Description

Book Synopsis
In this powerfully persuasive book, a Latin American economist with vast international experience argues that the economic framework of neo-liberalism and globalization is forcing a false dilemma on the nations of the South. The idea that these countries must integrate their economies into the global economy by means of export-led growth, or risk economic marginalization and stagnation, runs counter to the actual evidence of economic history. Nor is it inevitable that state and market be in diametric opposition. What is more, the roots of current global economic instability lie not in the South, but in an enduring crisis of the productivity of capital in the G-7 countries. With clarity, wit and abundant empirical evidence, Oscar Ugarteche explores the internal inconsistencies of neoliberal economic theory. He argues that the fundamental question is not whether to export, but why. And the ultimate goal of any country's economic policy must be the development of the internal market and the pursuit of the wellbeing of society as a whole. These considerations, in turn, can shape the extent and manner in which exports are promoted. Ugarteche lays out the case for a strong, innovative and interventionist state that mediates private interests with the larger national interest. Only if the state invests in its people, the social and the physical infrastructure, applied technological research and a new generation of domestic manufacturing industry can a path of rapid growth become possible, which integrates, rather than marginalizing, the majority of the population, reduces poverty rather than increasing inequality. In short, the South must reject the false logic of globalization that there is no choice, and recognize instead that the real folly is to integrate with the global market without developing the internal market.

Trade Review
'With The False Dilemma, the reader can accumulate a wide range of issues for further consideration.' Enterprise and Society

Table of Contents
  • Prologue
  • 1. Old Debates and New on Globalization and International Trade
  • 2. Systemic Crisis and Technological Change: A View from Latin America
  • 3. Trends in Industrialization and Foreign Trade
  • 4. Globalization, Competitiveness and New Trade Patterns
  • 5. The Export-Led Growth Model: the Theory, the Debate, the Evidence
  • 6. Central America in the Global Economy
  • 7. The Crisis of the Millennium and its Expansion
  • 8. Some Philosophical Problems Posed by the Systemic Crisis
  • 9. Epilogue: Hypotheses on the Wrong Path Taken

The False Dilemma: Globalization: Opportunity or Threat

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A Paperback by Oscar Ugarteche

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    View other formats and editions of The False Dilemma: Globalization: Opportunity or Threat by Oscar Ugarteche

    Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
    Publication Date: 16/10/2000
    ISBN13: 9781856496902, 978-1856496902
    ISBN10: 1856496902

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    In this powerfully persuasive book, a Latin American economist with vast international experience argues that the economic framework of neo-liberalism and globalization is forcing a false dilemma on the nations of the South. The idea that these countries must integrate their economies into the global economy by means of export-led growth, or risk economic marginalization and stagnation, runs counter to the actual evidence of economic history. Nor is it inevitable that state and market be in diametric opposition. What is more, the roots of current global economic instability lie not in the South, but in an enduring crisis of the productivity of capital in the G-7 countries. With clarity, wit and abundant empirical evidence, Oscar Ugarteche explores the internal inconsistencies of neoliberal economic theory. He argues that the fundamental question is not whether to export, but why. And the ultimate goal of any country's economic policy must be the development of the internal market and the pursuit of the wellbeing of society as a whole. These considerations, in turn, can shape the extent and manner in which exports are promoted. Ugarteche lays out the case for a strong, innovative and interventionist state that mediates private interests with the larger national interest. Only if the state invests in its people, the social and the physical infrastructure, applied technological research and a new generation of domestic manufacturing industry can a path of rapid growth become possible, which integrates, rather than marginalizing, the majority of the population, reduces poverty rather than increasing inequality. In short, the South must reject the false logic of globalization that there is no choice, and recognize instead that the real folly is to integrate with the global market without developing the internal market.

    Trade Review
    'With The False Dilemma, the reader can accumulate a wide range of issues for further consideration.' Enterprise and Society

    Table of Contents
    • Prologue
    • 1. Old Debates and New on Globalization and International Trade
    • 2. Systemic Crisis and Technological Change: A View from Latin America
    • 3. Trends in Industrialization and Foreign Trade
    • 4. Globalization, Competitiveness and New Trade Patterns
    • 5. The Export-Led Growth Model: the Theory, the Debate, the Evidence
    • 6. Central America in the Global Economy
    • 7. The Crisis of the Millennium and its Expansion
    • 8. Some Philosophical Problems Posed by the Systemic Crisis
    • 9. Epilogue: Hypotheses on the Wrong Path Taken

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