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LIBERALISM, CRISES, AND STRUCTURAL ADJUSTMENT IN CHILE 3/15/2010
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LIBERALISM, CRISES, AND STRUCTURAL ADJUSTMENT IN CHILE 3/15/2010.

Dec 27, 2015

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Page 1: LIBERALISM, CRISES, AND STRUCTURAL ADJUSTMENT IN CHILE 3/15/2010.

LIBERALISM, CRISES, AND STRUCTURAL ADJUSTMENT IN CHILE

3/15/2010

Page 2: LIBERALISM, CRISES, AND STRUCTURAL ADJUSTMENT IN CHILE 3/15/2010.

What is “Liberalism”?

Classical Liberalism Political

A theory emphasizing individual freedom and equality Policies tied to this idea include freedom of thought and

expression, and limitations on government power. Economic

A theory that holds that free markets are more efficient than managed ones and thus, in the long run, generate more prosperity

The state retains a role in the system as guarantor of rule of law and public goods The state may intervene to correct market inefficiencies

Policies tied to this idea include: Free markets tied to property, supply and demand Reduced trade restrictions tied to comparative advantage The state as guarantor: fiscal discipline targeting social

goods

Page 3: LIBERALISM, CRISES, AND STRUCTURAL ADJUSTMENT IN CHILE 3/15/2010.

What is “Liberalism”?

Neoliberal Theory The Natural Laws of the Market: the market,

once freed of government and social distortions, is a largely self-regulating mechanism and will naturally seek equilibrium.

The market is more efficient than the government can be and so should be widely relied upon to provide goods and services. Free flows in cross-border flows of goods, people,

and capital increase efficiency and are to be encouraged.

Page 4: LIBERALISM, CRISES, AND STRUCTURAL ADJUSTMENT IN CHILE 3/15/2010.

What is “Structural Adjustment”? Making fundamental changes to the

structures that underpin economic functioning The role of the state Property regime Mode of production

The process of moving from one mode of economic organization to another.

In practice structural adjustment has been linked to neoliberalism and the Washington Consensus; to forced conditionality

Page 5: LIBERALISM, CRISES, AND STRUCTURAL ADJUSTMENT IN CHILE 3/15/2010.

What is “Structural Adjustment”?:The Washington ConsensusPolicy instruments associated with neoliberalism. Reduce fiscal deficits Realign public expenditure priorities Encourage broad but moderate taxation Let the market determine interest rates Achieve a competitive, export-oriented exchange rate Implement free trade policies Encourage FDI Privatize enterprises Deregulate industry Stabilize and enforce property rights

Williamson, 1990

Page 6: LIBERALISM, CRISES, AND STRUCTURAL ADJUSTMENT IN CHILE 3/15/2010.

What is “Liberalism”?

Neoliberal Theory The intentional depression; atomizing Revolutionary intent: Bureaucratic rules distort

not only the economy but also individual choices and behavior; neoliberalism would bring greater individual freedom to pursue interests as well as prosperity. Renegotiating the state-society relations changes behavior and, eventually, values

Shock Therapy: suddenness and speed of economic shifts impacts the public reaction; quick and sudden transformations facilitate adjustment.

Page 7: LIBERALISM, CRISES, AND STRUCTURAL ADJUSTMENT IN CHILE 3/15/2010.

Neoliberalism in Chile

Pinochet and the Chicago Boys Pinochet was interested in political

developments, but had little interest in economics

Facing economic crisis in 1973, Pinochet turned to the Chicago Boys and their neoliberal reform agenda Training and travel made them conversant in

international financial matters Expertise and self-assuredness in an area in which

the military knew very little Technocrats with limited political loyalties They had a plan ready-made, drawn up in the

months before the coup

Page 8: LIBERALISM, CRISES, AND STRUCTURAL ADJUSTMENT IN CHILE 3/15/2010.

Neoliberalism in Chile: The Seven ModernizationsA change to a pay your own way system in

which quality of life was determined by the individual’s ability to pay.

Labor Reform 1979 Labor Code: Deregulation of the labor

market Social Security

Privatization of pensions and insurance Health

Healthcare and cemeteries were privatized Shift control to municipalities

Page 9: LIBERALISM, CRISES, AND STRUCTURAL ADJUSTMENT IN CHILE 3/15/2010.

Neoliberalism in Chile: The Seven Modernizations Education

Change in curriculum Higher education is privatized Shift control to municipalities (1980s)

Regional Decentralization Local control was exercised by strongmen

appointed by Pinochet Redistricting led to many, small municipalities

separated by socioeconomic class Agriculture Justice

Page 10: LIBERALISM, CRISES, AND STRUCTURAL ADJUSTMENT IN CHILE 3/15/2010.

Neoliberalism in Chile: 1973 - 1980 Deregulation and Privatization

500+ state-owned companies and banks were privatized

1975 Financial Administration Law: The executive has sole authority to propose tax and budgetary legislation

Reduced Social Spending By 1980 social spending was half what it had been

under Allende Inequality

Steadily increasing through the 1970s Average wage plummeted in 1973 and only

recovered in the 1990s Today Chile is the 8th most unequal country

(tracked by the UN)

Page 11: LIBERALISM, CRISES, AND STRUCTURAL ADJUSTMENT IN CHILE 3/15/2010.

Neoliberalism in Chile: 1981 - 1982The 1982 Debt Crisis Decline in imports, GDP, investment, and

terms of trade; increase in interest rates Increasing external debt from 40% of GDP

in 1979 to 100% in 1983 (with interest payments rising from 3% of GDP to 10%)

Corporate Debt Privatization had proceeded on borrowed

money - Chilean economic elites borrowed money internationally and run up $14 billion in debt

Page 12: LIBERALISM, CRISES, AND STRUCTURAL ADJUSTMENT IN CHILE 3/15/2010.

Neoliberalism in Chile: 1983 - 1986State Response to the Debt Crisis Divisions between the technocrats and the

businessmen The Chicago Boys lost their jobs; some

were investigated for fraud Softening of neoliberalism under Finance

Minister Hernán Büchi Re-nationalization of some companies, briefly

including banks Rebound in public spending from around 10%

of GDP in the 1970s to around 14% in after 1982

Page 13: LIBERALISM, CRISES, AND STRUCTURAL ADJUSTMENT IN CHILE 3/15/2010.

Neoliberalism in Chile: 1987 - 1989 Turn towards pragmatic economic policy favoring

macroeconomic stability “People’s Capitalism”: continued privatization focuses on

small investors and capitalization through stock sales Controlled fiscal expenditures Debt-equity swaps convert external debt into domestic

investment Incentives to exports Target social expenditures on the poor

Copper Stabilisation Fund, 1987: "The basic idea is to save resources when the price of copper exceeds its long-term level so as to use these savings when copper prices fall below the long-term trend.” (OECD)

The economy resumed strong growth in the late 1980s, leading to declining unemployment and increasing average real wages.

Page 14: LIBERALISM, CRISES, AND STRUCTURAL ADJUSTMENT IN CHILE 3/15/2010.

Neoliberalism in Chile: 1990 through todayIn 1999 a survey by the UNDP found that “the

results indicate the preeminence of two grand themes: the demand for economic security and well-being and the demand for equality” (PNUD 2000, 99) Government guarantees reduce risk and facilitate

private investment Transparency and higher accounting standards Adoption of a counter-cyclical policy stance

Structural budget surplus rule, 2001: “Estimating revenue based on trend GDP growth, so that expenditure can be calculated on the basis of the government’s capacity to collect taxes over the medium term, rather than on economic conditions each year. …[and] targeting a structural budget surplus of 1% of GDP has allowed for counter-cyclicality.” (OECD)

Public debt-to-GDP ratio fell from 45% in 1990 to 3.8% in 2008 (est.)