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Import Substitution Industrialization (ISI): Looking inward as a source of growth. Lecture # 9 Week 4. Structure of this class. Recap from last classes on ISI Dependency Theory: An Explanation for Backwardness From Dependency Theory to Development Policy: ECLA and the Structuralist School
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Import Substitution Industrialization (ISI): Looking inward as a source of growth Lecture # 9 Week 4
Structure of this class • Recap from last classes on ISI • Dependency Theory: An Explanation for Backwardness • From Dependency Theory to Development Policy: ECLA and the Structuralist School • From Structuralism to ISI • The ISI Toolbox • Performance of ISI • The Crisis of ISI
Recap from last classes on ISI • Economic historians argue that protection in Latin America can be traced back to the 19th Century • In the particular case of Argentina, we argued that a) the “terms of trade” hypothesis did not justify interventions, and b) Argentina fell behind because excessive ISI-style government intervention • More generally, ISI policies adopted strongly by LA6 after the Great Depression, growth increased, but income distribution worsened or remained the same while poverty indicators did not improve
Dependency Theory: An Explanation for Backwardness • Industrialized countries (“The Center”) caused underdevelopment in developing countries (“The Periphery”) I.e., Paul Baran (1952) International capitalists in industrialized countries & local elites in the center (monopolies and “latifundists”) hindered long-term growth because concentrated markets weakened competitive pressures revolution Others (F. E. Cardoso and E. Faletto) agreed with the principle but disagreed had a different prescription active state could counteract the power of the center
From dependency theory to structuralism • Structuralism in Latin America strongly linked to Economic Commission for Latin America under leadership of Raúl Prebisch -disappointing growth performance first half of 20th C linked to volatility primary commodity exports and terms of trade deterioration (increased difficulty paying for sophisticated technology imports) - seemingly positive correlation between growth and isolation during World War I and World War II - low income elasticity of primary commodities relative to technologically sophisticated industrial goods, in turn explained terms of trade deterioration
In addition • Complete brake with neoclassical theory - economic activity conditioned by interest group politics - markets in Latin America: - producers: oligopolies (price makers) - consumers: followed consumption patterns set by elites - no trickle down ( trade as in the theory of comparative advantage) • Economic historians would however argue that postwar growth was neither dynamic nor as isolated as dependency theorist would suggest
From structuralism to ISI • Instead of relying on international trade as an engine of growth, ISI policies sought to develop industries in a protected environment • Main goal: to create local industries capable of producing substitutes for expensive imports and promote industrial growth and expansion of domestic markets state-led technical change
Reinforced with two key concepts (Albert Hirschman (1945, 1955, 1970): • Bottlenecks • Linkages: Backward and Forward - Powerful state intervention for braking bottlenecks and for targeting growth in industries with largest linkages Moreover, powerful state also needed due to a market failure In turn led to populist movements (i.e., J. Peron and G. Vargas): mobilization of labor and industrial elites in the service of nationalist development strategies
ISI Toolbox • Industrial Policy • Form state-owned firms • Form “mixed” economic economic enterprises • Require foreign firms to form “joint ventures” • Pressure local firms to increase local content
2) International instruments - Tariffs on final goods - Quotas on imports - Exchange rate overvaluation - Foreign exchange rationing - Import licences
3) Fiscal and monetary policy - Subsidies for cheap inputs such as electricity - Subsidies for public transportation - Tax breaks in production - Preferential interest rates - Accommodating monetary policy
But performance varied across countries Strongest growth rates during 1950 – 1980 Brazil Mexico Ecuador
The Crisis of ISI • Exhaustion due to the limited size of the internal market • Export market could not develop because manufactured protected goods did not meet international standards • Lack of economic integration due to sharp variation of economic performance across regions, small potential demand and politics • Political and sociological explanations • Exacerbated income inequality • Fostered creation of inefficient institutions • Neglect of agriculture
Lessons? • Policies adopted during 1990s points to inherent flaws • Appropriate policies for the period but times changed (Bauer in your syllabus) • Macroeconomic stability and debt crisis in the 1980s? - Next class: Topic 10 in your syllabus