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Quo Vadis, Latin America? Food for Thought

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Unemployment still high and wages still low throughout Latin America. ... Why haven't reforms transformed Latin American countries into Asian Tigers, as promised? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Quo Vadis, Latin America? Food for Thought


1
Quo Vadis, Latin America?Food for Thought
  • Carlos E. J. M. Zarazaga
  • Senior Economist and Executive Director
  • Center for Latin American Economics
  • Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
  • Disclaimer The views expressed are those of the
    presenter and do not necessarily reflect those of
    the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas or the Federal
    Reserve System.

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Inflation in Latin America, 1970-90
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Latin Americas Institutions Democracies by 1980
Democratic government
Other
8
Latin America A Land of Unfulfilled Promises?
  • Import substitution policies 1950-80
  • Attributed poor performance in the lost decade
    of the 80s
  • Defaults
  • Slow Growth
  • High Inflation

9
Way out of lost decade stagflation and to
endless prosperity
  • Institutional Reforms
  • End dictatorships, Restore Democracy
  • Economic Reforms
  • End import substitution era, Open up trade
  • End big government era, Privatize
  • End financial repression era, Liberalize
    financial intermediation process

10
Latin Americas Institutions Democracies by 1980
Democratic government
Other
11
Latin Americas Institutions Democracies by 1990
Democratic government
Other
12
Latin Americas Institutions Democracies by 2000
Democratic government
Other
13
Inflation in Latin America, 1970-90
14
Inflation in Latin America, 1970-96
15

16
Have the reforms delivered the promised
prosperity?
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Free Market Reforms Still to Deliver Widespread
Prosperity
  • Growth rates in the 1990s SLOWER than in the
    heydays of the import substitution era 1950-70.

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Free Market Reforms Still to Deliver Widespread
Prosperity
  • Growth rates in the 1990s SLOWER than in the
    heydays of the import substitution era 1950-70.
  • Unemployment still high and wages still low
    throughout Latin America.

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Free Market Reforms Still to Deliver Widespread
Prosperity
  • Growth rates in the 1990s SLOWER than in the
    heydays of the import substitution era 1950-70.
  • Unemployment still high and wages still low
    throughout Latin America.
  • Market reforms have failed to reduce poverty and
    inequality.

29
Looking Ahead The Open Questions
  • Why havent reforms transformed Latin American
    countries into Asian Tigers, as promised?
  • Tentative answers the second theorems
  • The second best theorem
  • The second welfare theorem

30
The Tentative Answers
  • The second best theorem
  • Liberalizing some aspects of the economy and not
    others may result in worse outcomes than not
    liberalizing at all.
  • In English A chain is only as strong as its
    weakest link

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Institutional Reforms Not Completed Yet
35
Institutional Reforms Not Completed Yet
36
The Tentative Answers
  • The second best theorem
  • Liberalizing some aspects of the economy and not
    others may result in worse outcomes than not
    liberalizing at all.
  • In English A chain is only as strong as its
    weakest link
  • Therefore
  • trade liberalization may be a bad idea if not
    accompanied simultaneously with
  • labor market reforms
  • reciprocity from the US and EU (elimination of
    trade barriers on avocados and poultry from
    Mexico, oranges and steel from Brazil, honey and
    beef from Argentina, textiles from Ecuador)

37
The Tentative Answers
  • The second welfare theorem
  • A move to free markets can make everyone better
    off provided the winners compensate the losers
    in the transition period.
  • Therefore
  • Free market reforms must be accompanied by
    deliberate policies to retrain displaced workers
    and fight extreme poverty.

38
Looking Ahead The Open Questions
  • Why havent reforms transformed Latin American
    countries into Asian Tigers, as promised?
  • Tentative answers the second theorems
  • Lessons from the theorem of the second best
  • More reforms, not less
  • Lesson from the second welfare theorem
  • Free market reforms must be accompanied by
    deliberate policies to retrain displaced workers
    and fight extreme poverty.

39
The Challenges Ahead
  • Compensating losers with part of the gains the
    reforms bring about for winners is a technically
    challenging policy design problem
  • Need to identify winners
  • Need to identify losers
  • Transfers from winners to losers must be done
    with taxes that can undo the benefits of reforms.
  • YES. VERY DIFFICULT. Yet

40
ignoring theorems can be dangerous for the
future of democracy and free markets in Latin
America
41
ignoring theorems can be dangerous for the
future of democracy and free markets in Latin
America
42
ignoring theorems can be dangerous for the
future of democracy and free markets in Latin
America
43
ignoring theorems can be dangerous for the
future of democracy and free markets in Latin
America
Fidel Castro
44
ignoring theorems can be dangerous for the
future of democracy and free markets in Latin
America
Néstor Kirchner, President of Argentina since May
2003
Fidel Castro
45
Venezuela President Hugo Cesar Chavez celebrates
victory at recall referendum
46
ignoring theorems can be dangerous for the
future of democracy and free markets in Latin
America and many other emerging markets
  • China (1.3 billion people)
  • India (1.1 billion people)
  • Together these fashionable emerging markets
    represent 37 percent of the world population.
  • Why bother to study and understand Latin America,
    whose population of 560 million people represents
    only 9 percent of the worlds population?

47
  • Why bother to investigate the avian flu? Well
    because that resilient virus can some day mutate
    and infect humans.
  • Latin America once upon a time was engaged in
    reforms
  • like China is allegedly now.
  • But reforms didnt work quite well in Latin
    America. How do we know that the same will not
    happen with the reforms in China?
  • Despite declarations of the World Trade
    Organization to the contrary, China is not a free
    market economy and is farther from that status
    than any Latin American country, except Cuba.
  • Unless we understand why reforms seem to have
    failed in Latin America, history may repeat
    itself.
  • China.com?

48
  • Why bother to investigate the avian flu? Well
    because that resilient virus can some day mutate
    and infect humans.
  • Latin America once upon a time was engaged in
    reforms
  • like China is allegedly now.
  • But reforms didnt work quite well in Latin
    America. How do we know that the same will not
    happen with the reforms in China?
  • Despite declarations of the World Trade
    Organization to the contrary, China is not a free
    market economy and is farther from that status
    than any Latin American country, except Cuba.
  • Unless we understand why reforms seem to have
    failed in Latin America, history may repeat
    itself.
  • China.com?
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