Artículo
Argentine trade policies in the XX century: 60 years of solitude
Registro en:
2196-436X
En: Latin American Economic Review, volumen 27, número 1, febrero de 2018
Autor
Brambilla, Irene
Porto, Guido G. (Guido Gustavo)
Galiani, Sebastián
Resumen
Tariff protection, export taxes on agriculture, anti-export bias At the turn of the last century, the Argentine economy was on a path to prosperity that never fully developed. International trade and trade policies are often identified as a major culprit. In this paper, we review the history of Argentine trade policy to uncover its exceptional features and to explore its contribution to the Argentine debacle. Our analysis tells a story of bad trade policies, rooted in distributional conflict and shaped by changes in constraints, that favored industry over agriculture in a country with a fundamental comparative advantage in agriculture. While the anti-export bias impeded productivity growth in agriculture, the import substitution strategy was not successful in promoting an efficient industrialization. In the end, Argentine growth never took-off.