The Economic History of Latin America since Independence (Cambridge Latin American Studies)
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Product Description
The Economic History of Latin America seeks to explain why, despite the region’s abundance of natural resources and a favourable ratio of land to labour, not a single republic of Latin America has achieved the status of a developed country after nearly two centuries free from colonial rule. Taking its narrative from the end of the colonial epoch to the early 1990s, this book provides a comprehensive, balanced portrait of the factors affecting economic progress in Latin America. This book explains the successes and failures of export-led growth in the nineteenth century, and the withdrawal, after the depression of 1929, of many countries into a model of import-substitution industrialization. The debt crisis of the 1980s effectively ended hopes for the inward-looking approach, however, and the author examines the routes through which Latin American republics pursued a new version of export-led growth.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #516131 in Books
- Published on: 1995-01-27
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 505 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
‘Bulmer-Thomas has written an extraordinary book. It is the first general economic history of modern Latin America to be published in a generation. No scholar working on modern Latin America can afford not to know and use this book.’ John H. Coatsworth, Journal of Latin American Studies

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