Latin America From Independence to the 20th Century - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Latin America From Independence to the 20th Century

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Title: Stages of Economic Development in Latin America Author: Maxwell Cameron Last modified by: Maxwell A. Cameron User Created Date: 1/16/2001 6:57:49 PM – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Latin America From Independence to the 20th Century


1
Latin America From Independence to the 20th
Century
  • Poli332
  • Maxwell A. Cameron
  • Department of Political Science

2
Aftermath of Independence
  • Most Latin American nations experienced a long
    period of instability in the 19th Century.
  • Politics was often dominated by strong-men, or
    caudillos.
  • After 1850s, economic upturn occurred based on
    demand from Europe and North America.

3
Export-Import Growth, 1880s-1930 - A Liberal Era
  • Primary products for European markets
  • Import of manufactured goods
  • Foreign investment
  • Stimulus for development from outside internal
    entrepreneurship weak.
  • European migration encouraged
  • End of the era of caudillos, rise of oligarchic
    states

4
Crisis of Oligarchic States (1900-1930s)
  • Early industrialization, growth and incorporation
    of the working class by parties or the state.
  • Rise of middle sectors
  • Crisis of oligarchic states, rise of reformist
    movements
  • Depression and WWII paradoxical effect on Latin
    America

5
Import-Substitution Industrialization (1930-1960)
  • Rise of ISI following depression, collapse of
    export markets
  • Growth of industrial bourgeoisie and labor
  • Wave of military coups, efforts to coopt labor.
    Collapse of oligarchic states.
  • Expansion of the state and consolidation of
    populist alliances (examples Peronism,
    Cardenas).
  • Rise of CEPAL, dependency theory

6
Horizontal ISI Protecting a Domestic Market
Market open to imports
Expansion of domestic industry
7
Crisis of ISI, 1960s-1970s
  • ISI had numerous problems
  • Structurally incomplete reliance on capital
    goods. The need for deepening.
  • Limits of domestic demand (small markets).
  • Technological requirements labor absorption
    low. Creation of labor aristocracies.
  • Infant industries never grow up inefficient
    industrial plant.
  • Yet Latin America does not follow Asian route
    shift form ISI to export-oriented
    industrialization.
  • Dependency critique

8
Political Crises and Coups
  • Brazil 1964 coup
  • Argentina 1966, 1976 coups
  • Chile 1973 - Pinochet coup
  • Uruguay 1974 - coup
  • Novel attributes shocking levels of repression
    coups occur in modernized (urbanized, educated,
    economically advanced) countries regimes
    professional and institutional.

9
ODonnell Suggests New Theory
  • More industrially advanced countries (Brazil,
    Argentina, Chile, Uruguay, Mexico) all highly
    repressive authoritarian states
  • Medium level of development pacted democracies
    (Colombia and Venezuela)
  • Least developed personalist regimes or military
    rulers, some democracies (eg. other Andes).
    Oligarchies and autocracies (Central America).

10
Classifying Latin America - II
  • Advanced Countries
  • Southern Cone, Brazil, Mexico (BA states)
  • Medium developers
  • Venezuela, Colombia (democratic)
  • Least developed
  • Other Andes, Central America, Caribbean
    (non-democratic)

11
Latin Americas Unique Trajectory of Development
Level of industrial development
Level of Democracy
modernization
12
BA regimes
  • Crisis of ISI seen to be linked to the rise of
    bureaucratic authoritarian regimes
  • Coup-coalition created by perception of threat
  • Anti-political, technocratic and bureaucratic
    character near elimination of political
    activity.
  • Exclusion of the working class and popular
    sectors. Efforts to deactivate labor.
  • Effort to revive growth through transnational
    alliances (with TNCs, reliance on bank lending)

13
Assessment of BA State Theory
  • Illusion of one-to-one links between economic and
    political change.
  • Key concepts that remain an important part of
    regime analysis in contemporary Latin America
  • levels of threat connection with the degree of
    repression
  • exclusion/incorporation
  • technocratic roles and offices
  • BA literature also changed our thinking about the
    classification of cases.
  • Did not anticipate next phase democratization
    and debt

14
Debt Began with Heavy Borrowing in 1970s
  • Recycling of petro-dollars
  • Seemingly strong governments in Latin America
    promoting industrialization
  • Idea of sovereign debt

15
Caught in a Pincer Debt Crisis
  • Commodity (especially oil) prices fell
  • Interest rates rose
  • Mexican default in August 1982
  • An aggravating factor capital flight

16
IMF Washington Consensus
  • Stabilization
  • Monetary policy
  • Exchange rate policy
  • Fiscal policy
  • Structural adjustment
  • Open markets (free trade)
  • Encourage private investment
  • Reduce public sector (deregulation, privatization)

17
The Lost Decade
  • 1970s
  • World 2.68
  • Latin America 3.46
  • 1961-2000
  • World 2.76
  • Latin America 1.78
  • E. Asia 4.96
  • 1980s
  • World 2.29
  • Latin America -0.82
  • E. Asia 5.8

18
Debt Coincided with Democratization
  • Authoritarian coup coalitions collapsed
  • Military not a good manager
  • Business opposition
  • Pressures from below led to liberalization
  • Human rights protest
  • Commitment to elections
  • New democratic leaders

19
Incomplete, pacted democracies
  • Pacts
  • Military vetos (enclaves)
  • Limits on scope for policy reform
  • Continuing power of technocrats

20
The Neoliberal Record
  • Too much portfolio hot capital
  • Persistence of poverty inequality
  • Low growth (1.75 in 1990s)
  • Low employment growth
  • Inflation tamed
  • Fiscal discipline achieved
  • Balance of payments restored
  • Inflow of capital

21
End of 1990s
  • Mixed results of market reforms (neoliberalism)
  • Incomplete democracy
  • Rising dissatisfaction with economic and
    political performance of governments
  • Changes in the international system (end of Cold
    War, 9/11)

22
Current Era Left Turns (1998 - )
  • Shift to the left
  • With macroeconomic stability
  • Social spending, emphasis on poverty
  • Renegotiation of external relations
  • Mobilization of indigenous and unorganized
    sectors a new incorporation phase?
  • Re-founding of republics, constitutional reforms,
    attempts to encourage broader popular
    participation
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