Ministerial advisor His first notable job in Haiti was working in 1982 for Finance Minister
Marc Bazin under the administration of
Jean-Claude Duvalier. Bazin became favored in international circles for his anti-corruption drive but he was removed from his post after five months.
Interim Minister After
Jean-Claude Duvalier (Baby Doc) was ousted on 7 February 1986, Delatour was chosen to be
Minister of Finance where they could serve as cheap labor for industrial assembly plants as part of the global supply chain. He thus accelerated the
neoliberalism introduced under Jean-Claude Duvalier, arguing that he was removing the means through which corrupt officials could steal development aid and sabotage profitable planning. He argued further that his reforms were reducing prices for food and other essentials.
Jean-Bertrand Aristide, later President of Haiti, dubbed Delatour's appointment the "death plan". In June 1986, five days of protests took place throughout Haiti, the protesters demanding Delatour's resignation. Henri Namphy said that this "almost [led] a civil war" and promised to hold elections as a result. In November 1986, a general strike followed, again with calls for Delatour's dismissal. Namphy believed the provisional government did not have a mandate for carrying out sweeping reforms; Delatour believed otherwise. Haiti's sugar industry was hit hard by his policies as Haiti's sugar company
Hasco was shut down in April 1987 days after the Cayes Sugar Factory announced it was closing; these two events cost over 40,000 jobs. Delatour had shut down both state-owned sugar mills: the Darbonne National Sugar Factory in the
Léogâne area in the autumn of 1986 and also the Citadel Sugar Factory in
Cap-Haïtien. As a result, contraband Dominican sugar flooded into the Haitian market destroying the Haitian sugar industry. Delatour argued the sugar companies were inefficient and used an unnecessarily large amount of government funds. Delatour's decision to open the country up the country's market to subsidized American rice helped drive domestic producers out of business. Many moved to the capital, Port-au-Prince, which saw a rapid expansion of the
shantytown,
Cité Soleil. The industrial sector couldn't absorbed all the cheap labour so many were driven to work in the
informal sector, most notably in the
charcoal trade helping to de-forest Haiti's hills even further. The new imports of U.S. subsidized rice were protected by military convoys to protect it from peasants who tried to stop its transportation. For this, the
New York Times described him in 1987 as "reviled" in Haiti but celebrated by the U.S. government and by the
International Monetary Fund and
World Bank.
First Aristide government Delatour left his post in February 1988 when the provisional military government ended. However, his presence as an advisor became a condition for international aid and loans. To appease these forces who distrusted him based on his left-wing reputation,
Jean-Bertrand Aristide, who had previously denounced Delatour's "death plan", made him part of his team in 1991 after he won the Haitian presidency.
Return of Aristide government In September 1991, Delatour openly condemned the
coup d'état that deposed Aristide and brought
Raoul Cédras and
Michel François into power. His support for the deposed president was a very important factor in permitting Aristide to be restored to office in 1994. Shortly before Aristide's restoration, Delatour and Leslie Voltaire had proposed a plan titled the "Strategy of Social and Economic Reconstruction", a set of neoliberal reforms that convinced the U.S. to restore Aristide to power. In Haiti, the reforms were dubbed "The American Plan". In October 1994, after Aristide was restored to the presidency, Delatour refused to be involved in the government unless the neoliberal
Smarck Michel, whose businesses included the rice importation that was damaging the Haitian peasantry became Premier. After Aristide capitulated to this demand, Delatour accepted the post of Governor of the
Bank of the Republic of Haiti where he raised the
interest rates consistent with his
Chicago School ideological position.
Préval government The reform program he started in the mid-1980s was deepened under President René Préval, elected in December 1995, with the rice tariff slashed to 3%. With his help, Haiti became the most open country to trade in the whole Caribbean area. The country's cement factory and the flour mill were privatised in 1997 under Delatour's plan; both have since shut down, leaving Haiti with neither flour mill nor a cement production. Delatour resigned in 1998 midway through President
René Préval's first term .
Legacy In 2007, Haiti's state-owned asset, Teleco, underwent privatization for $59 million, resulting in the loss of 2,800 jobs. Delatour's pro-globalization and anti-nationalism sentiments economic policies had a lasting if deterious impact. His reforms saw Haiti become one of the most privatized nations globally, they led to the decline of Haitian agriculture, and a rapid increase in the population of
Port-au-Prince. Delatour's strategies led to a loss of self-sufficiency in rice production, leaving the country dependent on food imports and susceptible to fluctuations in global food prices. Under his policies, Haiti's per capita income plummeted to $329 in 2000, compared to $600 in 1980 during the height of Jean-Claude Duvalier's rule. Another consequence of the changes was the government's inability to respond to the catastrophic
2010 earthquake, further exposing the vulnerabilities exacerbated by these policies. == Death ==