Latin America is attracting increasing interest due to the strong economic performance of the last decade and to the political changes that are taking place. This book gives a unique, comprehensive, and up to date view of Latin America economic development over the two centuries since Independence. It considers Latin American economies within the wider context of the international economy, and covers economic growth, international trade, capital flows, and trends in inequality and human development.
With chapters that cover different eras, it traces the major developments of Latin American countries and offers a novel and coherent interpretation of the economic history of the region. It combines a wealth of original research, new perspectives, and empirical information to provide a synthesis of the growing literature that both complements and extends previous studies.
Foreword
1. Latin America in the World Economy, 1810-2010
2. The Economic History of the Young Independent Republics, 1810-1870
3. Globalization, Institution-building, and Commodity-export-led Growth, c. 1870-1929
4. State-led Industrialization
5. Turning Back to the Market
6. By Way of Conclusion: The History and Challenges of Latin American Development
This well-argued interpretive economic history is reasonably balanced in its assessment of the region's progress and shortcomings... --
Foreign AffairsLuis Bertolais Visiting Professor at Gothenburg University and Editor of the Journal of Iberian and Latin American Economic History Review, and the Montevideo-Oxford Latin American Economic History Database. He is a member of the bureau of the International Economic History Association.
Jose Antonio Ocampois former Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations for Economic and Social Affairs, former Executive Secretary of the UN Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean, and former Ml#"