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The Agony of Argentine Capitalism: From Menem to the Kirchners [Paperback]

Paul H. Lewis (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

June 22, 2009 0313378797 978-0313378799

They say those who do not learn from history are bound to repeat it. Thus the importance of this book. The Agony of Argentine Capitalism: From Menem to the Kirchners is the capstone of a magisterial trilogy exploring the reasons for Argentina's shocking "reversal of development." In the early 20th century, Argentina was a rising star. It was one of the world's ten richest countries, on course to a place among the most advanced and prosperous liberal democracies in the world. Then, in 1929, Argentina fell into an economic coma from which no political or military shock treatment has been able to rouse it.

The collapse of Argentina's capitalist class has been so devastating that little support remains for free enterprise or free trade. Her fate poses an intellectual challenge for First World capitalist countries. As famed economist Paul Samuelson warned: "Argentina is the pattern no modern capitalist may face without crossing himself and saying, 'There but for the grace of God….'"


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Editorial Reviews

Review

"Lewis presents the third in a trilogy that includes The Crisis of Argentine Capitalism, which explored the political economy of Argentina from the late 19th century through the rule of Juan Peron, and Guerillas and Generals: The 'Dirty War' in Argentina, which concentrated on the causes and effects of political violence in the 1970s. In this volume, he returns to the political economy focus of the first volume, discussing the efforts of President Menem and President De la Rua to push through free trade policies and criticizing the populist policies of the later governments of Cristina and Néstor Kirchner, who he argues seek to 'extend state control to all aspects of the economy and to redistribute income derived from the most efficient sector, agriculture,' and threaten to repeat the mistakes of Peron, who Lewis blames for the chronic 'stagflation' (stagnant production and persistent inflation) that plagued the Argentine economy through the 1980s."

-

Reference & Research Book News



"Lewis provides a first-rate analysis of the political processes leading to the implosion of the Argentine economy in December 2001. . . . Highly recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above."

-

Choice

--This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Review

"Professor Lewis, a talented political scientist cum pathologist, has written an account of a country in dire peril. Argentina's disastrously mismanaged economy has plunged its people into poverty and insecurity in a land of plenty. Its self- inflicted agony is portrayed unflinchingly. Whether the damage can be reversed remains in doubt. Argentina's dark shadow on the wall should be a warning to all of us."

(

Colin M. MacLachlan
John Christie Barr Distinguished Professor of History
Tulane University, New Orleans
Author of, Argentina: What Went Wrong. Praeger, 2006

) --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 221 pages
  • Publisher: Praeger (June 22, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0313378797
  • ISBN-13: 978-0313378799
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 7.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #556,970 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This isn't a gringo's book, August 28, 2009
By 
Dalton C. Rocha (Fortaleza, CE, Brazil.) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: The Agony of Argentine Capitalism: From Menem to the Kirchners (Paperback)
I read this excellent book, here in Brazil. This book has twelve chapters. The first chapter has this title:" The rise to power".The last chapter has this title: "Defiance". This book isn't outdated, because it ends in the last year.
This book describes Argentina as a political and economic joke, an unhappy nation legendary, in the last eighty years, for an economic crise. About eighty years ago, Argentina was one of the world's emerging powers. Today, Argentina is Argentina. A national decline on that scale did not just happen: it was the result of decades of struggle and systematic endeavor, led by the nation's elite. And this book talks about the last decades of this decline. As the Argentine great writer Jorge Luis Borges once told: Only generations of statesmanship could have prevented Argentina from becoming a world power.
Some excellents parts of this book:
1-Page 12:"Meanwhile, the proceso gradually imploded. Its "dirty war"tactics - such as mass arrests and torture - suceeded in smashing the guerrillas, but it failed to reform the economy or end corruption."
2-Page 16:"Hyper-inflation brought with it economic paralysis, social disruption, and political irrationality. Since prices changed daily - even hourly - production halted and stores closed because no one knew what prices to change. Consumption droped too, because wages couldn't keep up. With inflation running close to 200 percent a month, on payday workers would rush to the stores to spend their wages before they became worthless; by the end of the month they might be reduced to bartering. Many workers were laid off."
3-Page 24:"The proceso's ineffectual attempts at reform were followed by a return to the closed economy. Alfonsín not only refused to pay on Argentina's foreign debt, but also increased tariffs and issued a long list of of goods that could not be imported."
4-Page 68:"Nor was Alfonsin's government innocent of all this. In 1985 Alfonsín signed a secret executive order allowing the air force to provide Iraq with parts for producing a missile, and two years later he signed another secret order setting up a factory in Córdoba province to manufacture a solid, combustible fuel for launching long range missiles."
5-Page 90:"The poorer the province, the greater was the need to use the public sector to provide jobs and prevent emigration. One provincial governor admitted that his payroll was larded with superfluous employees, but defended the practice."
6-Page 118:"The deficit had to be covered somehow, but how? Tariff receipts were down because the peso was pegged to the dollar, and the dollar had continued to appreciate, pricing Argentina's exports out of world markets."
7-Page 134:"De La Rua's government was unable to raise any more foreign loans. By them the United States was preparing for the "War on Terror," following Al Qaida's 11 September attacks on the Twin Towers, and "had no interest in... a geopolitically insignificant country that was busily, stupidly, destroying itself."
8-Page 147:"In the past, Argentina had been able to avoid painful cuts in government spending by borrowing from abroad. Now neither European nor American investors were willing to lend any more money unless the IMF certified that the Argentines were actually making progress in briging their budget deficits under control - which the IMF was not willing to do. Since the end of the Proceso, it had loaned a total of some $30.6 bilion to bolster the newly recovered democracy, but now its patience was at an end."
9-Page 154:"Kirchner was not swept along by apparent success of neo-liberalism. He was critical of economic policies that he considered speculative and harmful to national interests. He also expressed strong dissent for Menem's pardons of the Proceso's junta leaders, and placed himself firmly on the side of the human rights organizations that were protesting. He did not, however, criticize Menem's pardons of the top Montoneros, or show any sympathy for victims of the terrorist left."
The text of this book eneds on page 192, when in the last two lines, we can read:"Argentina seems stuck in a three-cornered political standoff, while its capitalist economy continues its agonizing downward course."
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