural diversity and the environment.The PNBV 2013-2017 continues this agenda and positions the role of the state as central in the creation of buen vivir.

Analysis
Ecuador's 2008 Constitution and the subsequent National Development Plans are all antisystemic and counterhegemonic; they seek to decenter a U.S.-dominant system and advocate a move way from the capitalist paradigm.This policy shift is a clear example of how a peripheral state, facing pressures from global power holders and internal social movements, has challenged the global capitalist order.While difficult, if not impossible, for a single peripheral state to fundamentally alter the global development paradigm, Ecuador's problematic translation of buen vivir philosophy to policy in the short term (discussed in the next section) may plant a seed, inspiring new ways of thinking about future counterhegemonic projects.I turn now to an analysis of the policy in this larger, world-system context.

Buen Vivir Policy -Obstacles and Contradictions
There were several issues with the ways that buen vivir philosophy was implemented in Ecuador's state policy.Three of the most significant concerns were a continued reliance on natural resource extraction, the strengthened centralized state, and a growing external debt to China.
Progress and development are no longer solely defined by GDP and purchasing power; on paper buen vivir emphasizes the synergy between humans and nature.In practice one might expect the state to move away from its dependence on natural resources.The exploitation of nature for human need is an accepted part of most theories of modernity, but it is incompatible with buen vivir philosophy.There is evidence that Correa's commitment to social development superseded other goals of buen vivir.For instance, during Correa's first administration he requested money from global investors for his "Keep Oil in the Ground" initiative for the Yasuní rainforest.At the same time he promoted this initiative at the UN his administration wrote plans to open up the southern Amazon to new oil projects.Ecuador has reduced its dependence on oil, though it remains its most jwsr.org| DOI 10.5195/JWSR.2018.629important export.Unsurprisingly critics question how 'neo-extractivism' can be accepted in a country where Nature has rights (Dangle 2014;Zorilla 2014).The state invested heavily in the social sector while dependent on the exploitation of nature and natural resources to generate revenue-consistent with the existing capitalist system.
This reliance on extraction violates basic principles of buen vivir and is a point of contention for indigenous and environmental activists who put internal pressure on the government to change course.Correa said with regard to growth in mining: "I don't like mining, and open-pit is even worse, but it's impossible to think of modern life without mining and it would be irresponsible not to use those resources" (Garcia and Valencia 2013).The contradictions in the promotion of largescale mining while acknowledging the finite nature of natural resources in PNBV 2013-2017 is troubling for many (Walsh 2010; Zorilla 2014).Theoretically, how does this fit within the context of global historical trends of capitalism?Wallerstein (1991) contends that the contradictions between values and practices are inherent in the capitalist world-system.The neoliberal system is entrenched globally and it is inconceivable that a peripheral state acting alone could entirely replace this system (Radcliffe 2012).The PNBVs acknowledge a process of long-term structural change, yet there are no timelines for when the practice will move closer to the policy goals.How long can the contradictions in values and practices exist before the commitment to counterhegemonic change is realized?Is maintaining western notions of development in practice while investing in the social sector a first step in the process of moving away from the modernist paradigm?Or is the commitment to buen vivir principles in this particular case only superficial?
The second obstacle for the buen vivir policy was the increasingly centralized state that exerts a dominating power in key ways.In the government documents I analyzed, the role of citizenry and communities is highlighted as necessary to achieve buen vivir.Previous administrations and other 'pink tide' governments sought to expropriate and transform the power of movements by incorporating movement leaders into the government (Robinson 2008).However, Correa used other strategies to stall indigenous, student, and environmentalists that challenged his power; during his presidency over 200 indigenous protestors were jailed.He referred to them as "infantiles" and "terroristas."Seemingly progressive on some fronts, this government, like others before, used the coercive power of the state to maintain political order and disempower social movements (Petras and Veltmeyer 2005;Martinez 2013;Lewis 2016).Simultaneously, the government's proud stance as critic of U.S. hegemony was bolstered through the co-optation of several central issues of the indigenous movement (e.g., resisting U.S. free trade deals, dollarization of the economy, closing the naval base at Manta, holding a constituent assembly).Becker (2011:104) contends this co-optation of key issues and repression of activists "undermines the strength of social movements."Viewed through the lens of world-systems, the state maintained its counterhegemonic position vis-à-vis other states, but was less committed to the antisystemic jwsr.org| DOI 10.5195/JWSR.2018.629values of movements and civil society that helped elect Correa (Becker 2011).Indeed, the worldsystem in which Ecuador is entrenched prioritizes the state as the primary political institution.Thus Ecuador's political leader sought a strong counterhegemonic stance externally while maintaining centralized, dominating state power internally.
Ecuadorians have long had a strong commitment to protest, indeed with high levels of political corruption, public protest was one way to command attention and force change.Correa used intimidation, closed NGOs that resisted plans for resource extraction in indigenous communities and ended funding for the Development Council on the Indigenous Nationalities and Peoples of Ecuador, citing misuse of funds (Becker 2012).5 Indigenous anti-mining activists have in one case been killed, and in another jailed for ten months (Collyns 2015).This disdain for popular power was also directed at students who protested against Amazonian oil extraction.
Correa said that protestors were hurtful: "They are hurting the country, the poor, that Amazonian region.We are not the multinationals, we are the poor.We cannot be beggars sitting in front of a bag of gold" (Caselli 2012).Correa used the support of the indigenous and students to gain power, but as the political system grew increasingly hierarchical and dependent upon the president and his decrees, many argued that Correa was attempting "to neutralize the ability of the indigenous movement to mobilize and to destroy it as a historic social actor" (Dávalos quoted in Becker 2012:126).Indeed some of these tactics are similar to those used by more authoritarian states as methods to delegitimize and repress dissent (Prevost, Campos, Vanden 2012).The strength of the indigenous movement in Ecuador helped bring Correa to power and legitimized the implementation of state policy based on an Andean indigenous philosophy.Simultaneously, the indigenous and climate justice movements were increasing their transnational networks and translocal connections while the state sought to abandon this base of support (Becker 2013;Widener 2011).The relationship between state leaders who promote counter hegemonic initiatives and anti-systemic social movements has larger implications that can shape a political regime's success.
Finally, the state had presumably turned away from financing by global financial institutions; Correa was a long-standing critic of the World Bank and IMF.Correa sought another source of financing and found China eager to extend its reach in Latin America.Consequently, Ecuador accepted loans for upwards of $11 billion from China, with more on the horizon (Krauss and Bradsher 2015).Similar to the terms of the contracts China has with other regional counterparts, Ecuador agreed to pay primarily through oil and to a lesser extent through mining and the development of hydroelectric plants, entrenching the dependence on natural resource extraction.
For world-systems theorists, the significance of this relationship with China is twofold: 1) by jwsr.org| DOI 10.5195/JWSR.2018.629creating financial relationships with China, Ecuador contributes to the creation of a heterogeneous global market where non-Core countries are increasingly powerful (Dunaway and Clelland 2017) and 2) the investments from China are servicing the buen vivir development plan.However, while Chinese investments service Ecuador's counterhegemonic initiatives, the terms of the loans reinforce capitalist logics.The debt that the country has generated is staggering and will require the same long-term repayment and sacrifice by the most marginalized sectors as did the loans during the neoliberal period. 6Critics are concerned that even in the name of development for buen vivir, the Ecuadorian people and their desires are being silenced to the needs of the state for foreign capital (cf.Lewis 2016).
The question remains of how the debt to China will impact politics in Ecuador internally and regionally.Chinese loans far outweigh what the World Bank offered to all of Latin America.Thus, we see the state exercising dominating power to squelch internal pressures that were critical of Chinese loans all while it pursued counterhegemonic projects to support social development.The extent to which a peripheral state can entirely move outside the basic modernist paradigm is doubtful; this case reveals the distance between buen vivir philosophy and geopolitical realities.
Despite serious concerns about the implementation of buen vivir in the short term, in the next section I discuss how buen vivir has nonetheless contributed to a transformative space for political imagination and counterhegemonic strategies.

Buen Vivir Policy -Resistance in the Global Capitalist System
Buen vivir is antithetical to Western notions of capitalist development and the Ecuadorian policy that invokes buen vivir clearly challenges the hegemony of core countries and global financial institutions.In what follows, I describe how this resistance has taken three primary forms: prioritizing the autonomy of the Ecuadorian state, strengthening regional ties in Latin America, and rejecting a neoliberal definition of development.Each of these forms speaks to the capacity of the state to exercise a non-dominating, transformative power.
The review of government documents reveals that the Ecuadorian state sought to strengthen its ability to determine its economic and political agendas by reducing the influence of the United States.In the section "Ecuador Around the World" in PNBV 2013-2017, the global financial crisis of 2008 is used to contextualize the connection of countries and regions through the global economy.It explains how the decisions made in the United States, Europe, or by global financial institutions have the capacity to collapse other economies.As a strategy of resistance against neoliberal capitalism, Ecuador focused on defending the state's role as primary in setting the public jwsr.org| DOI 10.5195/JWSR.2018.629stronger regional connections (Smith and Wiest 2012).Arguably, Ecuador would not have been as emboldened in its counterhegemonic actions were it not for the support offered by pink tide counterparts Venezuela and Bolivia.By deepening relationships with South America and Cuba more generally, Ecuador reoriented its focus from the Global North to regional development by supporting initiatives such as ALBA, Banco del Sur, UNASUR (now headquartered in Ecuador), and the Organization of American States.Additionally, increasing regionalism is a geopolitical strategy that is enshrined in government documents: The Preamble to the Constitution states that 'the sovereign people of Ecuador…hereby decide to build a democratic country, committed to Latin American integration-a dream of Simón Bolivar and Eloy Alfaro."Renewed efforts for regionalism are a thread in the long history of resistance and decolonization in the country.
The capital accumulation and privatization for a development system that prioritizes a philosophy of 'living well' whereby state development enhances the quality of life for all.This alternate way of conceptualizing development built on indigenous roots is designed to inspire a "dialogue between ancestral knowledge and wisdom with the most advanced universal thinking, in a process of continued decolonization of ideas" (Acosta 2010:13, see also Gudynas 2011).The buen vivir development model represents a new way to organize life within the modern nation-state (Escobar 2012).
The capitalist system is in crisis.Understanding how counterhegemonic and antisystemic movements may influence the state to create and sustain alternative ways of living is critical.Some lessons from this case relate to the ways power was exercised and the controversies that ensued.For example, Ecuador took a political risk to turn away from the United States and assert its own ideological agenda.The radical break from the neoliberal paradigm and the focus on regional strength is clearly articulated: "We have recovered our Nation's sovereignty.Now our gaze is to the South, our historical South.There are no more foreign military bases.In Ecuador the international bureaucracies no longer give the orders.We no longer sign humiliating letters of intention" (SENPLADES 2013:20).Ecuador's ability to assume this position and implement a path for transformative power was bolstered by support from regional left-leaning states and existing fissures in the foundations of the capitalist world-system.It is quite likely that 'revolutionary shoves' from anti-systemic movements (Chase-Dunn 2013), such as popular global movements from indigenous, climate justice, and anti-austerity struggles, also played a key role in the state's defiance of the global capitalist hegemony (Reifer 2013).
However, an important criticism of this case is that macro-level policy was built on a community-oriented, grassroots philosophy.Contradictions quickly emerged that remain challenging for the state's use of dominating power in the name of a philosophy that espouses nondominating and collaborative power within the community.To reach his goals, Correa pushed back on both external and internal pressures, including silencing anti-systemic movements within Ecuador.As Martin Hart-Landsberg notes, "an anti-neoliberal stance should not be confused with anticapitalist politics" (quoted in Becker 2011:104).When activists questioned the state's position on natural resource extraction, they used the Constitutional rights granted to Nature as the foundation for their argument.Correa invoked his presidential power to prioritize investment in the social sector, a counterghegemonic step in a capitalist system that privileges a weaker welfare state.However, rather than acknowledge the validity in activists' concerns, he railed against them-invoking an authoritarian tone, which did little to engender support.The relationship between state leaders and social movements was key to advancing notions of buen vivir policy in Ecuador.Yet, as those movements grew louder and more critical of the administration's implementation of the policy, the state used its dominating power to silence them.Indeed, jwsr.org | DOI 10.5195/JWSR.2018.629peripheral states may work with movements to challenge core states and dominant ideology, but they may also be less accommodating to all of the goals and values of antisystemic movements (Smith and Wiest 2012).Finding the balance between a strong state willing to oppose capitalist hegemony and create a progressive political system that truly empowers communities-using the philosophy of buen vivir as a guide-is emblematic of the work that remains.
In an increasingly globalized world, the role of the state is complex.The case of buen vivir policy in Ecuador demonstrates an alternate path for the state (Escobar 2012), and it also provides a window into some of the challenges a peripheral state may face.At a time when many seek alternatives to the global capitalist system, Ecuador's transformation of buen vivir philosophy to policy is an important first step in the path for state resistance.
Until the Correa administration, Ecuador suffered from near constant political turmoil.His election in 2006 and maintenance of power through elections in 2008 and 2012 represents the country's longest period of political stability.Indeed, Ecuador had seven presidents from 1996-2006.Social movements, particularly the indigenous movement, played an important role in ousting presidents from office during this period.Though perhaps less unified today, the jwsr.org| DOI 10.5195/JWSR.2018.629 Correa, a U.S.-educated economist, ran as an independent in the presidential elections of 2006 and assumed office in January 2007.By April, citizens voted with overwhelming support (80%) for a referendum to create a Constitutional Assembly to rewrite the Constitution.Correa formed the party Alianza País to support candidates for the Assembly, ultimately winning a majority of seats in the September 2007 election.

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Ecuador was the first state to incorporate buen vivir in its Constitution in 2008, followed by Bolivia in 2010.jwsr.org| DOI 10.5195/JWSR.2018.629economy in 2000(Becker 2012; Prevost, Oliva, and Vanden 2012).CONAIE ultimately supported Correa's initial run for President and many of his subsequent programs, including rewriting the Constitution in 2008(Becker 2011).Support from this antisystemic movement organization enabled Correa to incorporate transformative ideas into the Constitution; including the incorporation of buen vivir as an orienting principle for the country and according legal rights to Nature.As I discuss below, this shift by the state is most notably included in the following three government documents I analyzed: the Constitution (Republic of Ecuador 2008), Plan Nacional de Buen Vivir (PNBV)2009-2013(SENPLADES 2009), and PNBV 2013-2017 (SENPLADES   2013).
existence with nature."Plan Nacional de Buen Vivir Empowered by the Constitution, Ecuador integrated buen vivir into three national development plans: National Development Plan 2007-2010, PNBV 2009-2013, and PNBV 2013-2017.These plans prioritize state spending and outline the internal development goals of the state.At the outset, the National Development Plan was framed as an initial step in the process of deep-seated change across the government, known as a "citizen's revolution."For example, the plan for 2007-2010 states: About the Author: Beth Williford is Associate Professor in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at Manhattanville College.Address correspondence to Beth Williford, Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Manhattanville College, 2900 Purchase St, Purchase, NY 10577; Email: Beth.Williford@mville.edu Santos 2006;ameh 2012)ce is the rejection of a neoliberal definition of development.Ecuador is a small peripheral state, yet the fact that it questioned and redefined key assumptions of progress is striking.For example, Ecuador now uses more indicators of development beyond per-capita income and GDP.While these traditional measures are employed, Buen Vivir policy provides the state an alternative orientation toward living life fully, the wellbeing of communities, the relationship with the natural world, and even happiness(SENPLADES 2009; SENPLADES 2013; way universities are funded, administered, and accredited.In 2011 Ecuador invested 5.2% of its GDP in higher education, a larger percentage than any other Latin American country and second only to Denmark globally(Ray and Kozameh 2012).Investment in education is a massive change from the previous neoliberal policies that prompted divestment in this sector.The investments are an example of the state exerting its capacity for transformative power, whereby the population is supported by the state to achieve 'good living.'Heavyinvestment in social welfare programs increases the responsibility and size of the state.Increased state spending contradicts neoliberal guidelines which advocate reduced state expenditure.In addition to the oil contract renegotiations, the state also increased its tax revenue by enforcing corporate tax laws.Corporate taxes account for 40% of revenue collection and strict penalties for non-payment are now enforced.Less support for privatization and more effort to increase corporate taxes is a reversal of broader economic policies advocated by international financial institutions.These components of increased social spending are certainly indicators of a move away from the capitalist development model.This case reveals the complexity of implementing policy that rejects key neoliberal tenants.ConclusionThis paper has examined how buen vivir, an Andean philosophy that is fundamentally antimaterialistic and based on community, rather than strictly individual, wellbeing, was integrated into state policy.I use the case of Ecuador to explore the role a state can play in challenging global capitalist hegemony.This case is theoretically significant because Ecuador is a peripheral state that has redefined development in ways contrary to what core nations and global financial institutions endorse, and it thus supports the argument that hegemonic resistance will emerge from the periphery (cf.Santos 2006; Markoff 2003).The Ecuadorian policies actively reject models of jwsr.org| DOI 10.5195/JWSR.2018.629 (Smith 2017)OI 10.5195/JWSR.2018.629 the The heart of Ecuador's buen vivir policy prioritized social investment, which helped Correa maintain popular support.Yet, this support contributed to Correa's ability to centralize state power, act coercively, and silence critics.Analyzing the role of the state-in policy and in practice-as an agent of transformative power is imperative for antisystemic and counterhegemonic efforts to unseat global capitalism.Clearly increasing regionalism and maintaining internal support were footholds for buen vivir policy in Ecuador.Admittedly, while the successes in Ecuador were limited, this case has inspired the larger transnational movement and brought attention to the transformative idea of buen vivir.The political conundrum for peripheral states ostensibly is determining how to advance buen vivir philosophy when constrained by the capitalist worldeconomy.Ultimately, the Ecuadorian case forces us to consider how to better align alternative visions with practice(Smith 2017).