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(note: the results of the election were very close, Calderon won with 36.38% of ... (PRD), has refused to accept the results and this has led to several large ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Class


1
Class 11-12 Mexico
  • Single-party development
  • Corporatism and clientelism
  • Import substitution, industrialization and
    challenges to modernization
  • Debt crisis and its implications
  • International influence on domestic politics and
    development.

2
Structure of Mexico's Government
  • Head of State/Head of Government President
    Felipe Calderon, National Action Party (PAN).
  • (note the results of the election were very
    close, Calderon won with 36.38 of the vote, less
    than a 1 victory over the second place
    candidate. His main opponent Andres Manuel Lopez
    Obrador, Party of Democratic Revolution (PRD),
    has refused to accept the results and this has
    led to several large protests.)

3
President
  • Head of State, Head of Government, and
    Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces.
  • Formal powers --
  • Initiate legislation
  • Lead in foreign policy
  • Create government agencies
  • Make policy through decree or administrative
    rules and procedures
  • Appoint a wide range of public officials.
  • Informal powers --
  • Manage a vast patronage network through filling
    government positions
  • Until recently, presidential initiatives were
    rubber-stamped by the legislature.

4
President
  • A unique aspect of Mexico's presidency is a
    deeply held constitutional norm that has been
    upheld since 1940 of the president stepping down
    after one, six year term (a sexenio) and then
    staying off the political stage during the term
    of their successor.

5
Legislature (2 parts)
  • Senate 128 seats, 6 year terms 3 from each
    state, 3 from the federal district, and 32 by
    proportional representation (PR).
  • Chamber of Deputies 500 seats, 3 year terms
    300 elected in single-member districts (SMP?),
    and 200 by PR.

6
Bureaucracy
  • 1.5 million people in the federal bureaucracy.
  • Lower level employees are unionized, with strong
    job security and benefits.
  • Middle and upper level employees are generally
    low paid and are called confidence appointments
    because they are appointed based on the
    confidence of their superiors. Often staffed
    with younger individuals looking to use the
    position as a stepping stone, or looking to
    benefit from corruption.

7
Para-statal sector
  • Semi-autonomous or autonomous government
    agencies, many of which produce goods and
    services.
  • Current examples PEMEX (oil production),
    national electricity board, NAFIN (strategic
    investment).
  • Also used to control development in sugar, steel
    and many other important industrial sectors.

8
Judiciary
  • Code law
  • Constitution also includes positive rights --
    entitlements for which the government is
    responsible for guaranteeing (employment, health
    care, etc.)
  • Supreme Court nominated by president and
    approved by Senate. Decides most important cases
    in the country on appeal (like US Supreme Court).

9
Sub-national government
  • Mexico has a federal system, with each state
    having its own executive, unicameral legislature
    and judicial system.
  • However, most of these regional governments are
    poor and rely on transfers from the central
    government. In practice, the central government
    dominates.
  • This is changing, as Vicente Fox and the PAN
    party have tried to allocate a greater role to
    the state in the hope of promoting greater
    efficiency.

10
Single-Party Authoritarianism
  • Much like the Soviet Union and the People's
    Republic of China, Mexico was under the control
    of a single party (the Institutional
    Revolutionary Party (PRI)) from 1929 to 2000.
  • Unlike the Soviet Union and the PRC, there was
    not an overriding ideology that unified the party
    authoritarian, not totalitarian.
  • Party was established by Plutarco Elias Calles,
    who brought the many of the most powerful
    contenders for leadership during the Mexican
    revolution together, offering a simple bargain
    contenders for power would accommodate each
    other's interests in the expectation that without
    political violence, the country would prosper
    and they could reap the rewards of power and
    economic spoils.

11
Single-Party Authoritarianism
  • Since the party could not rely on an underlying
    ideology or revolutionary goal to justify its
    leadership, it resorted to a number of other
    methods for gaining support.

12
Clientelism
  • (or patron-client networks) an informal aspect
    of policymaking in which a powerful patron (for
    example, a traditional local boss, government
    agency, or dominant party) offers resources such
    as land, contracts, protection, or jobs in return
    for the support and services (such as labor or
    votes) of lower-status and less powerful clients
    corruption, preferential treatment, and
    inequality are characteristic of clientelist
    politics.

13
Clientelism
  • Similar to patrimonialism, with two main
    differences
  • 1. it is usually not attributable to a single
    ruler
  • 2. officially, the state is not personal
    property.
  • The PRI developed a huge patronage network,
    providing union and ejido leaders with jobs,
    opportunities for corruption, land, and other
    benefits in return for delivering their
    followers' political support.
  • These extensive chains of personal relationships
    allowed the party to strengthen its political
    control and limit opportunities for opposition
    parties to organize.

14
Corporatism
  • Corporatist state a state in which interest
    groups become an institutionalized part of state
    structures.
  • Several types
  • Democratic corporatism a set of institutions or
    forums that bring representatives from employers,
    trade unions, and government together to
    negotiate issues affecting work-places, industry
    structure, and national economic policy.
  • State corporatism a political system in which
    the state requires all members of a particular
    economic sector to join an officially designated
    interest group. Such interest groups thus attain
    public status, and they participate in national
    policymaking. The result is that the state has
    great control over the groups, and the groups
    have great control over their members.
  • Also can have combinations of these two types.

15
Corporatism
  • Corporatism is an old idea, loosely based on the
    idea of medieval guilds.
  • Usually contrasted with pluralist systems of
    interest group representation, where groups are
    voluntary and competitive.
  • Under corporatism, interest groups are
    hierarchically organized within a peak
    organization that has standing in government.
  • Most prominent in handling negotiations between
    labor, employers, and the government.

16
Corporatism
  • The democratic variant is described by Philippe
    Schmitter and Gerhard Lehmbruch, and is usually
    characteristic of small, open European economies
    (Finland, Sweden, Austria, Norway, Ireland and
    Netherlands).
  • In these countries, peak organizations are used
    as a method of economic coordination to (1)
    divide up gains in the economy fairly and (2)
    manage wage restraints in times of inflation.

17
Corporatism
  • In the authoritarian variant, like in Mexico
    under the PRI, government-mediated organizations
    become a part of the state structure rather than
    an independent source of advocacy.
  • This increases state power, by incorporating
    groups into the state, without allowing them to
    develop independent social bases.
  • Some authoritarian regimes use this to greater or
    lesser degrees.

18
Dependency Theory
  • What it modernization theory?
  • Because many underdeveloped states remained
    underdeveloped, even after the end of
    colonialism, some scholars in the 1970s, like
    former Brazilian President Fernando Cardoso and
    sociologist Immanuel Wallerstein, suggested that
    the international system was set up in such a way
    that underdeveloped states could not catch up to
    developed ones.

19
Dependency Theory
  • Advantage of early industrializers no
    competition or little competition, lower initial
    capital investment, low technological barriers to
    entry, and production primarily for the domestic
    market.
  • Problems for late industrializers do not have a
    strong domestic market, capital startup costs are
    relatively high, high technology barriers, and
    international competition with well established
    firms.

20
Dependency Theory
  • The world is divided into two groups --
  • Center the industrialized states, who export
    primarily manufactured goods, and import
    primarily raw materials.
  • Periphery the non-industrialized states, who
    export primarily raw materials, and import
    manufactured goods.
  • These unequal terms of trade, also called world
    systems theory explain why underdeveloped states
    remain underdeveloped.

21
Import Substituting Industrialization (ISI)
  • Several policy aspects
  • Encouraging domestic and international
    investment.
  • Providing credit and tax incentives to
    industrialists.
  • Maintaining low rates of inflation.
  • Keeping wage demands low through subsidies.
  • Industrialization through state ownership and
    investment.
  • High tariffs and import licenses to protect
    domestic industries from foreign competition.

22
Import Substituting Industrialization (ISI)
  • Infant industries the idea that new industries
    in underdeveloped states need to be allowed to
    grow by marketing to the domestic market before
    being exposed to international competition.
  • State led industrialization the idea that, in
    underdeveloped societies, the state is the most
    likely accumulator of capital, and is therefore
    in the best position to invest in technologies
    that will allow rapid industrial progress
    (Alexander Gerschenkron).

23
Problems with Dependency Theory
  • Controversial whether underdeveloped countries
    are disadvantaged by trade, or advantaged by
    lower labor costs and the ability to adopt
    advanced practices (convergence).
  • The reasoning behind some types of dependency
    theory verges on conspiratorial.
  • A number of countries have made substantial gains
    since the 1960s and 1970s.
  • Newly industrializing countries Taiwan, South
    Korea, Singapore, Argentina, Brazil, Malaysia,
    Mexico, and Thailand.

24
Problems with ISI
  • Created dependence on the government for
    protection and investment.
  • Created powerful lobbying groups to guarantee the
    continuance of protectionist policies, subsidies,
    and favorable tax benefits.
  • Infant industries never made the leap from
    domestic to international competition.
  • Continued industrialization requires even greater
    investment, raising concerns of greater
    dependency.
  • Foreign exchange to purchase foreign-made
    technology becomes scarce (because of over-valued
    money and few exports).

25
Export-oriented Industrialization?
  • Many of the Asian Tigers -- South Korea,
    Taiwan, Singapore, Japan, etc.) -- used a
    strategy of export-oriented industrialization,
    which incorporated many of the aspects of ISI,
    but which primarily encouraged investment and
    subsidization for the international export
    market, allowing domestic industries to be
    exposed to international competition.
  • Either strategy requires a strong and largely
    non-corrupt government role in the economy.

26
Debt Crisis
  • OPEC 1
  • 1973-1974 oil boom gave some states increased
    revenue that they could not spend.
  • This led them to put their money in international
    banks.
  • These banks, in turn, gave loans at a more
    favorable interest rate, particularly to third
    world countries.

27
Debt Crisis
  • OPEC 2
  • In 1979, the US and Europe begin to increase
    interest rates in an effort to fight inflation.
  • This also increased debt payments.
  • This coincided with a general decrease in the
    price of primary commodities, including oil.
  • Debt in the third world balooned.

28
Debt Crisis
  • Mexican default
  • In August 1982, Mexico's Finance Minister, Jesus
    Silva-Herzog, declared that Mexico would no
    longer be able to service its debt.
  • After this, commercial banks stopped issuing new
    loans, which prevented countries from refinancing
    their debt.

29
Effects of Debt Crisis
  • Increased borrowing led to the quadrupling of
    debt in Latin America, from 75 billion in 1975
    to 315 billion in 1983, or about half of the
    region's gross domestic product.
  • Debt service (payments due on debt) increased
    from 12 billion in 1975 to 66 billion in 1982.

30
Effects of Debt Crisis (post-Mexican Default)
  • Per-capita growth dropped by 9 from 1980-85.
  • Countries abandoned ISI for export-oriented
    industrialization or economic liberalization.
  • Massive capital outflow decreased currency values
    and increased real interest rates.
  • Caused instability in authoritarian regimes in
    Brazil and Argentina.
  • Increased role of the IMF in debt rescheduling
    and structural adjustment.

31
Current Levels of Latin American Debt
  • Brazil -- 221,400,000,000 (2005 est.)
  • Mexico -- 174,300,000,000 (2005 est.)
  • Argentina -- 119,000,000,000 (2005 est.)
  • Chile -- 44,800,000,000 (2005 est.)
  • Venezuela -- 39,790,000,000 (2005 est.)

32
Global Impact Debt Outstanding by Region
33
Global Impact Debt to Debt Service Ration by
Region
34
Growth of Debt Crisis
35
Debt Crisis Today
  • The very poorest countries (those the World Bank
    characterize as 'low income') have per-capita GDP
    of less than 875 per person, but have a combined
    debt of 412 billion at the end of 2005 and paid
    43 billion in debt service in that year.

36
Structural Adjustment
  • IMF and World Bank provide loans for economic
    development and for refinancing current debt, but
    with particular conditions (conditionalities)

37
Structural Adjustment
  • These conditionalities usually include
  • Austerity
  • Focus on direct export and resource extraction
  • Devaluation of overvalued currencies
  • Trade liberalization
  • Increasing the stability of investment
  • Balancing budgets
  • Removing price controls and subsidies
  • Privatization of state-owned enterprises
  • Enhancing the rights of foreign investors
  • Improved governance and fighting corruption

38
Controversies around Structural Adjustment
  • Some structural adjustment policies, such as
    dropping subsidies, can cause instability.
  • Policies tend to be generic and do not address
    the needs of the particular country.
  • Curbing public spending often involves cutting
    funding for education, health care, and other
    major social programs.
  • Free trade is biased.
  • Structural adjustment should be unnecessary, most
    third world debt should be forgiven.

39
Defenses of Structural Adjustment
  • Reflects the best current economic thinking.
  • Crises would be a lot worse if structural
    adjustment programs were not implemented.
  • Programs are becoming more country specific.
  • The record of debt payment among those countries
    that do not undergo the reforms suggested by the
    IMF is generally poor.
  • Debt cancellation would essentially be a reward
    for corrupt and authoritarian regimes and would
    not prevent future borrowing.

40
Influence of Neighboring States
  • In political science, political outcomes of
    various states are generally treated as though
    they were independent (fragmentation of country
    experiences).
  • Tacitly, however, the field is divided into
    various geographic fields (Latin America, Asia,
    Western Europe, etc.).

41
Influence of Neighboring States
  • States tend to undergo the same processes at
    around the same time
  • Waves of democratization and authoritarianism
    (Huntington, 1991)
  • Ideology (ex. rise of Fascism and Communism)
  • Economics (ex. the rise of Keynesianism and
    monetarism, economic downturns)

42
Why is this?
  • Conflict
  • Competition
  • Cooperation
  • Modeling
  • Interdependence
  • Aid
  • Migration

43
How do we see this in Mexico's relations with the
US.
  • Conflict
  • Competition
  • Cooperation
  • Modeling
  • Interdependence
  • Aid
  • Migration
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