Commodity Price Booms and Populist Cycles. An Explanation of Argentina’s Decline in the 20th Century

Serie Documentos de Trabajo, No. 562

35 Pages Posted: 27 Jun 2015 Last revised: 8 Feb 2016

Date Written: May 1, 2015

Abstract

Argentina’s economic and institutional decline has long posed a conundrum to economists and social scientists. In particular, it challenges theories that seek to explain cross-country growth differences over time. Those theories that claim that institutions have a first-order effect on growth cannot explain the persistent economic decadence of a country that in 1930 was among the most institutionally advanced in Latin America. Theories that claim that that education and growth precede inclusive institutions face a similar problem, since Argentina was one of the most educationally advanced countries in Latin America. The same can be said of theories that claim that social capital is the determinant factor that explains long-term growth. This paper emphasizes the key role played by recurrent cycles of populism in pushing the country into secular decadence and posits that, in Argentina, rising commodity prices have driven the cycles of populism.

Keywords: Populism, commodity cycles, Argentina, inequality, institutions, social capital, economic growth, economic decline.

Suggested Citation

Ocampo, Emilio, Commodity Price Booms and Populist Cycles. An Explanation of Argentina’s Decline in the 20th Century (May 1, 2015). Serie Documentos de Trabajo, No. 562 , Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2623090

Emilio Ocampo (Contact Author)

UCEMA ( email )

Córdoba 374
1054 Buenos Aires
Argentina

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