Fewer Poor, More Resilient, But a Long Way to Go: The Last 20 Years in Latin America

 

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Dettagli Bibliografici
Autore: Rodríguez Echeverría, Miguel Ángel
Natura: artículo original
Status:Versión publicada
Data di pubblicazione:2008
Descrizione:The external debt crisis suffered by Latin America at the end of the 1970's implied an end to dominance of industrialization by import substitution with its protectionist, planning, and overly-regulatory policies. In the years after that, and especially in the 1990s, the region embarked on a broad set of reforms designed to reduce state intervention and let markets operate more freely, the so called Washington Consensus. The lack of growth and very limited progress in poverty reduction produced widespread disenchantment with those policies and even with democracy. The positive economic experience in the region in the last years, however, calls for a reevaluation of this view: the reforms of the eighties and nineties have allowed Latin American countries to grow at higher rates than those of the developed nations, have made us more resilient to foreign shocks and economically and politically facilitate the maintenance of growth.
Stato:Portal de Revistas UCR
Istituzione:Universidad de Costa Rica
Repositorio:Portal de Revistas UCR
Lingua:Español
OAI Identifier:oai:portal.revistas.ucr.ac.cr:article/9321
Accesso online:https://revistas.ucr.ac.cr/index.php/reconomicas/article/view/9321
Keyword:Crecimiento
Pobreza
Política Económica
Consenso De Washington
Proteccionismo
Apertura
Desencanto
Resistencia A Los Shocks
Gasto Y Deuda Públicos
Estado Y Mercado
Growth
Poverty
Economic Policy
Washington Consensus
Protectionism
Openness
Disenchantment
Shock Resilient
Public Expenditure And Debt
State And Market