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Issue 4, July/August 2002
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Beyond the Border
Latin American Market Reforms Put to the Test
By the beginning of the 21st century,
Latin America was supposed to have living standards comparable
with those of developed nations. At least, that was the implicit
promise behind the ambitious economic reforms undertaken by
most countries in the region during the last two decades of
the 20th century. Unfortunately, not all expectations have
been fulfilled.
Instead, a wave of dissatisfaction and
questioning of the wisdom of market-oriented policies is spreading
throughout Latin America and the world. It began with a vocal
antiglobalization minority, but the ranks of the discontent
seem to be growing, most recently fueled by Argentina's 2001–02
meltdown.
Why is Argentina, a country that was
often praised for its reforms and cited as an example for
other emerging economies, suffering one of the most severe
economic depressions of its history? If the best student is
in deep trouble after having done what the teacher advised,
what awaits the rest?
Many analysts fear that this wave of
antimarket criticism will swing the pendulum back to the populist
and authoritarian policies that market reforms were meant
to replace. The fear is justified in that the reforms have
not yet improved living standards to the degree promised.
During the 1990s, per capita income in Latin America was far
below that of both Asian and industrial economies (Chart
1).
Nonetheless, much of the criticism seems
premature for two reasons. First, market reforms have improved
the living standards in a number of Latin American countries,
such as Chile, Nicaragua, Honduras and Costa Rica. Second,
many criticisms typically overlook historical circumstances.
The drive to market reforms originated not in purely ideological
considerations but in the harsh economic realities that most
Latin American countries faced in the 1980s.
The Road to Market Reform
From the Great Depression until
the 1980s, the apparent success of centrally planned economies
prompted many developing countries to embrace the idea that
governments, rather than markets, were best equipped to deliver
endless prosperity and opportunities to their citizens. In
the spirit of centrally planned economies, most Latin American
countries adopted a growth strategy in the form of import
substitution policies—those aimed at protecting and developing
national industries through government intervention. The results
were high import tariffs, government subsidies, nationalization
of major industries and other forms of protectionism. Domestic
prices were controlled. Currencies carried a high devaluation-risk
premium, which made equipment imports needed for industrialization
very expensive.
This import substitution strategy appeared
to work at the beginning; GDP per capita steadily increased
at an average annual rate of 3 percent between 1950 and 1980
(Chart 2). Less apparent, however, was the debt buildup
taking place at the same time. A foreign debt crisis erupted,
beginning with Mexico in 1982 and spreading throughout Latin
America with such devastation that the 1980s became known
as "the lost decade." GDP per capita declined at
an average annual rate of 0.7 percent during the decade. Hyperinflation
was endemic. By 1986, three out of four Latin American countries
had inflation rates above 30 percent.

The unparalleled crisis of the lost
decade motivated a policy debate, not much different in intensity
and motivation from the current one. Heavy-handed government
intervention was rejected for market reforms in hopes that
the region would return to its fast-track growth rate of the
1950–80 "golden age." Emphasis on the market
economy pushed import substitution policies by the wayside.
Trade opened up. Institutional and political reforms replaced
dictatorships with democracies. Latin America began the 1980s
with 10 democracies (out of 26 countries); by 1990, all but
four countries were democratic, and by 2000, only Cuba was
not.
The big government era came to an end.
Privatizations—turning over government institutions and activities
to the private sector—became prevalent. Domestic financial
systems were deregulated, and controls on capital flows and
foreign currency transactions were eliminated. Latin America
experienced a dramatic turnaround in the 1990s. GDP per capita
growth rebounded to positive territory (Chart 2),
and inflation declined. By the end of 1996, only one country
had an annual inflation rate over 30 percent.
Even so, market reform critics argue
that the progress was unrelated to the reforms. GDP per capita
in the 1990s grew at rates that, although higher than in the
1980s, were still about half the growth rates of the import
substitution era. They conclude that the relatively good performance
of the 1990s is only a natural bounce-back that would have
happened anyway. They also emphasize that unemployment has
been climbing throughout Latin America roughly since the mid-1990s,
even in countries where the reforms seem to have worked best,
such as Chile.
Bumps in the Road
These observations suggest that
the question is not why market-friendly reforms have not been
successful, but rather why they haven't been as successful
as their advocates promised. Existing economic theory provides
some guidance. The theorem of the second best asserts that
the absence of government intervention in a particular market
or set of markets does not guarantee a favorable outcome for
the society as a whole when imperfections or regulations in
other markets are not removed at the same time. In other words,
introducing free market reforms in some areas, but not others,
is not necessarily better than a little bit of government
intervention in all markets.
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Although Latin America has made great
progress in some areas, such as financial and trade liberalization,
not much has been accomplished in terms of labor market legislation
(Chart 3). The second-best theorem suggests that
opening up trade while keeping labor markets heavily regulated
may be bad policy because it may not guarantee enough jobs
to employ the workers displaced by trade liberalization.
Domestic policies of the Latin American
countries are not the only ones at fault. Developed countries
also have failed to liberalize trade in agricultural products,
textiles, steel and other commodities. Therefore, in another
application of the second-best theorem, trade liberalization
for one group of countries is not necessarily the best policy
when the trading partners do not reciprocate. Thus, both the
failure to remove labor market regulations and the protectionist
policies of developed countries may be responsible for the
underachievement of market-friendly reforms.
Another theorem, the second-welfare
theorem, may also apply. Roughly stated, this theorem asserts
that a free market economy can make everyone better off than
an economy without free markets, provided the losers in the
transition from one regime to the other are appropriately
compensated. In implementing market reforms in Latin America,
policymakers may have overlooked this important caveat. Stubbornly
high poverty rates may very well be the lingering social consequence
of that omission.
In any case, the market-friendly reforms
introduced in Latin America since the 1980s have succeeded
in rescuing the region from the stagnation to which it seemed
condemned during the lost decade. But these reforms have fallen
short of achieving the prosperity they promised. However,
it is premature to attribute the failure to any intrinsic
shortcomings of the reforms. The evidence seems to point instead
to serious asymmetries and lack of depth in implementation.
On the issue of market reforms, as in
almost anything else, the devil seems to be in the details.
No question, those details may be imperative for the fate
of market reforms. Policymakers and scholars will have to
be more aware of the potential bumps in the road of market-friendly
reforms and engineer ways of driving over them as smoothly
as possible, without wrecking the economy in the process.
Provided this challenge is confronted
with technical competence and patience, available economic
theory supplies plenty of reasons to be optimistic about the
ultimate ability of market reforms to deliver, in due time,
on their prosperity-for-all promises.
—Carlos E. J. M. Zarazaga and Sherry
Kiser
| About the Authors
Zarazaga is a senior economist
and executive director and Kiser an associate
economist and coordinator in the Research Department's
Center for Latin American Economics at the Federal
Reserve Bank of Dallas. About Southwest
Economy
Southwest Economy
is published six times annually by the Federal
Reserve Bank of Dallas. The views expressed are
those of the authors and should not be attributed
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