Download Free Development And External Debt In Latin America Book in PDF and EPUB Free Download. You can read online Development And External Debt In Latin America and write the review.

Foreign Debt and Latin American Economic Development focuses on the constructive discussion of views held by investigators and experts on the dynamic interaction between economic growth and external debt in Latin America. The selection first offers information on a background paper on the external debt and development in Latin America and a perspective on the external debt of Latin America. The text then elaborates on external financing and debt of the Latin American countries and Latin American external debt and economic growth. Topics include debt rescheduling, external debt and development, and flow of external financial resources. The manuscript takes a look at the economic growth and external debt of Jamaica and Commonwealth Caribbean. Discussions focus on external debt and economic growth, trends in external debt, structure and functioning of the Jamaican economy, and debt policy in the 1970's and 1980's. The book also ponders on the external debt and economic growth of Mexico, external debt situation of Haiti, Venezuela's foreign public debt, and foreign debt and economic development of Costa Rica. The selection is a dependable source of data for readers interested in the interaction between economic progress and external debt in Latin America.
Since 1981 Latin America has been in the midst of a protracted external debt crisis due, among other reasons, to emergency borrowing at record-high real interest rates and the decline in the region's export proceeds. Until now, most literature on the subject originated in industrial lender countries, whose primary concern is the impact of the debt
External debt, debt repayment, economic and social development, economic recession, Latin America - trends, development planning, monetary transfer to developed countries, terms of aid, international monetary system, international monetary reform, aid financing, self reliance, import substitution. Bibliography, statistical tables.
Conference papers, case studies illustrating the implications of external debt for development policy in Latin America - covers the respective responsibilitys of the world banking system and central governments for Latin American indebtedness, the threat of external debt to economic development and trade, obstacles to debt repayment, economic policy for debt consolidation, the policy of the IMF towards debtor countries, etc.; considers the adjustments to economic recession made by Korea R and Taiwan, China and their relevance for Latin American countries.
In the 1970s and 1980s the countries of Latin America dealt with their similar debt problems in very different ways--ranging from militantly market-oriented approaches to massive state intervention in their economies--while their political systems headed toward either democracy or authoritarianism. Applying the tools of modern political economy to a developing-country context, Jeffry Frieden analyzes the different patterns of national economic and political behavior that arose in Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Mexico, and Venezuela. This book will be useful to those interested in comparative politics, international studies, development studies, and political economy more generally. "Jeffry Frieden weaves together a powerful theoretical framework with comparative case studies of the region's five largest debtor states. The result is the most insightful analysis to date of how the interplay between politics and economics in post-war Latin America set the stage for the dramatic events of the 1980s."--Carol Wise, Center for Politics and Policy, Claremont Graduate School
The crisis that struck Latin America in 1981-82 has inflicted heavy losses on borrowers, lenders, and industrial countries alike. It has deprived Latin America of growth and has forced lenders to reschedule repayments of principal and in most cases to put up new money. The crisis has also caused a sharp drop in exports from the United States and other industrial countries to Latin America.