Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-dh8gc Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-11T06:26:42.388Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Equality or Growth: A 20th Century Argentine Dilemma

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 January 2010

Pablo Gerchunoff
Affiliation:
Universidad Torcuato Di Tellaa
Lucas Llach
Affiliation:
Universidad Torcuato Di Tellaa

Abstract

Argentina's long term economic performance between 1880 and 2000 (convergence with the rich followed by divergence) can be understood in terms of the economic and political consequences of its peculiar factor endowments. Skewed endowments meant huge gains from trade during the First Globalization boom; but, conversely, disintegration of world commerce in the Depression was a heavier blow for such a naturally specialized economy. The extreme protectionism, characteristic of the post-war period, was related to the country's peculiar economic structure: comparative advantages in food production and disadvantages in (labor-intensive) manufacturing implied that closing the economy was a political winner, though it eventually hampered growth. The road to openness followed in the last quarter of the 20th century would have meant, correspondingly, an increase in inequality. Attempts to moderate it through debt accumulation and exchange rate appreciation destabilized the economy and contributed further to Argentina's comparative decline.

Resumen

La experiencia económica de la Argentina entre 1880 y 2000, caracterizada por una sucesión de convergencia y divergencia con los países ricos, puede entenderse a partir de las consecuencias económicas y políticas de su dotación de factores de producción. Una sesgada disponibilidad de factores implicó grandes beneficios para la Argentina en la primera globalización; pero la desintegración comercial durante la depresión representó un impacto aciago. El extremo proteccionismo de la Argentina en la posguerra tuvo que ver con su peculiar dotación factorial: las ventajas comparativas en alimentos y desventajas en producción industrial trabajo-intensiva hacían políticamente atractivo el cierre de la economía, aunque a la larga desalentara el crecimiento. El camino de la apertura seguido en el último cuarto de siglo xx implicaría, al contrario, un aumento de la desigualdad. Los intentos por moderarlo con apreciación cambiaria y endeudamiento desestabilizaron la economía y contribuyeron, al cabo, al retraso argentino.

Type
Artículos/Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Instituto Figuerola de Historia y Ciencias Sociales, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid 2009

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Altman, M. (2003): «Staple theory and export-led growth: constructing differential growth». Australian Economic History Review, vol. 43, No. 3, pp. 215326.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Anuario Geográfico Argentino (1941): Government publication.Google Scholar
Argy, V. (1992): Australian Macroeconomic Policy in a Changing World Environment (1973–1990). North Sydney, N. S. W.: Allen & Unwin.Google Scholar
Bennett, M. K. (1951): «International Disparities in Consumption Levels». The American Economic Review, vol. 41, No. 4, pp. 632649.Google Scholar
Berlinski, J. (2003): «International Trade and Commercial Policy», in Della Paolera, G. and Taylor, Alan (eds.) (2003), A New Economic History of Argentina, Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Bértola, L., and Porcile, G. (2002): «Rich and Enpoverished Cousins: Economic Performance and Income Distribution in Southern Settler Societies». XIII International Economic History Congress, Buenos Aires.Google Scholar
Bértola, L., and Porcile, G. (2006): «Convergence, Trade and Industrial Policy: Argentina, Brazil and Uruguay in the International Economy, 1900–1980». Revista de Historia Económica. Journal of Iberian and Latin American Economic History, 24, 1, pp. 3767.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Broadberry, S., and Irwin, D. A. (2004): «Labor Productivity in the US and the UK During the 19th Century». CEPR Discussion Paper No. 4596.Google Scholar
Bulmer Thomas, V. (1995): «The Economic History of Latin America since Independ-ence». Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
CEPAL (1958): El desarrollo económico de la Argentina. Mexico.Google Scholar
Coatsworth, J., and Williamson, J. (2002): «The Roots of Latin American Protectionism: Looking Before the Great Depression». NBER Working Paper 8999.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Conybeare, J. (1983): «Tariff Protection in Developed and Developing Countries: A Cross-Sectional and Longitudinal Analysis». International Organization, vol. 37, No. 3, pp. 441467.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cortés Conde, R. (1998): Progreso y declinación de la economía argentina. Buenos Aires: Fondo de Cultura EconómicaGoogle Scholar
Cortés Conde, R. (1994): «Estimaciones del producto bruto interno de Argentina 1875–1935». Documentos de Trabajo Economía, Universidad del San Andrés.Google Scholar
Damus, S. (2002): «Materiales para la historia de los ferrocarriles argentinos». CD and http://www.storm.ca/~sdamus/primera.htm.Google Scholar
Della Paolera, G., and Gallo, E. (2003): «The Argentine Puzzle», in Della Paolera, G. and Taylor, A., (eds.), The New Economic History of Argentina, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Della Paolera, G., and Taylor, A. (1999): «Economic Recovery from the Argentine Great Depression: Institutions, Expectations, and the Change of the Macroeconomic Regime». Journal of Economic History, vol. 59, No. 3.Google Scholar
Della Paolera, G., and Taylor, A. (eds.) (2003): A New Economic History of Argentina. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Di Tella, G., and Zymelman, M. (1969): Las etapas del desarrollo económico argentino. EUDEBA.Google Scholar
Diamand, M. (1972): «La estructura productiva desequilibrada argentina y el tipo de cambio». Desarrollo Económico, vol. 12, No. 45.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Díaz Alejandro, C. (1970): Essays on the Economic History of the Argentine Republic. Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Díaz Alejandro, C. (1988): «No Less than One Hundred Years of Argentine Economic History plus Some Comparisons,» in Velasco, A. (ed.), Trade, Development and the World Economy, Selected Essays of Carlos Díaz Alejandro, Oxford: Basil Blackwell.Google Scholar
Dornbusch, R., and Edwards, S. (1991): «Macroeconomic Populism in Latin America». NBER Working Paper No. W2986.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Duncan, T. (1963): «Imperial Preference: the Case of Australian Beef in the 1930's». The Economic Record, vol. 39, No. 6, pp. 153165.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dyster, B., and Meredith, D. (1999): Australia in the global Economy: Continuity and Change. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Engerman, S., and Sokoloff, K. (2002): «Endowments, Inequality, and Paths of Development among New World Economies». Economia, vol. 3, No. 1, pp. 41109.Google Scholar
Ferreres, O. (2005): «Dos siglos de economía argentina, 1810–2004: historia argentina en cifras». Fundación Norte y Sur.Google Scholar
Forster, C. (1953): «Australian manufacturing and the war of 1914–18». Economic Record, 29, pp. 211230.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gallo, E. (1970): «Agrarian Expansion and Industrial Development in Argentina, 1880–1930», in Carr, R. (ed.), Latin American Affairs, Oxford: Oxford University Press, St. Antony's Papers, No. 22.Google Scholar
Geller, L. (1970): «El crecimiento industrial argentino hasta 1914 y la teoría del bien primario exportable». El Trimestre Económico, vol. 37, No. 148, pp. 763811.Google Scholar
Gerchunoff, P., and Aguirre, H. (2006): «La economía argentina entre la gran guerra y la gran depresión». CEPAL, Serie Estudios y Perspectivas, No. 32.Google Scholar
Gerchunoff, P., and Llach, L. (2004): Entre la equidad y el crecimiento. Buenos Aires: Siglo XXI.Google Scholar
Gerchunoff, P., and Llach, L. (2007): El ciclo de la ilusión y el desencanto. Buenos Aires: Emecé.Google Scholar
Gerchunoff, P.; Rocchi, F., and Rossi, G. (2008): Desorden y progreso. Buenos Aires: Edhasa.Google Scholar
Goldberg, , Koujianou, Pinelopi and Pavcnik, Nina (2007): «Distributional Effects of Globalization in Developing Countries». Journal of Economic Literature, vol. XLV, pp. 3982.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jones, R. (1956): «Factor Proportions and the Heckscher-Ohlin Theorem». The Review of Economic Studies, vol. 24, No. 1, pp. 110.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Katz, J. (1976): Importación de tecnología, aprendizaje e industrialización dependiente Mexico: Fondo de Cultura Económica.Google Scholar
Lamartine Yates, P. (1959): Forty Years of Foreign Trade. London: George Allen & Unwin.Google Scholar
Little, I.; Scitovski, T., and Scott, M. (1970): Industry and Trade in some Developing. Countries. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Llach, J. (1984): «El Plan Pinedo de 1940, su signifcado histórico y los orígenes de la economía política del peronismo». Desarrollo Económico, vol. 23, No. 92, pp. 515558.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Llach, J. (2006): «Argentina y el mercado mundial de sus productos, 1920–1976». CEPAL Serie Estudios y Perspectivas, No. 35.Google Scholar
Maddison, A. (2006): The World Economy. Paris: Development Center Studies, OECD.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mclean, I. (2004): «Australian Economic Growth in Historical Perspective». Economic Record, vol. 80, No. 250, pp. 330345.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Míguez, E. (2005): «“El fracaso argentino». Interpretando la evolución económica en el “corto siglo xx”». Desarrollo Económico, vol. 44, No. 176, pp. 483514.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mussa, M. (2002): Argentina and the Fund: From Triumph to Tragedy. Institute for International Economics.Google Scholar
Nurkse, R. (1954): «International Investment To-Day in the Light of Nineteenth-Century Experience». The Economic Journal, vol. 64, No. 256, pp. 744758.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
O'rourke, K., and Williamson, J. (1999): Globalization and History. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Perry, G., and Servén, L. (2002): «The Anatomy of a Multiple Crisis: Why was Argentina special and what can we learn from it». World Bank, mimeo.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pfaffenzeller, S.; Newbold, P., and Rayner, A. (2007): «A Short Note on Updating the Grilli and Yang Commodity Price Index». The World Bank Economic Review Advance Access published January 31, 2007, doi:10.1093/wber/lhl013.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Reitsma, A. (1960): Trade protection in Australia. Brisbane: University of Queensland Press.Google Scholar
Rocchi, F. (2006): Chimneys in the Desert: Industrialization in Argentina during the Export Boom Years, 1870–1930. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Sanz Villarroya, I. (2005): «The Convergence Process of Argentina with Australia and Canada: 1875–2000». Explorations in Economic History, vol. 42, pp. 439458.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schwartz, H. (1967): «The Argentine Experience with Industrial Credit and Protection Incentives, 1943–1958». Ph. D dissertation, Yale University.Google Scholar
Sourrouille, J. (2006): «La posición de activos y pasivos externos de la República Argentina entre 1946 y 1948». CEPAL, Serie Estudios y Perspectivas, No. 29.Google Scholar
Taylor, A. (1994): «Three Phases of Argentine Economic Growth». NBER Historical Working Paper, No. 60.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Taylor, A., and Williamson, J. (2006): «Convergence in the age of mass migration». European Review of Economic History, vol. 1, No. 1, pp. 2763.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vamvakidis, A. (2002): «How Robust is the Growth-Openness Connection? Historical Evidence». Journal of Economic Growth, vol. 7, No. 1, pp. 5780.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vázquez Presedo, V. (1971): El caso argentino: migración de factores, comercio exterior y desarrollo 1875–1914. Buenos Aires: Eudeba.Google Scholar
Villanueva, J. (1972): «El origen de la industrialización argentina». Desarrollo Económico, vol. 12, No. 47.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Waisman, C. (1987): Reversal of Development in Argentina. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Williamson, J. (1999): «Real Wages and Relative Factor Prices in the Third World 1820–1940: Latin America». Revista de Historia Economica, vol. 17, special number, pp. 101142, updated fgures at http://www.economics.harvard.edu/faculty/jwilliam/papers.html.CrossRefGoogle Scholar