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But Pinochet's leftist successors basically followed the same economic model, and careful management of Chile's mineral wealth has enabled the country to ride out the global financial crisis, with relatively low debt, unemployment of just 6.5 percent and strong 5.5 percent economic growth expected this year. Chileans' per capita annual income of $14,000 trails only Argentina in Latin America. Chile "is a country in good shape, a country that seen from the outside is in very good shape. But the people inside, in Chile, don't see it this way. We are always complaining," said author Isabel Allende, the niece of President Salvadore Allende, the leftist leader who died while under siege during Pinochet's coup. Some dictatorship-era figures also believe Chile has been on the wrong track. "This country had huge possibilities of becoming a developed country when the military government ended, with all of its wounds overcome," retired Gen. Guillermo Garin, the army's second-in-command under Pinochet, told the AP. "Unfortunately we have only managed to keep the wounds festering." A string of post-Pinochet leftist governments ended last year with the election of conservative billionaire Pinera, a hard-driving entrepreneur who pioneered credit cards and built LAN Chile into one of Latin America's largest airlines. He has promised to eliminate severe poverty, create 1 million jobs and make Chile "the best country in the world." Allende said the Mapuches deserve just as much attention as the miners. "Chile has a debt with the Mapuches that has been unpaid, not for just 200 years but 500," she said. "This Mapuche issue is bringing to the surface a series of hidden aspects of our culture, which no one wants to show off," said Lagos, the poll director. "It will be violent. It will be hard. It will be surprising to those who see Chile differently, as a peaceful country without ethnic problems, because we've hidden them."
[Associated
Press;
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