To nobody's great surprise, Bolivian President Evo Morales has won a third five-year term by a landslide majority. It's no surprise because Bolivia's gross domestic product (GDP) has tripled since he took office in 2006. The number of people living in poverty has fallen by a quarter, even the poorest now have the right to a pension, and illiteracy has fallen to zero. Of course he won.
What has happened in Bolivia seems as miraculous as what happened in Brazil, where another left-wing president, Luiz Inacio "Lula" da Silva, took office in 2003. The economy started growing at 5 per cent a year, unemployment fell steeply, and some 40 million Brazilians, almost a quarter of the population, were lifted out of poverty. Lula's former chief of staff and successor as president, Dilma Rousseff, is also likely to win another term in office.
Is there some secret they share? Many other South American economies have been growing fast too, but without the dramatic change in the distribution of income that has happened in Brazil and Bolivia. Even the late Hugo Chavez's "Bolivarian revolution" in Venezuela, for all its anti-imperialist rhetoric and despite the country's great oil wealth, has not delivered a comparable transformation in the lives of the poor.
Morales has another claim to fame too. He comes from the poorest of the poor.
"Until I was 14, I had no idea there was such a thing as underwear. I slept in my clothes ... (which) my mother only removed for two reasons: to look for lice or to patch an elbow or a knee," he wrote in his recent autobiography.