Business Power and the Minimal State: The Defeat of Industrial Policy in Chile
Fecha
2019Registro en:
Bril-Mascarenhas, T., & Madariaga, A. (2019). Business power and the minimal state: the defeat of industrial policy in Chile. The Journal of Development Studies, 55(6), 1047-1066.
0022-0388
1743-9140
DOI: 10.1080/00220388.2017.1417587
Autor
Madariaga, Aldo [Univ Mayor, Ctr Polit Publ, Santiago, Chile]
Bril-Mascarenhas, Tomás
Institución
Resumen
Chile has maintained a limited industrial policy for nearly three decades. Policy resilience during the 2000s and 2010s is especially puzzling given the political and economic context: three Socialist-led administrations; the retreat of the Washington Consensus; resource abundance from the commodity boom; and the decline of the so-called economic 'miracle'. We present the first comprehensive analysis of industrial policy in post-authoritarian Chile (1990-present) and show the significant political influence of business actors with a preference for limited state intervention in the economy as a mechanism of policy reproduction.