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The Political Economy of Foreign Investment in Latin America: Dependency Revisited
Andy Higginbottom (2013)Presenter: Mariana Echaniz Arciga
+ Neoliberal phase of dependency in Latin American countries flow of surplus value from Latin America to the industrialized world (U.S. & E.U)
Quantitative analysis of FDI flows, stock and behavior from 1997 -2010
FDI stock (investment position) US. vs. EU, 1997–2010. Higginbottom, 2013,192).
+Current situation Reappearance of dependent extractive economy
Global capital inflows with ensuing exploitation of land, labor, and environmental degradation.
Transferring surplus value abroad
Growing presence of EU. However, USA still getting high returns.
Two blocs of countries with diverging strategies since early 2000s:
ALBA Non-ALBAVenezuela, Bolivia & Ecuador
Characteristics: Dwindling FDINationalizationsConditionality on global capital
Chile, Peru & Colombia
Characteristics:Increasing FDI & international liabilities (national accounts)FTA & bilateral investment agreements
+ Dependency theory
1970
“Transfer of resources from the most backward and dependent
sectors to the most advanced and dominant ones” (Santos, 1970).
Systemic value extraction creates underdevelopment or conditions a
dependent development.
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Hub (center)
manufactured
Spoke (periphery
) raw materials
Spoke (periphery
) raw materials
Spoke (periphery
) raw materials
+Modernization theory
Rostow
Modernization advocates explain Latin American underdevelopment as a result of “poor policies and weak institutions”.
Deny the exploitative character of FDI and say that dependency theorists have misunderstood FDI stocks and flows.
+Neoliberal dependency in Latin America Author acknowledges possible caveats or shortcomings
in the data… Yet:
New fields for capital accumulation and transfers.
FTA & bilateral agreements that give foreign investor privileged access and secure high profits.
At a macro level it seems that Latin America has a solid economy, it grew around 4% from 2002 to 2011. Commodities and remittances
Net transfers: net capital inflows minus net interest and other investment income payments abroad.
1980s
2000s
1990s
+Investment profiles
1990: opening up for FDI Chile (Pinochet) & Bolivia (dictatorship) leading
2000: some grow some dwindle Bolivia, Ecuador and Venezuela reduced their FDI stock
relative to annual GDP Colombia and Peru increased it from under 12% to 29% in
10 years. Case of Brazil: not only FDI but also promoting “national
champions” and “trans-latins” to invest abroad. However, in overall terms FDI in Brazil was four times greater than outgoing investments from 2000-2010.
+NET repatriation of income
Net outflow of investment income, “negative income balance” constitutes nearly 3% of the Latin American aggregate annual GDP.
Evident privileges and beneficial terms for foreign investors:
Aznar “agenda for freedom” (freedom of investors)
High profitability of UK-held investments (in 2008, they averaged 20.8%).
“The conversion of rent into corporate superprofits […] is a characteristic of
imperialism”
+Conclusions and further research questions
FDI stocks and flows constitute, in most Latin American countries, the neoliberal face of dependency
US & EU investments are preeminent. They have tripled their share over the last 15 years.
FTA & bilateral investment agreements serve foreign interests
Two investment regimes since early 2000s, ALBA & Non-ALBA
Further questions: social & environmental effects of FDI, trans-Latins, Brazil & Mexico, influence of European civil society, Chinese FDI, offshore effects, military-strategy.
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Higginbottom argues that Latin American economies are going through a “neoliberal”
dependency moment; do you consider that his thesis adequately explains the economic future of
the region? Or are the developmentalists right, failure to
develop economically is a matter of “poor governance” and “backwards institutions”? Do you think that Higginbottom’s arguments are still valid in the current economic and political context of the
Andean region? (Hugo Chavez death, Maduro’s poor economic performance, the deepening of the
European crisis, etc)