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Why have Latin American countries developed sharply divergent financial systems and how do these systems shape national growth strategies? While Chile built large capital markets and Brazil expanded long-term credit for firms, Argentina lags behind in both. What explains this variation? This book uncovers the political origins of national financial systems by examining how coalitions of executive-branch officials reconfigure markets through two levers: the governance of the pension system and the deployment of state-owned banks as long-term lenders. In Chile, neoliberal técnicos dismantled the state's capacity as a lender and set up regulation inducing private pension funds to invest in domestic equity and bonds. In Brazil, a developmental coalition expanded BNDES and activated state-owned-enterprise pension funds as institutional investors. By tracing how political struggles inside the state shape markets, the book offers an innovative view of statecraft and marketcraft in Latin America. It speaks to scholars of political economy and to policy entrepreneurs working on development across the Global South.
Table des matières
Chapter 1: Introduction.- Chapter 2: The Within-State Politics of Policymaking: Entrepreneurial Political Técnicos in the Configuration of National Financial Systems.- Chapter 3: The Politics of State Involvement in Credit Markets in Brazil.- Chapter 4: The Politics of State Involvement in Credit Markets in Chile.- Chapter 5: The Politics of State Involvement in Capital Markets in Brazil.- Chapter 6: The Politics of State Involvement in Capital Markets in Chile.- Chapter 7: Implications.
A propos de l'auteur
Tomás Bril Mascarenhas (Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley) specializes in the comparative political economy of development. He is a Principal Researcher at the Argentine think tank Fundar.
Résumé
Why have Latin American countries developed sharply divergent financial systems—and how do these systems shape national growth strategies? While Chile built large capital markets and Brazil expanded long-term credit for firms, Argentina lags behind in both. What explains this variation?
This book uncovers the political origins of national financial systems by examining how coalitions of executive-branch officials reconfigure markets through two levers: the governance of the pension system and the deployment of state-owned banks as long-term lenders. In Chile, neoliberal técnicos dismantled the state's capacity as a lender and set up regulation inducing private pension funds to invest in domestic equity and bonds. In Brazil, a developmental coalition expanded BNDES and activated state-owned-enterprise pension funds as institutional investors.
By tracing how political struggles inside the state shape markets, the book offers an innovative view of statecraft and marketcraft in Latin America. It speaks to scholars of political economy—and to policy entrepreneurs working on development across the Global South.