Title: Economics%20of%20Latin%20America%20
1Economics of Latin America the Caribbean
2LISTING OF LATIN AMERICAN COUNTRIES Argentina
Belize Bolivia Brazil Chile Colombia
Costa Rica Cuba Dominican Republic Ecuador
El Salvador Guatemala Honduras
Mexico Nicaragua Panama Paraguay
Peru Suriname Uruguay Venezuela (other)
French Guiana a colony LISTING OF CARIBBEAN
ISLAND NATIONS Anguilla - Antigua and Barbuda -
Aruba - Bahamas - Barbados - Bermuda - Cayman
Islands - Cuba - Dominica - Dominican Republic -
Grenada - Guadeloupe (French) - Guyana - Haiti -
Jamaica - Martinique (French) - Montserrat -
Netherlands Antilles - Puerto Rico - Saint Kitts
Nevis - Saint Lucia - Saint Vincent
Grenadines - Trinidad and Tobago - Turks and
Caicos Islands - Virgin Islands
3 GDP valuation GDP per Income Poverty Human Environment Quality Annual
based on PPP capita equality Index Development Performance of life economic
Country 2008 Current (PPP) (2001-06) 2005 2008 2008 2005 growth ()
Billions USD 2008 USD Gini index HPI-1 HDI EPI index 2007
Argentina 570.53 14,354.00 51.3 4.1 0.860 (H) 81.8 6.469 8.7
Bolivia 43.45 4,332.00 60.1 13.6 0.723 (M) 64.7 5.492 4.6
Brazil 1,975.90 10,298.00 57 9.7 0.807 (H) 82.7 6.47 5.4
Chile 246.48 14,688.00 54.9 3.7 0.874 (H) 83.4 6.789 5.1
Colombia 402.46 8,336.00 58.6 7.9 0.787 (M) 88.3 6.176 7.7
Costa Rica 48.92 10,832.00 49.8 4.4 0.847 (H) 90.5 6.624 7.3
Cuba N/A N/A N/A 4.7 0.855 (H) 80.7 N/A N/A
Dominican Republic 76.19 8,558.00 51.6 10.5 0.768 (M) 83 5.63 8.5
Ecuador 104.67 7,518.00 53.6 8.7 0.807 (H) 84.4 6.272 2.5
El Salvador 43.89 6,052.00 52.4 15.1 0.747 (M) 77.2 6.164 4.7
Guatemala 66.84 4,899.00 55.1 22.5 0.696 (M) 76.7 5.321 5.7
Haiti 11.68 1,292.00 59.2 59.2 0.521 (M) 60.7 4.09 3.2
Honduras 32.67 4,085.00 53.8 16.5 0.714 (M) 75.4 5.25 6.3
Mexico 1,550.26 14,581.00 46.1 6.8 0.842 (H) 79.8 6.766 3.2
Nicaragua 16.75 2,704.00 43.1 17.9 0.710 (M) 73.4 5.663 3.8
Panama 38.31 11,255.00 56.1 8 0.832 (H) 83.1 6.361 11.5
Paraguay 29.34 4,767.00 58.4 8.8 0.752 (M) 77.7 5.756 6.8
Peru 244.69 8,584.00 52 11.6 0.788 (M) 78.1 6.216 8.9
Uruguay 40.66 12,707.00 44.9 3.5 0.859 (H) 82.3 6.368 7.4
Venezuela 362.77 12,933.00 48.2 8.8 0.826 (H) 80 6.089 8.4
Notes (H) High human development (M) Medium human development Notes (H) High human development (M) Medium human development Notes (H) High human development (M) Medium human development Notes (H) High human development (M) Medium human development
4- Latin America Update (2010)
- In the five years between 2004-2008 Latin
Americas economies grew at an annual average
rate of over 5. - Inflation remained generally low.
- Credit expanded and exports boomed.
- Proportion of people living in poverty fell from
44 in 2002 to 33 in 2008.
- Until the fall of 2008 Latin Americans could
still hope that they would escape the worst of
the downturn. - But in the last three months of 08, Latin
America saw its stock markets crash, currencies
wobble and credit start to dry up. That came on
top of falling exports and the plunge in the
prices of the commodities it sells to the world. - Estimate regional GDP declined 3.6 in 2009.
5- Remittances (money being sent home by Latin
Americans working abroad) has fallen sharply. - Still, the region withstood the global economic
decline better than had been anticipated in 2009,
and is rebounding quickly. - The regional economic powerhouse, Brazil,
continued to see strong inflows of foreign direct
investment even while its economic output
contracted 1.2. - The increase in commodity prices after March of
2009 helped most Latin American countries. - As a whole, the OECD expects Latin American and
the Caribbean to recover modestly in 2010 and
2011, with growth of 2.2 and 3.2 respectively. - Growth in the English speaking Caribbean will be
very weak to begin with, with growth returning to
most of these economies only late 2010/early 2011
(tourism). - Much will depend on what happens with the Global
Economy in general and the US in particular, in
the second half of 2010.
.
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7- Many fear that Latin America will revert to its
dictatorial and populist past that was often
characterized by the seizing of foreign assets
along with fiscal and monetary irresponsibility. - This may be a concern for Venezuela, Bolivia and
Ecuador, but throughout the region democracy has
quickly formed deep roots.
- Results from a October 2009 Latinobarómetro poll
(left) indicates that the countries of Latin
America may not only be diverging economically in
the coming years, but we may witness political
divergence as well. - Most Latin Americans see themselves as
politically moderate, but they retain a yearning
for strong leaders and expect the state to solve
their problems.
8- Latin Americans generally support democracy and
its institutions, although many remain frustrated
by the way their political systems work in
practice (weak rule of law, widespread corruption
and cronyism). - General risks
- Biggest risk in the region is of abandoning the
recent commitment to fiscal and monetary
prudence. - While most of the poorest are nowadays covered
by government cash-transfer programs, those in
the third to the fifth deciles of income
distribution are now at risk of falling back
into, or going deeper into, poverty. - Corruption is still a major obstacleand may
worsen in the short run. - Update on the Caribbean
- On October 15th, 2008 in Barbados, 13 Caribbean
countries approved a new Economic Partnership
Agreement (EPA) with the European Union. - The EPA involves only gradual changes to a
trading relationship which goes back to colonial
days. It grants almost all Caribbean exports
duty-free and quota-free access to Europe. In
return, the Caribbean will phase out duties on
87 of European imports by 2033.
9 Trade between US and Caribbean Countries Trade between US and Caribbean Countries Trade between US and Caribbean Countries
Millions of US (2007) US Exports Nations Imports
Antigua and Barbuda 240 9
Bahamas 2,473 523
Barbados 457 40
Belize 234 113
Dominica 84 2
Grenada 83 9
Guyana 188 147
Jamaica 2,318 789
St. Kitts and Nevis 203 61
St. Lucia 166 36
St. Vincent and Grenadines 69 1
Suriname 306 136
Trinidad and Tobago 1,779 9,342
Dominican Republic 6,091 4,328
Haiti 711 500
Cuba 447 0
Aruba 529 3,070
Bermuda 660 24
Netherlands Antilles 2,082 810
- Until late 2008 these countries have had
one-way access to European market (since 1975
under the Lomé Convention, and its successor, the
Cotonou agreement) - Pattern of trade relations between Europe and
the Caribbean was no longer in synch with the
rules of the WTO. - The agreement will help the Caribbean to develop
new exports, and to rely less on old staples like
bananas and sugar. - US is still the largest trading partner with,
and investor in, the region. - Still, the most dynamic business opportunities
in the coming decade will be between countries in
the region and the EU. - The big story for 2010 may be Cuba.
10CORRUPTION PERCEPTIONS INDEX 2008 CORRUPTION PERCEPTIONS INDEX 2008 CORRUPTION PERCEPTIONS INDEX 2008
country country 2008 CPI
rank country score
109 Argentina 2.9
102 Bolivia 3
80 Brazil 3.5
23 Chile 6.9
70 Colombia 3.8
47 Costa Rica 5.1
65 Cuba 4.3
102 Dominican Republic 3
151 Ecuador 2
67 El Salvador 3.9
96 Guatemala 3.1
177 Haiti 1.4
126 Honduras 2.6
72 Mexico 3.6
134 Nicaragua 2.5
85 Panama 3.4
138 Paraguay 2.4
72 Peru 3.6
23 Uruguay 6.9
158 Venezuela 1.9
Each year, Transparency International draws on
surveys of businessmen and country experts to
gauge perceptions of corruption in 180 countries
around the world. It defines corruption as the
abuse of public office for private gain. This
year, Chad shared the bottom slot with
Bangladesh. Corruption has declined significantly
over the past year in a number of countries,
including France, Hong Kong, Taiwan and
Nigeria. Transparency International
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12- The Puzzle of Latin America Economic Development
Diversity, Trends and Conflict - The nations of Latin American and the Caribbean
are engaged in programs of political and economic
liberalization that may prove as historic as
their struggles for independence from Spain and
Portugal. - After decades of political instability,
corruption, and military dictatorship, many
countries in the region seem to be developing
stable democracies. - Markets long protected from competition are
opening to foreign trade, foreign investment, and
regional cooperation. -
- Issue 1 The Economic Landscape
- Diversity The nations of Latin America are
different from each other in many ways. Many of
them also have a large amount of diversity within
themselves. - Regional trends Changing from a rural to an
urban society, an increase in population, and new
found deposits of natural resources. The
countries have instituted different types of
political structures and domestic policies.
13- The five major issues that confront Latin
American countries today - External Balance
- Credibility
- Distribution
- Sustainability
- Role of the State
- The net effect of the reforms initiated in the
1980s and 1990s may very well result in a
divergence among the nations of Latin America
over the next 25 years. - Those that successfully address these five issues
will see their peoples fortunes rise, while
those that fail will experience sub-par economic
growth and political instability. - The importance of running a consistent balance of
payments surplus gt boost reserve of domestic
financial capital. Role of national savings rate.
14- What is the difference between economic growth
and development? - Authors definition of development a process
of meeting the basic human needs of the
population and enhancing options for the
allocation of economic resources both today and
in the future to increase the choices citizens
have in their daily lives. - UN Millennium Development Goalspgs. 14-15
- Role of technological change the world
technology frontier. - Human Development Index
- Dualism gt the rich become richer and the poor
more destitute in the process of change (without
access to resources, the poor often become
poorer) - the simultaneous existence of modern and
traditional economics. - complicates the policymakers task (must
address the social deficit). - Todaro growth must be accompanied by a
change in the economic and social rules of the
game. - Therefore, economic growth is a necessary, yet
not sufficient, condition for economic
development.
15The Human Development Index (HDI) is an index
combining normalized measures of life expectancy,
literacy, educational attainment, and GDP per
capita for countries worldwide (ranges from 0 to
1 with green being greater than .85, yellow
between .85 and .5 and red below .5)
16- Growth of output must outstrip population growth
to improve the resources available to people. - Tasks of policymakers in designing development
policy - They must establish a delicate balance between
the external sectors and domestic macro policy. - They must be attentive to the changing nature of
the global economic environment as well as
preserve confidence and stability within their
own economies. - To attain equitable growth, they must fashion
policies to target different economic, ethnic,
and gender groups. - Their policies must balance the allocation of
resources between meeting the needs of the
present as well as future generations (i.e.
sustainable development). - Must face the challenge of deciding the extent to
which each state should supplement the activities
of its own markets to facilitate equitable,
sustainable development.
17- Three basic schools of thought Development
Theory - Planning Model
- a. Dependency theory Center vs. Periphery
- 2. Institutionalist Model
- a. Structuralistsasymmetric development
(bottlenecks)an economy also shaped by power and
politics. - b. Heterodox theorya flexible approach
- 3. Orthodox Model
- a. Chicago Schoolgrounded neoclassical
economics - b. Washington Consensus
- c. IMF
18- Issue 2 Historical LegaciesPatterns of Unequal
- Unsustainable Growth
- What were the Spaniards main goal in coming to
the New World? - What kind of social and political system did
they set up? - Difference between peninsulares and creoles?
- Imperial trade restrictions.
- What is the meaning of the terms mercantilism,
monoculture and Dutch Disease? - Agricultural development workers labored on a
debt peonage structure gt the latifundios
(production for the world market the best land
the encomieda system ltrepartida quintogt) and
minifundios (subsistence farming marginal
land). Model of self-sufficiency (feudal concept
of manor). - Why was Brazil overlooked by the Spanish?
- Independence and entry into the world economy
Most nations gained independence in the early
1800s. Followed by a period of turmoil
territorial disputes. In the 1840s, Latin America
began to enter the world trade market, especially
with Great Britain.
19- What was The Golden Age (1870-1914)?
- The Golden Age occurred in Latin America between
1870-1914 and was so called because of the
increased demand for exports, the tremendous
growth in population and new transportation
technology. - Stalled Progress (1914-1930) During this
period, the U.S. replaced Great Britain as the
primary trading partner and investor of Latin
America. Export led growth slowed during this
period because of falling prices and because of
World War I scissors effect Engles Law. - The 1930s (the Great Depression) The main
causes of problems in Latin America were capital
flight, contracting income because of declining
export prices, insular multinationals, lack of
forward and backward linkages from prior
development. - The 1930s was a political watershed period in
Latin America with its "increased social
pressure, numerous strikes, the emergence of
radical parties, and nationalist rhetoric." A new
development model emerges. - Issue 3 Theories, Ideas, and Opinions
- Divergent Opinions The major economic problems
plaguing Latin America are low incomes, unequal
income distribution, periods of hyperinflation,
negative balance of payments and periodic debt
crises.
20- Many of the proposed policies are radical because
the problems are so extreme that it appears minor
changes in policy will not work. - Why is Latin America underdeveloped?
- Dependency theory periphery? center?
- Harsh critics of foreign direct investment and
MNCs . - 2. Mainstream interpretations
- Resource endowmentglobal geography.
- The conventional, mainstream economists say that
underdevelopment is caused by small market size,
slow capital accumulation (low domestic savings),
shortages of foreign exchange, unskilled labor,
and poor political organization (inefficient
public institutions). - Late out of the gate no agricultural revolution,
lack of an investment climate, needed
transportation revolution, imperial opposition,
opposition from within difficult to catch up
from behind. - Three positive effects from foreign direct
investments and MNCs? - Foreign firms bring superior technology.
- Increases competition in the host economy.
- Foreign market access.
21- Concepts to Define Understand at the Beginning
- 1. Comparative advantage - def A nation has a
comparative advantage over a trading partner in
the production of an item if it can produce that
item at a lower unit cost than its partner. - Implications...
- a. Any country can increase its income by
trading, because the world market provides an
opportunity to buy some goods at relative prices
that are lower than those which would prevail at
home in the absence of trade. - b. The smaller the country the greater this
potential gain from trade, but all countries
benefit to some extent. - A country will gain most by exporting commodities
that it produces using its abundant factors of
production most intensively, while importing
those goods whose production would require more
of the scarcer factors of production. - 2. Balance of Payments - Exports (X) Imports
(M) - B of P PxX PmM
- Px vector of prices of exports
- Pm vector of prices of imports
22- Surplus excess of exports over imports
- Deficit excess of imports over exports
- Merchandise trade account, capital account,
reserve account - Engles Law again gt deteriorating terms of
trade over time. - 3. Exchange rates - def The price of one
nation's monetary unit in terms of the monetary
unit of another country. - - Foreign exchange market A market in which
buyers and sellers of bank deposits denominated
in the monetary unit of many nations exchange
their funds. - - Exchange rates can be allowed to fluctuate
freely, can be "managed" or can be pegged to the
currency of a major trading partner. - gt Graph (500p1 or 1p.002)
- Demand side - People who want to import Chilean
goods, or travel in Chile, or others who just
want to hold pesos. - When North Americans demand more Chilean
vegetables, copper, wine, or whatever, (D curve
shifts right) the price of the peso will rise in
terms of dollars.
23Supply side - those who want to import goods into
Chile from the United States or hold . (1) When
Chileans demand more US cars or computers (S
curve shifts right) the price (in ) of the
Chilean peso will tend to decline (S of peso
shifts r). Appreciation and depreciation of a
currency When country A's currency becomes more
valuable relative to country B's, country A's
currency is said to appreciate relative to that
of country B and country B's currency is said
to depreciate relative to that of country
A. Determinants of Exchange Rates 1. What
determines the relative positions of SD curves
for currency? (a) Relative price levels -
constantly changing (inflation) (b) Relative
rates of growth (c) Relative interest - rate
levels (d) Expectations/Speculation Example of
Argentina
24- (e) Random daily trade and financial flowsnoise
(3.8 trillion per day) - Note Market exchange rates vs. PPP rates
(purchasing power parity). - 4. Domestic Absorption (A) The national
expenditures on both home-produced goods and
imports. - - Not equal to B of P...
- If AgtGDP gt trade deficit
- If AltGDP gt trade surplus
- How does a nation pay for domestic consumption
(absorption) above and beyond GDP? gt Draw down
domestic savings, sell domestic assets and/or
borrow from abroad (increase external debt). - 5. Import Substitution Industrialization
development strategy - The substitution of
domestic production for imports of foreign
manufactures. - Was first explored by Latin American countries
when their primary exports markets were severely
disrupted, first by the Great Depression of the
1930s and subsequently by the breakdown of
commercial shipping during World War II. - What are forward and backward linkages?
25The Big Mac Index (7/2009) The Big Mac index is
based on the theory of purchasing-power parity.
Under PPP, exchange rates should adjust to
equalize the price of a common basket of goods
and services across countries. Our basket is the
Big Mac. Video Clip
26- - Emerging from the war with fledgling
industries, countries like Argentina, Brazil,
Columbia, and Mexico began systematically to
sustain these manufactures by erecting tariffs
and other barriers to trade-competing imports
from the US. - Latin America developed import substitution
regimes with a multitude of protective techniques
that were later emulated by other developing
countries. - Conditions for success
- (1) Identify large domestic markets, as indicated
by substantial imports over the years. - (2) Ensure that the technologies of production
can be mastered by local manufacturers or that
foreign investors are willing to supply
technology, management, and capital (joint
ventures). - (3) Erect protective barriers - Either tariffs or
quotas on imports, to overcome the probably high
initial cost of local production and make it
profitable for potential investors in the target
industries (infant industry argument). - First targets gt Consumer goods industries
(processed foods, beverages, textiles, clothing,
and footwear) have technologies easily obtained
and mastered by domestic producers.
27- (4) Keep an overvalued exchange rate gt Imports
are cheap (intermediate inputs are cheap) and
exports are expensive to foreigners (reduced
dependence of foreign markets for economic
well-being Foreigners just won't buy your
products). -
- (5) SOEs and why? Key industries vs. natural
resources (p. 62). -
- (6) Role of MNCs? Subject to restrictions (p.
67). - Marked change in national economic policy began
in the 1950s - Following the end of the WWII, most Latin
American governments formulated clear policies to
foster "import-substituting industrialization". - - Governments improved the region's transport
system and expanded the infrastructure for
electricity and water. - - Governments helped finance local industry and
welcomed foreign corporations willing to
establish factories in certain industries.
28 - Still the strategy failed to resolve the Latin
American tendency to import more than it could
export. - In fact the import strategy
contributed to the problem because the new
factories were dependent on foreign suppliers for
machines, spare parts and intermediate
products. - As the policy ran its course,
domestic markets became exhausted... if economic
growth was to be sustained at home, then foreign
debts had to be incurred (keep political
promises). (4) Eventually, many developing
nations faced a breakdown (run out of loans and
must reduce exchange rates). - When this
occurred the wealthy and powerful were the first
to know domestic currency will exchange into a
larger number of foreign currency per unit.
Economic reality gt the national currency must
depreciate gt Capital flight Causes the domestic
currency to depreciate rapidly. In other words
this strategy ended with a crisis. - Devaluation
typically reduces imports and increases exports
but in the import trade strategy environment, the
dependency on imported goods made the demand for
foreign goods inelastic gt imports did not fall
yet became more expensive to obtain. - Also,
reducing imports would mean reduced employment
(populist politicians would not accept) gt net
result worsening of the balance of
payments/foreign exchange problems.
29- a Government felt compelled to borrow as much
as possible from external sources (plus to print
money to pay their domestic bills). - (5) In addition, levels of efficiency in the new
industrial plants were sometimes rather low due
to limited size of the home market. - Many producers used technology designed to
produce high volumes of output (higher than Latin
American countries could support) - Many firms operated at capacity levels below
50! - (6) Under the ISI regimes governments introduced
productive tariffs and quotas (or total ban on
certain imports) to protect domestic producers
and in some instances domestic producers had
monopoly status gt little incentive to improve
management or labor practices so the prices of
local manufactures rose well above international
prices. - a Also, very powerful domestic interests
resisted dismantling tariffs and quotas that
protected their favored status.
30(7) Next, the rate of job creation was much lower
than had been hoped for - largely because of
the rapid growth of the labor force (from both
urban migration and high rates of population
increase). - Also, the problem was made worse
because the technology incorporated in domestic
industry was often capital-intensive even though
more labor-intensive techniques were
available. (8) Finally, the import-substitution
strategy and associated domestic growth was
bound to slow down eventually because of small
markets without hope of exports (due to
overvalued exchange rate). but it worked for a
while (5.5 growth 1950 1980) 6. Export
oriented trade policy development strategy
(outward looking trade strategy or the
neoliberal agenda) - Allows a nation to
realize, as fully as possible, the inherent gains
from their comparative advantage through free
markets. - Often means primary-export-led
growth (drawbacks volatile price swingsand
limited revenue upside due to Engels Law). -
Starting in the 1960s there were the beginnings
of an intellectual return to free trade thinking
and attempts were made to encourage Latin
American countries to export more to the
developed countries.
31- Stimulus here was the budding success of the
Asian Tigers or NICs (Newly Industrialized
Countries Hong Kong, Korea, Singapore and
Taiwan) who were successfully penetrating MDNs
(More Developed Nations) markets. - Encouraged
by the advice of the World Bank, several
governments including those of Brazil and
Colombia began to reduce levels of domestic
protection and to give incentives to export
producers. a By 1970 this had become an
accepted way of sustaining industrial
expansion. Conditions for Success (1) Maintain
an exchange rate that helps make it profitable
for domestic producers to sell their crops,
manufactures, and services on world markets. The
lower the exchange rates, the more desirable the
nations products will be to foreigners. As
exchange rate decreases gt exports rise while
imports fall gt goal to get nation to run a
balance of payments surplus gt give them foreign
currency to service and reduce external
debt. (2) It may be necessary to subsidize some
exports to induce manufacturers and farmers to
invest in capacity for the export market (infant
industry argument again).
32-
- (3) If governments want producers to turn towards
world markets, they must reduce the relative
attractiveness of production for the domestic
markets gt reduce high protective tariffs for
favored industries, eliminate quotas on imports
and reduce regulations. -
- Hyperinflation - Inflation (absolute increase in
price level) at very high rates of usually 200
percent or more prevailing for at least one year
(table on page 108). - Caused by one factorgovernment printing too
much money to pay its bills (Seniorageor,
quantitative easing). - Why is it bad?
- A. Uncertainty and therefore higher risk gt less
investment (both from domestic and international
sources). Induces the outflow of financial
capital and reduces FDI. The poor flee to
dollars. - B. Functions of money destroyed... store of
value, unit of accounting, unit of exchange. - No lubricant to machinery of economy gt
frictiongt slows down (people revert to barter). - C. Encourages speculation... Diverts effort away
from production.
33D. But why do it? Effectively a tax without
increasing official tax rates government uses
money right after it is printed thereby using it
when it has the greatest purchasing power...
those who receive it later have reduced
purchasing power therefore have transferred,
unknowingly, some of the purchasing power which
would have been theirs to the government
(inflation tax). especially impacts the
poor. it is not understood, so most citizens
dont blame government. E. Solution... New
currency or abandon currency (...El Salvador and
Ecuador have done plus the US accepted almost
everywhere). 8. The International Monetary Fund
(IMF) What is it? - International role of IMF is
to extend emergency credit (Short Term!) to
member nations who get in trouble. - Criticsgt
IMF tool of MDNs lying in wait to get control of
the nation's economic policies and reshape them
in a monetarist, market oriented, conservative
model. - Problem Has had a standard package
that includes 1 Monetary Fiscal restraint.
34 Monetary restraint reduces domestic demand and
reins in inflation (also ties politicians hands
so they cant use seniorage). Government
spending reduced (reduce size and involvement of
government). Create fiscal prudence by bringing
the federal budget in balance. 2 Currency
Devaluation Goal Reduce excess demand and to
reorient the structure of national production
away from imports and toward exports (with low
import content a comparative advantage often
focused on labor intensive manufactured goods and
primary products). also reduces appeal of
capital flight. 3 Cut subsidies and other
trade impediments (tariffs, quotas, rules
regulations) gt open up economy to global market
forces. 4 Limit on wage rate increases in
countries with high inflation there are also
price controls to help break inflation psychology
structural inflation Argentina, Brazil and
Peru. 5 Overhaul tax structure to reduce
loopholes for wealthy and to make more efficient.
Note Theres been little progress on this one.
35- - All subject to periodic review If they
haven't followed guidelines they lose additional
funding or must accept and even more stringent
set of guidelines. - gt funding is received in installments over
period of the loan. - Capital flight A rapid and massive conversion of
domestic currency for that of a major
international reserve currency and movement of
that reserve currency out of the country to an
off-shore financial haven. - - When devaluation is about to occur, the
wealthy and powerful are the first to know. - - The overvalued exchange rate means that just
before crisis point the domestic currency will
exchange into a larger number of foreign currency
per unit. - - Economic reality gt the national currency must
depreciate gt capital flight helps to depreciate
the domestic currency rapidly in a short period
of time (depletion of reserve account). - - This often creates volatile financial markets,
increases risk, increases interest rates, social
unrest and reduces economic growth. - - It is also followed by a period of inflation
( actually stagflation). - - Psychology imbedded in wealthy Latin culture
to have one financial foot in and one financial
foot out of home country (keep a house and bank
account in Miami).
36- Evaluating and Comparing Economies
- Need some definitions before we go on...
- Institution Institutions are rules of the
society that structure the interaction among
people. - - Are made up of formal rules and regulations.
- - And informal rules as well at times (important
in LA!). - - They are the informed ways by which people deal
with each other every day ? norms of behavior. - - Institutions, collectively, are the framework
within which all of human interaction...
political, social and economic... takes place. - Economy The economy of a society is comprised of
institutions that perform economic functions.
These institutions are structured and behave
according to established working rules. - Philosophical Basis for an Economy A viewpoint
which specifies the place of an individual within
society an ideal state of political, social and
economic reality to serve as a set of ultimate
goals for society and a general program
suggesting broad policy measures that will guide
society from its actual conditions toward the
ideal reality. This economic philosophy will be
multidimensional in the sense that social,
political, and cultural, as well as economic
elements are contained therein.
371. Capitalism ? Adam Smith - dominance of "the
invisible hand" in guiding economic activity.
Limited role of government (provide public goods
and define the rules of the game). A process
ideology. B. Institutional Economics 1. While
there is no hierarchy of importance in the tenets
of institutional economics, one of the most
important for our purposes is that... a
Economies are fluid rather than static. b The
second tenet is that one can understand an
economy only within its historical context. -
The constellation of factors shaping an economy
is unique. - A corollary to this tenet is that
what might work for one nation might not work
for some other due to historical
inconsistencies. c Third, the values of a
nation's people can be understood best by
studying the philosophical/religious
underpinnings of its culture. - Old and new
philosophies alter attitudes that may
subsequently lead to a change in work rules and
therefore institutions.
38 d A fourth general tenet is that the values,
institutions and work rules which operate in one
nation will not necessarily function in another
nation. - A corollary tenet is that values,
institutions and work rules which functioned in
the past may not function in the future. G. C.
Allen "One of the most common fallacies in the
minds of academics, or the citizenry of a nation,
is that once a trend is established it will
persist indefinitely." e Finally, the basic
structure and performance of an economy are
influenced by the dynamics of the society's
social and political structure. 4. This broad
theory is based upon the interrelationship
between a society's beliefs, power structures,
and working rules of institutions. a The
theory can be used to explain the nature and
evolution of economic systems. b Changes in
working rules can modify institutions or create
new ones, with the economy evolving in the
process. c The philosophical basis accepted by
authorities and the economy's performance
determines whether the working rules are
retained, modified, or replaced.
39- 5. Working rules...
- - Establish the boundaries of economic activity
between institutions. - 6. Principal institutions...
- - Socially determined not inherent.
- a Instrumental in establishing and coordinating
most production and distribution patterns of
behavior, and giving meaning and durability to
routine activities. - b Significant features Origin, the activities
participants perform, working rules governing
them, their impact on the economy, and the
philosophical basis for these activities and
rules. - 7. Behavior of the economy...
- - Three components How it is organized to
resolve the economic problem(s) (what, when, how,
for whom), institutional change, and performance. - In describing how each society is organized to
resolve its economic problem, three questions
need to be addressed
401. How is the resource allocation decision
organized... a Centralized (state control) or
decentralized (markets) or some combination.
Decision making rules and institutions. 2. What
are the rules regarding ownership and control
over productive resources? - In each economy the
rules differ...even where similar, differing
restrictions exist. 3. What type of social
process has been adopted for coordinating
information and for making production and
distribution decisions? - Including markets,
traditional mechanism, or some form of economic
planning. II. Evaluating and Comparing
Economies - The performance of an economy is
influenced by goals and priorities established by
authorities and by environmental factors such as
technology, natural resource endowment, and
international economic and political factors...
all interrelate.
41- How the economy performs, relative to stated
goals and priorities (prevailing norm), determine
which other economic, social or political
policies are necessary. - Evaluating and
comparing economies cannot be purely
objective. Conclusions influenced by the
analysts point of view... the comparors
norm. A. Evaluating the performance of an
economy... 1. An economy's performance can be
defined in many ways, depending upon the
performance criteria, methods of measurement and
weights attached to each criterion when overall
performance is calculated (the performance
index). - The choice of criteria is up to the
analyst (you!). 2. Four steps to follow a. The
analysts definition of performance. b. The
identification of performance criteria. c. The
choice of performance indicators for each
criterion.
42- d. The compilation of a performance index for
cross-comparisons. - Includes weighting - must be made explicit
(you will not be expected to do this) - e. Need for a benchmark country.
- 3. Criterion examples
- Economic growth (change in GDP or GDP per
capita) - Economic stability (low inflation, stable
exchange rate, low unemployment, lack of
deficits, etc.) - International balance of trade, external debt,
and currency values - Income distribution... Lorenz Curve (Gini
Coefficient) - World Atlas of Income Inequality
- Quality of life e.g. Human Development Index
(United Nations) - other indices Corruption, Competitiveness,
Economic Freedom
43Approach in writing a course paper on a country
(ideal) Mexico 1. Introduction. Start with
overview of country/issue plus some current
statistics.
44- Population 108.7 m (2007)
- Population growth 1.2 (average, 2003-2007)
- Land area 1.9m sq km (about three times the
size of Texas) - Currency Mexican peso (Ps) 12.95 pesos to the
dollar (Feb. 2010) - GDP US bn market exchange rate
893.4 US bn purchasing power parity
1,345.8 - GDP growth 3.3 (average, 2003-2007)
- GDP per head GDP per head (US market
exchange rate) 8,219 - GDP per head (US purchasing power parity)
12,381 - Inflation 4.2 (average, 2003-2007)
45- BackgroundMexico was ruled by the Partido
Revolucionario Institucional (PRI) and its
predecessor, the Partido Revolucionario Nacional
(PRN), between 1929 and 2000. Once strongly
nationalist and interventionist, the leaders of
PRI governments in the 1990s embraced free-market
policies and economic liberalization. Following
the victory in July 2000 of Vicente Fox Quesada,
the presidential candidate of the centre-right
party, the Partido Acción Nacional (PAN), changes
to the political system are slowly taking place.
The PRI remained the largest party in Congress
during the Fox years, but it became less
enthusiastic about free-market policies. Current
president Felipe Calderon (PAN). - Political structureThe political system is
presidential, bicameral (Senate and Chamber of
Deputies) and federal (32 states). The president
is elected every six years Mr. Calderon took
office in December 2006. The 500 members of the
Chamber of Deputies are elected every three
years, 300 from single-member districts and 200
by proportional representation. Three-quarters of
Senate members are elected directly for a
six-year term with the remaining one-quarter
elected by proportional representation.
46Key indicators Forecasts 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012
Real GDP growth () 3.3 2.3 1.6 3.4 3.8 3.6
Consumer price inflation () 4 5.2 5.2 3.6 3.4 3.3
Commercial banks' prime rate (av ) 7.6 8.3 8.5 7.1 7.4 7.4
Current-account balance ( of GDP) -0.6 -1.1 -1.2 -1.5 -1.6 -1.4
Major exports 2007 of total Major imports 2007 of total
Manufactures 80.7 Intermediate goods 72.9
Maquiladora 44.7 Maquiladora 34.2
Oil 15.8 Consumer goods 14.8
Agricultural products 2.8 Capital goods 12.3
Leading markets 2007 of total Leading suppliers 2007 of total
US 82.1 US 49.6
Canada 2.4 South Korea 10.5
Spain 1.5 China 5.8
Germany 1.3 Japan 4.
47- 2. History be brief.
- - philosophical basis (prevailing norm)
- - identify principal institutions in the social,
political and economic spheres - - discuss notable working rules of these
institutions - 3. Methodology (more on this below) Explicitly
state your comparors norm contrast with
prevailing norm. Define your performance
criteria, consistent with your comparors norm,
and provide the data on your chosen country/issue
and your benchmark country. - 4. Behavior/Analysis of economy (recent).
- 5. Evaluation from point of view of your
performance criteriabenchmark country for
comparison. - 6. Conclusion
- - what can you now say about this country/issue?
- do some forecasting where are things going
from here? - 7. Footnote/Endnotes
48- I have already chosen Mexico as my primary
country - My benchmark country will be Argentina.
- Comparors norm I think the standard of living
is important and strongly correlated with good
social indicators (healthy diet, access to health
care, good sanitation, access to education,
etc.). Since inflation has been a problem in the
pastand can devastate purchasing powerthat
stable, relatively low inflation is a must to
maintain a productive economic environment.
Finally, to compete in the global economy I think
access to technology is crucial for the people. - Performance criteria The amount of income per
person in real dollar/peso terms will measure
standard of living. The change in national prices
each year will measure inflation. Finally, the
availability and spread of advance technology
will lead to the ability to compete in the global
marketplace. - Performance indicators
- 1. Inflation, GDP deflator (annual )
- 2. GNI per capita, PPP (current international )
- 3. Fixed line and mobile phone subscribers (per
1,000 people)
49 Year Mexico (Inflation GDP deflator) Mexico (Percent change from previous year) Argentina (Inflation GDP deflator) Argentina (Percent change from previous year)
1995 37.87 --- 3.17 ---
1996 30.74 -18.83 -0.05 -101.66
1997 17.69 -42.47 -0.46 784.99
1998 15.39 -13.02 -1.71 267.53
1999 15.09 -1.91 -1.84 7.70
2000 12.10 -19.80 1.04 -156.48
2001 5.88 -51.43 -1.10 -205.64
2002 6.96 18.34 30.56 -2888.45
2003 8.49 21.98 10.50 -65.65
2004 6.10 -28.09 9.19 -12.48
2005 8.80 44.22 5.50 -40.13
2006 13.50 53.41 4.40 -20.00
2007 14.10 4.44 3.20 -27.27
Mexican Inflation in Comparison to Argentina's
Mexican Inflation in Comparison to Argentina's
50 Comparison to Argentina's Comparison to Argentina's Comparison to Argentina's
Year Mexico (per capita GNI) Mexico (Percent change from previous year) Argentina (per capita GNI) Argentina (Percent change from previous year)
1995 6,690.81 --- 10,178.24 ---
1996 7,058.22 5.49 10,811.49 6.22
1997 7,551.75 6.99 11,742.87 8.61
1998 7,898.89 4.60 12,189.31 3.80
1999 8,208.48 3.92 11,815.08 -3.07
2000 8,815.06 7.39 11,850.38 0.30
2001 8,885.24 0.80 11,482.92 -3.10
2002 8,976.73 1.03 10,299.60 -10.31
2003 9,136.73 1.78 11,306.55 9.78
2004 9,644.73 5.56 12,525.94 10.78
2005 10,420.00 8.04 11,180.00 -10.75
2006 11,670.00 12.00 11,970.00 7.07
2007 12,990.00 11.31 12,580.00 5.10
Mexican Gross National Income per capita (in
current international dollars PPP)
51 ...in Comparison to Argentina's ...in Comparison to Argentina's ...in Comparison to Argentina's
Year Mexico (Fixed line and mobile) Mexico (Percent change from previous year) Argentina (Fixed line and moblile) Argentina (Percent change from previous year)
1995 104 --- 171 ---
1996 106 2.18 193 12.55
1997 117 10.03 236 22.75
1998 139 19.07 273 15.41
1999 193 38.60 323 18.35
2000 270 39.54 390 20.68
2001 358 32.63 399 2.36
2002 406 13.47 379 -4.96
2003 454 11.87 433 14.12
2004 545 19.98 579 33.75
2005 820 50.58 650 12.29
2006 1050 28.05 740 13.85
2007 1260 20.00 840 13.51
Mexican fixed line and mobile phone subscribers
(per 1000 people)
52- Mexico (United Mexican States)
- Capital Mexico City 8.5 million people.
- Ethnic makeup 60 mestizo, 30 amarindian, 9
white, 1 others. - Much of Mexico's territory is vulnerable to
earthquakes and volcanic activity. In 1943, for
example, a cornfield in one of Mexico's richest
agricultural zones sprouted a volcano instead of
maize. In 1982, a severe volcanic eruption in the
south took several hundred lives, destroyed
thousands of head of livestock, and buried crops
under tons of ash. Thousands of people died when
a series of earthquakes struck Mexico City in
1985. - Mexico is a nation of climatic extremes.
Much-needed rains often fall so hard that most of
the water runs off before it can be absorbed by
the soil. When rains fail to materialize, crops
die in the fields. The harsh face of the land,
the unavailability of water, and erosion limit
the agricultural potential of Mexico. Only 10 to
15 percent of Mexico's land can be planted with
crops.
53- Mexico's central region has the best crop-land.
It was here that the Aztecs built their capital
city, the foundations of which lie beneath the
current Mexican capital, Mexico City. - For decades, Mexico City has acted as a magnet
for rural poor who have given up attempts to eke
out a living from the soil. - - The size and location of Mexico City have
spawned awesome problems (the worst smog in the
Western Hemisphere, traffic congestion is among
the worst in the world, essential public
servicesincluding the provision of drinkable
water, electricity, and sewershave failed to
keep pace with the city's growth in population).
- Mass communication has had an incalculable
impact on culture. - Television commercials
primarily use models who are ethnically European
in appearancepreferably white, blue- eyed, and
blonde. As if in defiance of the overwhelmingly
mestizo character of the population (success has
become associated with light skin). - - Television, however, has helped to educate the
illiterate Some Mexican soap operas, for
instance, incorporate educational materials.
54- Literacy is portrayed as being essential to one's
success and well-being. - Compadrazgo ("co-godparenthood" or
"sponsorship") is found at all levels of Mexican
society and in both rural and urban areas. - - It is a device for building economic and
social alliances that are more enduring than
simple friendship. Furthermore, it has a
religious dimension as well as a secular, or
everyday, application (informal rules of
society). - - The chaos of city life, the hundreds of
thousands of migrants uprooted from rural
settings, and the sense of isolation and
alienation common to city dwellers the world
over are in part eased by the Hispanic
institution of compadrazgo. - - Compadrazgo performs many functions, including
providing assistance from the more powerful to
the less powerful and, reciprocally, providing
homage from the less powerful to the more
powerful (reaches across class lines and knits
the various strands of Mexican society
together).
55- As Mexico City has sprawled ever wider across
the landscape, multitudes of new neighborhoods
have been created. Many are the result of
well-planned land seizures, orchestrated by
groups of people attracted by the promise of the
city. - - Technically, such land seizures are illegal
and a primary goal of the colonos (inhabitants
of these low-income communities) is
legitimization and consequent community
participation. - - Beginning in the 1970s, colonos pursued their
demands for legitimization through protest
movements and demonstrations, some of which
revealed a surprising degree of radicalism. - - In response, the Mexican government adopted a
two-track policy It selectively repressed the
best-organized and most radical groups of
colonos, and it tried to co-opt the remainder
through negotiation. In the early 1980s, the
government created "Citizen Representation"
bodies, official channels within Mexico City
through which colonos could participate.
56- The Border
- Driven by poverty, unemployment and lack of
opportunity many Mexicans have chosen the United
States as the place to improve their lives (2009
estimated at 8.8 million). - During WWII the presidents of both nations
agreed to allow Mexican workers, called braceros,
to enter the US as agricultural workers. - Regardless, each year hundreds of thousands of
undocumented Mexicans illegally cross the border
in search of work (estimated at 4 to 6 million
at any given time). - For the Mexican government this is a blessing
since such mass emigration is a sociopolitical
safety valve and results in an inflow of dollars
sent home by workers (remittances). - Still, the US has attempted to stem the flow by
negotiating treaties so that US companies and
Mexican states along the border would profit from
the creation of assembly plants (maquiladoras). - Low wages and lax labor and environmental law
enforcement has resulted in US firms gaining
profits while the Mexican government reaps the
benefits of employment and tax dollars.
57- Mexicos Stability
- Depends on the ability of the ruling elite to
maintain a state of relative equilibrium among
the multiplicity of interests and demands within
the nationand to reign in the drug gangs. - Process characterized by bargaining among elites
with various views of politics, social injustice,
economic policy, and the conduct of foreign
relations. - The 1910 Revolution (1910-1917) resulted in the
Mexican Constitution A remarkable document in
that it covers not only political rights but
economic rights as well (e.g. 8-hour work day,
minimum wage, 6-week paid leave for pregnant
women, etc.) - Unfortunately, many of the provisions of the
1917 Constitution have yet to be achieved. - Indian problem they have long endured the
unequal practices of a ruling white and mestizo
elite. - Land reform focus of struggle and occasion for
serious human rights abuses. - Drug gangsorganized, wealthy, powerful and
violent.
58- Even today, paramilitary bands and local police
controlled by political bosses or landowners
routinely threaten and/or kill peasant activists.
The further south you go in the country, the more
acute this problem (Chiapas Oaxaca). - Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI)
controlled the federal government from 1929 to
2000 and set policy and controlled all levers of
political power. - Paternalistic and all-powerful, the state
controlled the bureaucracies that directed the
labor unions (powerful), peasant organizations,
student groups, and virtually every other
dimension of organized society. - Even though the PRI lost the presidency in 2000,
it remains the most powerful political party. - The PRI lost power because a series of economic
crises alienated the upwardly mobile
middle-class. - In 2000 Vicente Fox headed a coalition of
parties that adopted the name Alliance for Change
and promised Mexicos electorate Revolution of
Hope he promised to be a citizen president.
59- Economic Crisis
- In the 1970s the PRI undertook economic
policies designed to foster rapid and sustained
economic growth (import substitution). - Borrowed heavily to fund and achieved economic
growth of 8. - Backed by its vast deposits of petroleum, the
PRI recklessly borrowed to expand its economic
infrastructure. - Petroleum prices plunged in 1981-82 debt
crisis. By the end of 1982 40 of Mexicos export
earnings were devoured in interest payments on a
debt of 80bil. - IMF set as a condition for emergency funding a
drastic reduction in state spending ? layoffs,
reduced spending on social welfare programs.
Devastated the poor and reduced the standard of
living of the middle class. - In December 1994 the economy collapsed after the
government could no longer sustain an overvalued
peso. - The peso fell 50, while the stock market fell
38. Ushered in another round of public austerity
(Pres. Zedillo) and was the final ingredient in
bringing down the PRI.
60- US engineered a bailout by backing (attached
loan guarantees Brady bonds) a new issuance of
Mexican government bonds. - NAFTA (1992) hope was that it would shore up
the Mexican economy and generate jobs. It has for
Mexico so that now Mexico is the third largest
trading partner of the US. A new trade agreement
between Mexico and the EU signed in 2000. - Resulted in the globalization of Mexico.
- Analysts have noted that NAFTA has contributed
to a trend toward more representative government
and that globalization has undercut the
state-centered regime of the PRI. - Still, there are far to many Mexicans who live
below the poverty level. Of the 40 million poor,
18 million are characterized as living in
extreme poverty (less than 2 a day). - Income distribution is skewed with the richest
20 in control of 58 of the nations wealth
while the poorest 20 control only 4. - Questions on Mexico?
61- Chapter 4 Latin Americas Debt Crisis The
Limits of External Financing - The debt crisis in Latin America was a
development crisis. - The reasons for a debt crisis include
- A chronic deficit in the non-interest current
account balance. - A rise of import costs or a decrease in export
earnings. - World capital markets lose confidence capital
inflows dry up. -
- Borrowing is not necessarily bad (investment vs.
current consumption). - Definition of a Debt Crises A debt crisis arises
when countries fail to meet their interest and/or
principal payments. -
- There are three ways to service national debt
- First, the non-interest current account can be
brought into a surplus balance. - Obtain newly borrowed money from international
sources in order to cover old debts. - Other capital inflows such as from foreign
direct investment. - Note Overvalued exchange rates and capital
flight contribute to debt crises. - ? Over-invoicing of imports and under-invoicing
of exports? - Causes foreign asset accumulation but goes
into black market.
62- The 1980s Debt Crisis
- Gradual failure of ISI policies during late 60s
and early 70sgt need for external money to
support. - Yom Kipper war gt OPEC raises price of oil gt
stagflation in developed countries gt OPEC money
floods Eurocurrency market gt growth looked
relatively good in Latin America because of ISI
insulation gt money flowed in from Europe gt
feeding virtuous cycle of growth. - US Federal Reserve acted to stop inflation (80
81) gt drained money from US system gt caused
interest rates to skyrocket gt US economy went
into a sharp contraction gt Latin exports to US
tumbled gt balance of payments quickly
deteriorated and economies stalled. - Currency overvaluation and capital flight during
1978-1982 contributed to the debt crisis. - Mexico 1982 (OPEC loses controloil prices
drop). - ? Brazil, Argentina and Venezuela got into
similar trouble shortly thereafter. - ? A sovereign guarantee
- ? external debt to exports or debt service to
export ratio (table 4.6) - ? Other terminology in box on page 90.
63- Many nations were unable to sustain positive net
exports and struggled under the dead weight of
ISI gt political and economic inertia gt The Lost
Decade - Debt Crisis Management
- What was "the muddling-through strategy?
- Assumed that debtors would regain their
credit-worthiness with a combination of internal
adjustment and more favorable world economic
conditions. - Assumes problem is a liquidity not a structural
problem. - Wrong! Led to depressed living conditions,
hyperinflation, sharply reduced investment, and
reduced long term growth rates. - What is conditionality?
- Debt-equity swaps.
- Debt for nature swaps.
- Buybacks of debt.
- Debt facilities organized by creditor governments
(Paris Club). - Relief on interest payments rather than principle.
64- 7. Provisioning increased private financial
sector set aside profits before dividend payments
against risky loans (protects capital base in
case of client default). - 8. Development of secondary market for developing
country debt (Mexico ? .51 on each dollar of
outstanding debt Peru (1987) ? .02 to .07 to
the 1) - 9. The Baker Plan (October, 1985)
- Plan to jump-start regional growth.
- Premise countries in region could not repay
external debts in the context of contractionary
policies (IMF conditionality). Plan was to shift
debt crisis policy from austerity to growth. - Targeted 15 LDCs for 29 billion of new money
(20 from banks and 9 from IMF/World Bank). - Was a formal recognition that the problems were
structural rather than of a liquidity nature ?
caused policy shift at IMF to tie future loans to
growth targets. - Still, it was too little too late money spread
too thinly to have major impact (almost 1
trillion of debt involved).
65- 9. The Brady Plan first proposed in 1985 but
didnt get underway until 1989. - Asked banks to forgive part of their loans to
debtor countries in exchange for limited
guarantees of repayment of remaining outstanding
debt. - Three options
- 1 decrease face value of debt (sanctioned
buy-back in secondary markets) - 2