Chapter 15 Trade and Policy Reform in Latin America.

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Chapter 15 Trade and Policy Reform in Latin America

Transcript of Chapter 15 Trade and Policy Reform in Latin America.

Page 1: Chapter 15 Trade and Policy Reform in Latin America.

Chapter 15

Trade and Policy Reform

in Latin America

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Learning Objectives

• Describe the strengths, weaknesses, and reasons for import substitution industrialization.

• Explain the strategy and performance of economic populism.

• Give the main reasons for the debt crisis of the 1980s and analyze its relationship to ISI.

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Learning Objectives (cont.)

• Discuss the goals of economic policy reforms that began in the later 1980s.

• Explain why some Latin American leaders have become impatient with economic policy reforms.

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Introduction: Defining a “Latin American” Economy

• A “Latin American” economy is considered “all of the Americas south of the United States” (Webster’s dictionary)

• However, Latin America is quite diverse, and one needs to be careful not to over-generalize

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Population, Income, and Economic Growth

• For long stretches of the 20th century, Latin America was one of the fastest-growing regions of the world

• From 1900-1960 real GDP per capita grew at similar rates to Europe, U.S., or Asia

• The Debt Crisis turned the 1980s into a Lost Decade, as growth was negative, inflation skyrocketed, and poverty increased

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TABLE 15.1 Population and GDP for Latin America and the Caribbean, 2010

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TABLE 15.1 (continued) Population and GDP for Latin America and the Caribbean, 2010

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TABLE 15.1 (continued) Population and GDP for Latin America and the Caribbean, 2010

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Import Substitution Industrialization: Origins and Goals of ISI

• Economic policy reform in Latin America brought the demise of the economic development strategy known as import substitution industrialization (ISI)

• ISI shifts policies from outward, export orientation toward an inward, targeted industrial strategy

• ISI is a form of industrial policy that focuses on those industries that produce substitutes for imported goods

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Import Substitution Industrialization: Origins and Goals of ISI (cont.)

• Terms of trade (TOT): (index of export prices)/(index of import prices)

• Argentine economist, Raul Prebisch and a German exile, Hans Singer argued that coffee, tin, copper, bananas, and other primary commodity exports would inevitably experience price declines relative to the prices paid for manufactured goods

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Import Substitution Industrialization: Origins and Goals of ISI (cont.)

• In effect, Latin America would be marked by export pessimism—each unit of exports would earn a declining unit of imports

• ISI would boost industries that produce substitutes for imported goods

• Export pessimism formed the basis of orthodox economic policy from roughly the 1950s through the 1970s

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Criticisms of Import Substitution Industrialization

• Government involvement in production decisions caused a misallocation of resources; not market failures as assumed

• Exchange rate overvaluation

• Policies were too biased in favor of urban areas

• ISI trade and competition policies were heavily protectionist and often favored the creation of domestic monopolies

• ISI fostered rent-seeking and corruption

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Macroeconomic Instability and Economic Populism

• Many Latin America specialists blame faulty macroeconomic policies on populist or economic populist political movements

• Crises are often attributed to economic populism and populist policies: political movements using expansionary fiscal and monetary policies without regard of inflation risks, budget deficits, and foreign exchange constraints

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Populism in Latin America: Three Conditions of Populism

• Deep dissatisfaction with the status quo (slow growth)

• Rejection of the traditional constraints of macro policy

• Promises to raise wages while freezing prices and restructuring the economy by expanding domestic production of imported goods

• “reactivating, redistributing, and restructuring”

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Stages of Populist Policies

• Economic stimulus through government expenditures and printing money

• Creation of bottlenecks • Increase in prices and budget deficits/debt• Acceleration of inflation • Pervasive shortages become pervasive• Capital flight and decline in wages• Resort to IMF intervention

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TABLE 15.2 Economic Indicators during the Garcia Administration

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The Debt Crisis of the 1980s

Causes of the Debt Crisis:

•Collapse of world oil prices (Mexico particularly affected)

•Increase in international interest rates

•Longstanding political mismanagement

•High rates of lending in 1974–1982

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TABLE 15.3 Debt Indicators at the Onset of the Debt Crisis, 1983

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Responses to the Debt Crisis

• U.S. Treasury Secretary James Baker, 1985, tried to organize a renewed lending program by commercial banks through the Baker Plan

• U.S. Treasury Secretary Nicolas Brady engineered the Brady Plan in 1989: Latin American countries required to reform their economies to obtain debt relief

• Capital flows began to return to Latin America

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Neoliberal Policy Reform and the Washington Consensus

• In the late 1980s, Latin America launched economic policy reforms that began to alter the fundamental relationships between business and government and between their national economy and the world.

– The region adopted a neoliberal model or neoliberalism favoring free markets and minimal government intervention in the economy

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Neoliberal Policy Reform and the Washington Consensus (cont.)

Three Aspects of Neoliberal Reforms

•Implementation of stabilization plans to stop inflation and control budget deficits

•Privatization of state-owned enterprises

•Protectionist trade policies were abandoned

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Neoliberal Policy Reform and the Washington Consensus (cont.)

• These reforms came to be known as the Washington Consensus on policy reform

• Both the neoliberal agenda and the Washington Consensus were considered policy prescriptions for reform of government finances and management of the economy

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The “Washington Consensus”

• Macroeconomic reforms proposed by the Consensus:– Avoid large budget deficits

– Spend public money on health, education, and basic services

– Cut taxes, but tax a wider range of activities and improve collection

– Make certain real interest rates are positive; limit the use of preferential rates

– Make the exchange rate competitive and credible

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The “Washington Consensus” (cont.)

• Microeconomic reforms proposed by the Consensus:

– Use tariffs instead of quotas, and gradually reduce them

– Encourage foreign direct investment– Privatize state enterprises in activities where

markets work– Remove the barriers to firm entry and eliminate

restrictions on competition– Guarantee the security of property rights

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Stabilization Policies to Control Inflation

• Some Latin American countries adopted the orthodox model of cutting government spending, reforming the tax system, and limiting the creation of new money

• Others adopted the heterodox model: same as orthodox model but also included freezing of wages and prices

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TABLE 15.4 Inflation Rates, 1982–1992

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Structural Reform and Open Trade

• Structural reform policies include:

– The privatization of government-owned enterprises, deregulation and redesign of the regulatory

– Environment of overregulated industries such as financial services, and

– Reform of trade policy

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Structural Reform and Open Trade (cont.)

• In 1970s Chile began to reform its trade policies

• In 1985 and 1986 Mexico and Bolivia followed

• In the late 1980s and early 1990s, nearly all the countries of Latin America began reducing both the level of tariffs and nontariff barriers (NTBs)

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Structural Reform and Open Trade (cont.)

• The three main goals of trade reform:– To reduce the anti-export bias of trade

policies that favored production for domestic markets over production for foreign markets

– To raise the growth rate of productivity– To make consumers better off by lowering

the real cost of traded goods

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Regional Trade Blocs in Latin America

• Latin America has many regional trade agreements; some of the oldest

• NAFTA was implemented January 1, 1994

• December ‘94, thirty-four countries in the Western Hemisphere committed to a Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA) no later than 2005

• By 2002, the FTAA idea was nearly dead, but Latin American countries have continued to sign bilateral and plurilateral agreements

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TABLE 15.5 Average Tariff Rates, in Percents, Selected Countries

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Table 15.6 Regional Trade Blocs

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The Next Generation of Reforms

• Both Neoliberalism and Washington Consensus viewed negatively by many Latin American citizens

- reforms of the last two decades have created uncertainty and change

- have not begun to fulfill expectations of growth and prosperity.

• More moderate reformers developing a second generation of reforms

– take into account the region’s institutions– address the problems of social and economic inequality

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The Next Generation of Reforms (cont.)

• Mechanisms for addressing Latin America’s highly unequal distribution of income

• Greater emphasis on primary education and health care for children

• A set of social policies called conditional cash transfers (CCT)

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The Next Generation of Reforms (cont.)

• A few Latin American countries, including Mexico and Chile, have become the most open and outward oriented of countries anywhere

• Results elsewhere have been disappointing