Beställningsvara. Skickas inom 5-8 vardagar. Fri frakt för medlemmar vid köp för minst 249 kr.
This Companion examines why Latin America and the Caribbean have struggled to achieve sustained economic progress despite cycles of state-led development, market liberalization, and social policy experimentation. Through thematic analyses and detailed country studies, the contributors explore the structural constraints that have shaped the region’s trajectory. Rather than seeking another universal model, chapters delve into regional and country-specific challenges, analyzing them within their historical, institutional, and economic contexts. Instead of a new ‘consensus’, they advocate for a new conversation: one that moves beyond rigid frameworks and embraces the complexity of the region’s economies, societies, and histories. The Companion examines critical challenges such as governance failures, state capture, and the role of political elites in shaping economic outcomes, emphasizing the need to strengthen institutions, promote economic diversification, and invest in human capital. Ultimately, it underscores the importance of fostering a more nuanced debate: one that acknowledges the diversity of Latin America’s economies and histories while identifying actionable strategies for inclusive growth, resilience, and long-term development.The Elgar Companion to the Economies of Latin America and the Caribbean is a vital resource for students and scholars of development, international economics and political economy. Historians of Latin America and practitioners in political science will also benefit from the book’s detailed insights.
Edited by Francisco Rodríguez, Senior Research Fellow, Center for Economic and Policy Research and Faculty Affiliate, Josef Korbel School of Global and Public Affairs, University of Denver, USA
Contents1 Introduction: why is Latin America not developed? 1Francisco RodríguezPART I CROSS-CUTTING THEMES2 Productivity growth in Latin America: 1820–2024 20André Hofman and Mariana del Rio3 Latin America’s Gramscian moment: when the old fades (“Extractivism”),but the new fails to be born 68José Gabriel Palma4 Continuismo v Rompismo: neocaudillismo and the electoral dominance ofincumbents, ex-presidents, and newcomers in Latin America 119Javier Corrales5 Latin America in the neoliberal and postneoliberal eras 146Gabriel Hetland6 From parents to children: educational intergenerational mobility trends inLatin America and the Caribbean 158Lucila Berniell, Cristian Bonavida, and Dolores de la Mata7 Central banks and monetary policy in historical perspective 190Esteban Pérez Caldentey and Matías Vernengo8 Gender inequality and development in Latin America 203María Magdalena Camou and Silvana Maubrigades9 Social movements and extractivist mining in Latin America and theCaribbean: reshaping pathways of development? 222Leonith Hinojosa, Salvador Martí i Puig, and Victor Tricot10 The underground and criminal economy in Latin America 240Julia BuxtonPART II ANALYTICAL CASE STUDIES11 Argentina: a lost half century? 258Ignacio Labaqui and Marcos Buscaglia12 Bolivia’s development: long view 270Juan Antonio Morales13 The Brazilian double disease 286Otaviano Canuto14 The Caribbean small economies in the world-economy: trade, economicperformance, and innovation governance 298Keith Nurse15 Chile 1820–2020: a case of frustrated development? 322Cristian Ducoing and Marc Badia-Miró16 Colombian economic development since the early 20th century 336José Antonio Ocampo and Carmen Astrid Romero17 Costa Rica: the development of compromise 362Ludovico Feoli18 Cuba’s failed reforms and new economic crisis 376Pavel Vidal Alejandro19 Assessing the Dominican Republic’s economic development, 1970–2020 391José R. Sánchez-Fung20 Ecuador’s truncated development trajectory: the rise and fall ofdevelopmentalism in the early 21st century 416Isabel Estevez and Andrés Arauz21 Capitalist modernization and growth in small countries: El Salvador’sexperience in the neoliberal era 434Alexander Segovia22 Haiti: a brief history of underdevelopment from colonial state to aid state 452Jake Johnston23 The struggle for sovereignty in Honduras 472Lynn Holland24 Why is Mexico not yet developed? 489Gerardo Esquivel25 Nicaragua: institutions-constrained growth 504Alvaro López-Espinoza, Umanzor López-Baltodano, andMayerli Obando Chamorro26 From stabilization to stagnation? Peru’s economy toward the mid-21stcentury 521Silvio Rendon27 Is Puerto Rico the missing Latin American Tiger? 547José Caraballo-Cueto28 Suriname’s economic development 568Scott MacDonald29 Uruguay: a tale of economic successes and failures 583Arturo C. Porzecanski and Henry Willebald30 The Venezuelan growth puzzle 602Michael Penfold and Francisco RodríguezIndex 619
‘A fantastic set of studies on the comparative political economy of Latin America, and an indispensable volume for anyone interested in understanding economic development in a historical context.’