Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of tables, figures, and maps
- Preface to the second edition
- Preface
- List of abbreviations
- 1 Latin American economic development: an overview
- 2 The struggle for national identity from independence to midcentury
- 3 The export sector and the world economy, circa 1850–1914
- 4 Export-led growth: the supply side
- 5 Export-led growth and the nonexport economy
- 6 The First World War and its aftermath
- 7 Policy, performance, and structural change in the 1930s
- 8 War and the new international economic order
- 9 Inward-looking development in the postwar period
- 10 New trade strategies and debt-led growth
- 11 Debt, adjustment, and the shift to a new paradigm
- 12 Conclusions
- Appendix 1 Data sources for population and exports before 1914
- Appendix 2 The ratio of exports to gross domestic product, the purchasing power of exports, and the volume of exports, circa 1850 to circa 1912
- Appendix 3 Gross domestic product per head, 1913, 1928, 1980, and 2000
- Bibliography
- Index
- CAMBRIDGE LATIN AMERICAN STUDIES
5 - Export-led growth and the nonexport economy
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of tables, figures, and maps
- Preface to the second edition
- Preface
- List of abbreviations
- 1 Latin American economic development: an overview
- 2 The struggle for national identity from independence to midcentury
- 3 The export sector and the world economy, circa 1850–1914
- 4 Export-led growth: the supply side
- 5 Export-led growth and the nonexport economy
- 6 The First World War and its aftermath
- 7 Policy, performance, and structural change in the 1930s
- 8 War and the new international economic order
- 9 Inward-looking development in the postwar period
- 10 New trade strategies and debt-led growth
- 11 Debt, adjustment, and the shift to a new paradigm
- 12 Conclusions
- Appendix 1 Data sources for population and exports before 1914
- Appendix 2 The ratio of exports to gross domestic product, the purchasing power of exports, and the volume of exports, circa 1850 to circa 1912
- Appendix 3 Gross domestic product per head, 1913, 1928, 1980, and 2000
- Bibliography
- Index
- CAMBRIDGE LATIN AMERICAN STUDIES
Summary
In the century before the First World War, Latin America followed a model of export-led growth. A successful export-led growth model implies a rapid rise in exports and in exports per head coupled with increases in labor productivity in the export sector. Yet this is only the first, albeit very important, condition for a significant rise in real income per head. The second condition is the transfer of productivity gains in the export sector to the nonexport economy. Thus the export sector needs to become the “engine of growth,” stimulating investment outside the export sector itself.
The export sector could provide such a stimulus in many ways. For example, thinking in terms of backward linkages, the growth of the export sector could promote investments in railways, which in turn would generate investments in sawmills (for lumber), capital goods (e.g., locomotives), and workshops for repair and maintenance of the rolling stock. In terms of forward linkages, the export sector could also contribute to a faster rate of investment. For example, cattle raising for export leads not only to investments in beef and beef-extract production but also to investments in the leather industry, the shoe industry, and even the chemical industry.
The growth of some sectors of the nonexport economy was so intimately tied to the fortunes of the export sector that we can think of them as complementary activities.
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- Chapter
- Information
- The Economic History of Latin America since Independence , pp. 117 - 151Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003