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Economic history of Chile

The economy of Chile has shifted substantially over time from the heterogeneous economies of the diverse indigenous peoples to an early husbandry-oriented economy and finally to one of raw material export and a large service sector. Chile's recent economic history (since 1973) has been the focus of an extensive debate from which neoliberalism acquired its modern meaning.[1][2]

Chile emerged into independence as a rural economy on what was the periphery of the Spanish Empire. A period of relative free trade that began with independence in the 1810s brought a modernizing development of certain sectors of the Chilean economy. This was accompanied by formation of a local business class, a novelty in Chile. Chile experienced its first modern economic crisis with the Long depression in the 1870s. The exploitation of lucrative nitrate deposits of the north conquered in the War of the Pacific (1879–1884) marked a whole epoch in the history of Chile and the economic legacy of nitrate has been widely debated.

When Chile became an independent nation in 1818 it was the poorest[clarification needed] territory in the Americas,[3][4] by the 1890s it had become richer[clarification needed] than Sweden, and twice as rich than Japan[5] and it became one of the 15 richest[clarification needed] nations in the world,[6] a position it would retain for decades, even as late as the 1950s it remained richer[clarification needed] than its former colonial master, Spain, and almost as rich as Germany.[7] However, starting in the late 1920s, the Chilean economy began a steady decline with 1950 industrial capacity inferior to what it had been forty years previously.[5] It was not until the late 1970s that this decline started to revert.[8] Since that time the Chilean economy has generally grown although it has yet to regain its former status.

In the first half of the 20th century Chile suffered severe economic recessions including the Great Depression. This period saw the rapid urbanization of the country, and a state-led partial "industrialization" that began in 1939. Large-scale copper mining replaced nitrate extraction as the country's main source of wealth. Chilean agriculture remained one of the most undeveloped sectors of economy and was stagnant, despite land reforms in the 1960s and 1970s, from 1930 to 1980.

In the mid-1970s under the influence of the Chicago Boys, Pinochet's military dictatorship initiated profound changes oriented to a "neoliberal" economic model. The democratic governments that succeeded the dictatorship since 1990 have largely continued its economic policies, but increased social spending and reduced poverty. Chilean exports and GDP per capita rose steadily through the 1980s and 1990s until the Asian crisis of 1997 after which economic growth slowed somewhat. In the post-1973 period there has been a rise in outsourcing, self-employment, informal employment and an increase in women's share in the labor force.[9]

Pre-Hispanic economy edit

In the Far North the Pre-Hispanic economy of indigenous groups were divided among those that practised agriculture and were sedentary and the Changos that lived as coastal hunter-gatherers. The sedentary groups raised llamas and practised irrigation techniques. Bone necklaces, gold and copper objects interpreted as luxury goods suggest according to Villalobos et al. certain level of social stratification among the sedentary groups.[10]

At the time of the arrival of the first Spaniards to Chile the largest indigenous population concentration was in the area spanning from Itata River to Chiloé Archipelago.[11] In this area indigenous groups practised glade agriculture among the forests.[12] The forests provided firewood, fibre and allowed the production of planks.[12] Agriculture type varied; while some Mapuches and Huilliches practised a slash-and-burn type of agriculture some more labour-intensive agriculture is known to have been developed by Mapuches around Budi Lake (raised fields) and the Lumaco and Purén valleys (canalized fields).[13][14] Pre-Hispanic agriculture extended as far south as the Guaitecas Archipelago (44° S), were indigenous Chonos cultivated Chiloé potatoes.[15] Tools are known to have been relatively simple. In addition the Mapuche and Huilliche economy was complemented with chilihueque raising.[14] The southern coast was particularly rich in molluscs, algaes, crustaceans and fish.[12]

The fjords and channels of the Chilean Far South (excluding Chiloé Archipelago) were inhabited by nomadic canoe-using hunter-gatherers. These groups included the Chonos, the Alacaluf and the Yaghans.[16]

Colonial economy edit

 
Founding of Santiago in 1541. The new cities were important for the economic order that emerged in Chile during its conquest.

Spanish conquest (1541–1600) edit

The conquest of Chile was not carried out directly by the Spanish Crown but by Spaniards that formed enterprises for those purposes and gathered financial resources and soldiers for the enterprise by their own.[17] In 1541 an expedition (enterprise) led by Pedro de Valdivia founded Santiago initiating the conquest of Chile. The first years were harsh for the Spaniards mainly due to their poverty, indigenous rebellions and frequent conspirations.[18] The second founding of La Serena in 1549 (initially founded in 1544 but destroyed by natives) was followed by the founding of numerous new cities in southern Chile halting only after Valdivia's death in 1553.[18]

The Spanish colonization of the Americas was characterized by the establishments of cities in the middle of conquered territories. With the founding of each city a number of conquistadores became vecinos of that city being granted a solar and possibly also a chacra in the outskirts of the city, or a hacienda or estancia in more far away parts of the countryside. Apart from land natives were also distributed among Spaniards since they were considered vital for carrying out any economic activity.[19]

Beyond subsistence the 16th century economy of Chile was oriented towards large-scale production. Spanish colonizers used large amounts of indigenous labour following the slave labour system used in the sugar cane plantations of the Mediterranean islands and Macaronesia. This system of labour successively killed the production base leading to the imposition of the encomienda system by the Spanish Crown in order to prevent excesses. In Chile Spanish settlers managed to continue to exploit indigenous labour under slave like conditions despite the implementation of the encomienda. Rich Spanish settlers had over time to face opposition to their mode of production by Jesuits, Spanish officials and indigenous Mapuches.[20]

 
All mainland Spanish settlements (red dots) south of Biobío River were destroyed by 1604.

The initial Spanish settlers of Chiloé Archipelago (conquered in 1567[21]) attempted to base their economy on gold extraction and a "hispanic-mediterranean" agricultural model. This activity ended in a general failure given the unsuitable conditions of the archipelago.[22] Spaniards however reoriented their activities into logging Fitzroya.[22]

Century of suet (1600–1687) edit

The collapse of the Spanish cities in the south following the battle of Curalaba (1598) meant for the Spaniards the loss of both the main gold districts and the largest indigenous labour sources.[23] After those dramatic years the colony of Chile became concentrated in the central valley which became increasingly populated, explored and economically exploited. Following a tendency common in the whole Spanish America haciendas were formed as the economy moved away from mining and into agriculture and husbandry.[24] Compared to the 16th and 18th centuries Chilean mining activity in the 17th century was very limited.[25] Over the course of the 17th century the indigenous population of Chile declined, making the encomiendas less and less important.[24] Chilean encomenderos who had encomiendas in Cuyo, across the Andes, introduced to Chile indigenous Huarpes who they hired to other Spanish without encomiendas.[26]

 
1744 engraving published in Relación histórica del viaje a la América meridional. The image shows cattle in the Chilean countryside including a square for cattle slaughter.

In the 17th century economy of the Viceroyalty of Peru, Chile's husbandry and agriculture based economy had a peripheral role, contrasting to ore-rich districts like Potosí and the wealthy city of Lima. Husbandry products made up the bulk of Chilean exports to the rest of the viceroyalty. These products included suet, charqui and leather. This trade made Chilean historian Benjamín Vicuña Mackenna label the 17th century the century of suet (Spanish: Siglo del sebo).[27] Other products exported included dry fruits, mules, wines and minor amounts of copper.[27] Trade with Peru was controlled by merchants from Lima that enjoyed protection by the Spanish authorities in Lima.[28] In addition to the exports to coastal Peru Chile also exported products inland to Upper Peru through the port of Arica.[27] Trade inside Chile was small since cities were tiny and self-sufficient.[27]

Generally the extraction of wood had little importance in colonial Chile but Chiloé Archipelago and Valdivia were exceptions.[29] These two areas exported planks to Peru.[29] With the destruction of Valdivia in 1599 Chiloé gained increased importance as the only locale that could supply the Viceroyalty of Peru with Fitzroya wood.[22] In 1641 the first large shipment of Fitzroya wood left Chiloé.[22]

Century of wheat (1687–1810) edit

In the 1650–1800 period the Chilean lower classes grew considerably in size.[30] To deal with the poor and landless population a policy of founding cities[note 1] and granting lands in their surroundings was implemented.[30] From 1730 to 1820 a large number of farmers settled in the outskirts of old cities or formed new cities.[31] Settling as a farmer in the outskirts of old cities (La Serena, Valparaíso, Santiago and Concepción) was overall more popular than joining a new city since it secured a larger consumer market for agricultural products.[32] Chilean haciendas (latifundia) engaged little in the supply of Chilean cities but focused on international exports for revenues.[33]

without Chile, Lima would not exist

— Viceroy José de Armendáriz in 1736[34]

Chile begun exporting cereals to Peru in 1687 when Peru was struck by both an earthquake and a stem rust epidemic.[28] Chilean soil and climatic conditions were better for cereal production than those of Peru and Chilean wheat was cheaper and of better quality than Peruvian wheat.[28][35] According to historians Villalobos et al. the 1687 events were only the detonant factor for exports to start.[28] The Chilean Central Valley, La Serena and Concepción were the districts that came to be involved in cereal export to Peru.[28] It should be pointed out that compared with the 19th century the area cultivated with wheat was very small and production modest.[35]

Initially Chilean latifundia could not meet the wheat demand due to a labour shortage, so had to incorporate temporal workers in addition to the permanent staff. Another response by the latifundia to labour shortages was to act as merchants buying wheat produced by independent farmers or from farmers that hired land. In the period 1700 to 1850 this second option was overall more lucrative.[36]

The 1687 Peru earthquake also ended a Peruvian wine-boom as the earthquake destroyed wine cellars and mud containers used for wine storage.[37] The gradual decline of Peruvian wine even caused Peru to import some wine from Chile as it happened in 1795 when Lima imported 5.000 troves (Spanish: botijas) from Concepción in southern Chile.[37][38] This particular export showed the emergence of Chile relative to Peru as a wine-making region.[37]

Haciendas of central Chile are believed to had become labour-saturated by 1780 generating an "excess" population that could not be incorporated into their economy.[39] Some of this population settled in the outskirts of larger cities while other migrated to the mining districts of Norte Chico.[39] Chile saw an unprecedented revival of its mining activity in the 18th century with annual gold production rising from 400 to 1000 kg over the course of the century and the silver annual production rising from 1000 to 5000 kg in the same interval.[40]

In the 18th century the shipbuilding industry in Valdivia, one of the city's main economic activities, reached its peak building numerous ships including frigates.[41][42] Other shipyards of Chile included those of Concepción and Chiloé Archipelago.[43] The Chiloé shipyards constructed the bulk of the ships in Chile until the mid-18th century.[43] In 1794 a new shipyards was established the mouth of Maule River (present day Constitución).[43] Despite some navigators expressing that Valdivia had better conditions than Guayaquil in Ecuador, this last port was the chief shipyard of the Spanish Empire in the Pacific.[41][43]

 
Smuggling became increasingly common in the 18th century Chile. Governor Francisco Antonio García Carrasco in picture was involved in a smuggling scandal.

Direct trade with Spain over the Straits of Magellan and Buenos Aires begun first in the 18th century constituting primarily an export route for gold, silver and copper from Chilean mining. By the same time Spain's trade monopoly with its colonies was successively weakened by smugglers from England, France and United States.[44]

Independence Era (1810–1830) edit

The independence wars in Chile (1810–1818) and Peru (1809–1824) had a negative impact on the Chilean economy. Trade was disrupted and armies in Chile pillaged the countryside. The war made commerce a high risk activity and royalist Peru, then the only market for Chilean agricultural products, was closed to commerce with independent Chile. The Guerra a muerte phase was particularly destructive for the Biobío area and ended only to see a period of outlaw banditry (e.g. Pincheira brothers) occur until the late 1820s. Chilean mining activity came out of the independence wars with relatively little damage.[45]

Trade with Peru did not fully recover after the independence struggles, instead commerce with United States, France and United Kingdom took off in the 1820s.[45]

During the Chilean Independence War the scarcity of weapons in the Chilean market forced the patriots to do large weapon purchases abroad or to the ships that anchored at Chilean ports.[46] In addition to the finance of the Chilean army the nascent Chilean state had also to wholly finance the Chilean-Argentine Army of the Andes after San Martín begun to disobey the orders from Argentina and the Freedom Expedition of Perú, originally thought to be financed in part by Argentina.[46][47]

An expensive loan of £1,000,000 taken in 1822 in London in order to finance the independence struggle became a heavy burden for the Chilean state and took decades to pay off.[46] Finance minister Diego José Benavente attempted to reform the tax system but met severe opposition to many measures.[46] To pay off the loan the Chilean state granted the company Sociedad Portales, Cea y Cía a sales monopoly of tobacco in Chile, but this activity ended in failure.[46]

Liberalism edit

Early republican boom (1830–1873) edit

 
A modern Chilean steamboat and primitive rafts in Huasco in the 1850s illustrates the uneven modernization of the Chilean economy.

In the early republican period Chilean international trade grew considerably.[48] Merchants from countries like England, Italy, Germany and the United States settled in Chile.[48] Chile was officially open to trade to all nations since 1811 but applied protectionist policies to favour domestic production in a manner that has been called neomercantilism.[48] Chile's relative openness to international trade contrasted with contemporary truly protectionistic policies of Peru and Argentina.[48] The 1830–1870 period was one of the greatest growth for the Chilean economy and was largely indebted to two export booms: the copper and silver mining in Norte Chico and the Chilean wheat cycle.[49] The overall development resulted in Chile becoming one of the high-income countries in South America.[50]

 
Chañarcillo train station, Atacama, Chile, 1862.

Following the discovery of silver at Agua Amarga (1811) and Arqueros (1825) the Norte Chico mountains north of La Serena were exhaustively prospected.[51][52][53] In 1832 prospector Juan Godoy found a silver outcrop (reventón) 50 km south of Copiapó in Chañarcillo.[51] The finding attracted thousands of people to the place and generated significant wealth.[52] After the discovery of Chañarcillo, many other ores were discovered near Copiapó well into the 1840s.[51] Copiapó experienced a large demographic and urbanistic growth during the rush.[51] The town became a centre for trade and services of a large mining district.[52] The mining zone slowly grew northwards into the diffuse border with Bolivia.[53] At the end of the silver rush rich miners had diversified their assets into banking, agriculture, trade and commerce all over Chile.[51]

 
Cornelio Saavedra Rodríguez in a meeting with the main Mapuche loncos of Araucania in 1869. With the Occupation of the Araucanía, that culminated in the 1880s, new lands were made available for non-indigenous agriculture.

In the 19th century, access to the Californian and Australian markets made wheat export a very lucrative activity.[54] In the mid 19th century, these countries experienced large gold rushes which created a large demand for wheat. Chile was at the time the "only wheat producer of some importance in the Pacific".[55] At the same time as the wheat cycle new irrigation canals were built and apiculture and some machines introduced into Chilean agriculture.[56] Apart from that, new markets were explored for Chilean agricultural products.[56] The wheat boom did not last for long; by 1855 California managed to supply itself with wheat and from 1858 onwards it went over to export wheat to Chile.[55] The Australian gold rush of 1851 had the effect of decreasing the labour used in agriculture forcing the colony to import wheat from Chile sustaining Chilean wheat exports whilst the Californian market vanished.[55] After the gold rushes of California and Australia were over these regions begun exporting wheat competing with Chilean wheat[56] forcing from the mid-1860s onwards wheat exports to be shifted to England.[54] Between 1850 and 1875 the area cultivated with wheat and barley for export in Chile rose from 120 to 450 ha.[57] The "cycle" came to an end in the late 1870s due to the increased technification of agriculture in the United States and Argentina plus the competition of Russia and Canada.[54][58] The end of the wheat cycle added to the already difficult situation that Chilean economy was passing through in the 1870s.

In the mid-19th century the value relationship established by law between gold and silver coin undervalued silver coins causing the flight of silver from Chile due to better prices in the international market and a scarcity of silver coins in Chile. With the abolition of the silver standard in most countries that begun in Germany in 1871 the unadjusted Chilean rate that had previously undervalued silver came to undervalue gold instead.[59]

Following independence in 1820 Valdivia entered a period of economic decline.[60] This was because Valdivia was since colonial times isolated from Central Chile by hostile Mapuche territory and depended heavily upon seaborne trade with the port of Callao in Peru.[60] With independence this intra-colonial traded ended but was not substituted by new routes.[60] German immigrants that arrived from 1850 to 1875 transformed the economy of Valdivia and the whole Southern Chile. Among the achievements of the Germans immigrants was the deepening of division of labour, the introduction of wage labour in agriculture and the establishment of Chile's first beer brewery in Valdivia in 1851 by Carl Anwandter.[60][61]

Until the mid-19th century more than 80% of Chilean population remained rural working in agriculture or mining and was to a large degree self-sufficient to produce articles of consume.[62]

Saltpetre Republic (1873–1914) edit

 
Antofagasta in 1879 in a photograph of Eduardo Clifford Spencer and Carlos Díaz Escudero. It is calculated that more than £ 1,000,000 had been invested in the region.[63]

Starting in 1873, Chile's economy deteriorated.[64] Chilean wheat exports were outcompeted by production in Canada, Russia, and Argentina. Chilean copper was largely replaced in international markets by copper from the United States and Río Tinto in Spain.[58][65] Chile's silver mining income also dropped.[58] In the mid-1870s, Peru nationalized its nitrate industry, affecting both British and Chilean interests.[64] Contemporaries considered the crisis the worst ever of independent Chile.[64] Chilean newspaper El Ferrocarril predicted 1879 to be "a year of mass business liquidation".[64] In 1878, then-President Aníbal Pinto expressed his concern through the following statement:[58][64]

If a new mining discovery or some novelty of that sort does not come to improve the actual situation, the crisis that has long been felt will worsen

— Aníbal Pinto, president of Chile, 1878.
 
View of Humberstone, a saltpetre work from the Saltpetre Republic epoch.

It was during this context of economic crisis that Chile became involved the costly War of the Pacific (1879–1883) seizing control of mineral-rich provinces of Peru and Bolivia. The notion that Chile entered the war to obtain economical gains has been a topic of debate among historians.[58][66][67] The crisis in has also been considered by Jorge Pinto Rodríguez a force behind the new pulse of conquest of indigenous lands that took place in Araucanía in the 1870s.[58][68]

When Chile found herself in command of the then still Peruvian province of Tarapacá during the War of the Pacific and being subjected to pressure from Peru's creditors, who threatened Chile's credit in Europe if their claims were not met, the Chilean government essentially had two options: to nationalize the industry for Chile (that is to pay the Peruvian debt certificates), or to recognize the holders of the Peruvian debt certificates (which John Thomas North hurried to purchase at knock-down prices) as the owner of the assets. On June 11, 1881, Chile issued a decree in favor of the second option and to enact an export tax upon the export of saltpeter. The Chilean war debts, the impossibility to assume the financial obligations of nitrate certificates and the will to deflate European opposition to the annexation were the reasons to the decree that was criticized in Chile after the war.[69]

As the victor and possessor of a new coastal territory following the War of the Pacific, Chile benefited by gaining a lucrative territory with significant mineral income. The national treasury grew by 900 percent between 1879 and 1902, due to taxes coming from the newly acquired lands.[70] British involvement and control of the nitrate industry rose significantly,[71] but from 1901 to 1921 Chilean ownership increased from 15% to 51%.[72] The growth of Chilean economy sustained in its saltpetre monopoly[73] meant, compared to the previous growth cycle (1832–1873), that the economy became less diversified and overly dependent on a single natural resource.[58] In addition the Chilean nitrate, used worldwide as fertilizer, was sensitive to economic downturns as farmers made cuts on fertilizer use one of their earliest economic measures in the face of economic decline.[73] It has been questioned on whether the nitrate wealth conquered in the War of the Pacific was a resource curse or not.[74] During the Nitrate Epoch the government increased public spending but was however accused of squandering money.[58]

The 1870s saw of industries like sugar refineries, confectioneries and shoe and textile factories emerge.[75] Since the 1880s some scholars argue that Chile was en route to becoming an industrialized nation before 1914, economist Ducoing claims no industrialization took place, but rather a modernization process.[76]

 
View of the harbour of Valparaíso (1908–1919). Until the opening of the Panama Canal Valparaíso was one of the principal ports of the Pacific.

Starting in 1878, the Chilean state increased the issuing of new banknotes (fiat currency) causing the Chilean peso to devaluate.[77] When the War of the Pacific began in 1879 the government issued more fiat currency in order to afford the costly war, and continued to do so in 1880 and 1881.[78] In 1881 the country prepared for a return to the gold standard and to gradually eliminate fiat currency.[78] However, during the Chilean Civil War in 1891 the government of José Manuel Balmaceda issued more fiat money to finance this new war.[78] By 1891 a dispute begun between those who supported a return to gold convertibility of money ("oreros") and those who opposed convertibility ("papeleros").[77] In 1892 the "oreros" succeeded in having the convertibility of currency approved by law and in December 1895 non-convertible legal tender was pulled out of circulation.[77] In 1898 the convertible regime collapsed once again in the face of severe economic instability (crop failure, war scare) and was abolished.[78] Issuing of fiat money then continued until 1907 but from there on currency was issued with convertibility to gold or saltpetre mining related legal titles.[78]

 
Chilean hawker in the early 20th century.

The establishment of the Buenos Aires-Mendoza railroad in 1885 ended the lengthy and costly trade with carts that connected these two regions of Argentina and facilitated cattle exports from the pampas to Chile, albeit in the last portion of the route the cattle had to walk over the high mountain passes of the Andes.[37][79] These imports resulted in a lowering of meat prices in Chile.[79] Sociedad Nacional de la Agricultura (National Agriculture Society), a landowners organization, pushed for a tariff on Argentine cattle and in 1897 the tariff was passed in a bill at the Chilean congress.[79] The unpopular tariff resulted a massive protest in that degenerated into a destructive riot in Santiago in October 1905.[79] Chilean wine exports to Argentina were hampered by the lack of effective land transport and a series of war scares. This situation changed after the Pactos de Mayo were signed in 1902 and the inauguration of the Transandine Railway in 1909, making war unlikely and trade across the Andes easier. Both governments agreed to sign a free trade agreement. The Argentine winegrowers association, Centro Vitivinícola Nacional, seeing Chilean wines as a threat to domestic industry, protested vigorously against the agreement. Their complaints, in conjunction with that of Chilean cattle farmers represented by Sociedad Nacional de la Agricultura ended up tearing down the plans for a free trade agreement between Argentina and Chile.[80]

The rapid economic expansion of the late 19th century occurred not only in the northern regions but also in the extreme south where in Tierra del Fuego a gold rush was triggered in 1884 fueled economic growth in Punta Arenas and attracted a considerable amount of European immigrants.[81] Tierra del Fuego and much of Magallanes Region also experienced a boom in the sheepherding industry since the 1880s accompanied by colonization of the sparsely populated Patagonian grasslands.[82] In the South-Central Araucanía the Chilean invasion of native Mapuche territory caused the economy of Araucanía to change from being based on sheep and cattle herding to one based on agriculture and wood extraction.[83] The Mapuches' loss of land following the occupation caused severe erosion since Mapuches continued to practice large-scale livestock herding in limited areas.[84]

Crisis and restructuring (1914–1938) edit

 
View of Sewell, a town created to serve El Teniente during the early days of the large-scale copper mining ("Gran Minería").

The opening of Panama Canal in 1914 caused a severe drop in traffic along Chilean ports due to shifts in the maritime trade routes.[82][85][86] In addition to this international trade collapsed and state income was reduced to half of its previous value after the start of the World War I in 1914.[87][88] The Haber process, first applied on an industrial scale in 1913 and later used as part of Germany's war effort due to its lack of access to Chilean saltpetre, ended Chile's monopoly on nitrate and led to an economic decline in Chile.[72][89][90] While saltpetre mining gradually waned in importance copper mining rose, exporting raw materials to a level unprecedented in the history of Chile.[72][91] By 1929 copper exports had reached the same values as saltpetre exports, and in 1937 the value of copper exports largely surpassed that of saltpetre.[92] In the 1920–1937 period both industries had combined a 70–83% share of the value of Chilean exports.[92]

In the 20th century two new economic actors rose to prominence in Chile; the state and capital from the United States.[72] Beginning in 1905 United States-based companies came to develop and control copper mining in Chile.[72][93] The main companies were; Anaconda Copper in control of Chuquicamata, Kennecott Copper Corporation in control of El Teniente and Andes Copper in control of Potrerillos.[72][94] Between the 1910s and 1930 United States investments in Chile had a tenfold increase, the bulk of which was directed to mining activities.[92]

The increased influence of the United States in Chilean economy did not only manifested itself in copper mining but also in foreign trade. After the First World War the United States became the prime importer of Chilean goods and in the 1930s it overtook the United Kingdom's place as the prime source of Chilean imports.[92]

Edwin W. Kemmerer, a "Money Doctor", was invited to Chile in 1925 to deal with monetary policy and inflation problems which were considered one of the principal economic problems of Chile at the time.[92][95] The visit by Kemmerer was used to back up monetary policies already outlined by Chileans.[92] These reforms included the creation of a central bank, the establishment of a government budget law and general bank law.[95] All these reforms were established by rule by decree by Arturo Alessandri who had been reestablished in power following a coup d'etat against him in 1924 (where the coup-makers protested among other things against inflation).[92][95] Gold convertibility was established in 1925.[95] As result of these reforms Chile managed to tame inflation to such degree that the 1920s were the decade with less inflation in the 1890–1980 period.[92] Another consequence of the reforms was an increased easyness by Chile to obtain loans not only in the United States but also in the United Kingdom, Switzerland and Germany.[92] In the years after the visit of Kemmerer there was a sharp increase in foreign investments.[92]

 
Soup kitchen to feed the unemployed in 1932.

The Great Depression that begun 1929 was felt strongly in Chile from 1930 to 1932.[96] Saltpetre and copper exports collapsed.[96] The World Economic Survey of the League of Nations declared Chile the worst affected nation by the depression.[96] The crisis caused the authoritarian regime of Carlos Ibáñez del Campo to fall in July 1931 followed by a succession of short-lived governments until the election of Arturo Alessandri in December 1932.[96] The economic crisis rose the levels of unemployment and caused a migration of unemployed saltpetre miners from the north to Santiago.[96] Miners constituted around 6% of the active population but made up more than half of the unemployed during the crisis.[92] Numerous soup kitchens sprang up in Santiago while homeless people begun to dwell in caves in the hills around the city.[96] The state responded to the crisis by gradually raising tariffs, increasing internal demand and increasing control over the "flux and use" of foreign currency.[88][92][97] Quotas and licences were established for imports and the gold convertibility was once again abolished in 1931.[92][98]

These policies contributed to an industrial recovery and for the industry to already by 1934 surpass the levels of activity of 1929.[88] In the 1930s the massive industrial growth was spearheaded by the textile industry, but non-metallic mining, chemical industries and machine and transport factories did also expand.[88][99] Overall industry recovered and expanded faster than the traditional exports in the post depression period.[100]

The Great Depression brought initially a period of deflation of Chilean currency followed by inflation in 1931 and 1932. The inflation was brought under control momentarily after 1932 but resurfaced again in 1936.[98]

The 1900–1930 period was the one of largest growth of agriculture in the 20th century until the 1980s.[101] Despite of this conditions in for rural workers remained harsh with Tancredo Pinochet denouncing the poor conditions of workers in the hacienda of president Juan Luis Sanfuentes during his presidency (1915–1920).[101] Within a dual sector economic model the Chilean hacienda has been characterized as a prime example of a primitive and rural component.[76] McBride, a British who visited Chile in the 1930s, is reported to have been "astounded" to see haciendas with "agricultural methods that reminds of ancient Egypt, Greece or Palestine."[102]

The Faculty of Economical Science of the University of Chile was established in 1937 coinciding with the spread of Keynesian economics.[97]

Internal growth era edit

Partial industrialization (1938–1958) edit

Industrialization became a state policy from 1938 onwards.[76][99] This policy line became possible after the victory of the Popular Front, a coalition including communists and socialists, in the 1938 elections.[103] The perceived success of the Soviet economy, the fast growth of other centralized European economies and the influence of Keynesian economics helped to establish "development inwards" ideas in Chile paving the way for active state involvement in the nation's economy.[103][104] These tendencies were reinforced in 1948 with the establishment of ECLAC (CEPAL in Spanish) in Santiago and the arrival of Raúl Prebisch in 1950 as director of it.[104][105] Chile's "development inwards" policies were part of a regional phenomenon with Argentina, Brazil and Uruguay applying similar policies.[105]

In the aftermath of the disastrous 1939 Chillán earthquake, the government created CORFO (Spanish acronym for Production Development Corporation) to help in the reconstruction of the country and to industrialize the country, mechanize the agriculture and help mining to develop.[106][107] To finance CORFO loans were taken by the government, the bulk of the taxes were raised and copper mining in particular got an additional tax.[107]

One of the early tasks of CORFO was to "solve the old problem of the ironworks".[108] In doing so it injected capital and granted loans to the Compañía Electro-Siderúrgica e Industrial de Valdivia, the inheritor to the failed Altos Hornos y Acerías de Corral.[108] In 1947 CORFO begun the construction of a large steel mill in Huachipato near Concepción which in 1950 begun operating as Compañía de Acero del Pacífico.[108] Another division of CORFO engaged in oil exploration making a breakthrough discovery in northern Tierra del Fuego in 1945. Extraction began in 1949 and in 1950 the state created ENAP (National Petroleum Company) to deal with oil extraction and prospection. Until 1960 most oil extracted in Chile came from Tierra del Fuego.[109]

Industrial activity experienced enormous growth in the 1940s, it expanded at least 6.1% annually in that decade.[99] The industries share of GDP rose from 16.7 to 23.7 in the 1940–1955 period.[99] Starting in 1953 the growth rate of Chilean economy decreased to an annual average of 0.7% but increased to an annual average of 2.4–3.0% in the 1957–1960 period.[99] The decline in the economic growth from 1953 onwards was variously attributed to excessive state intervention, neglect of agriculture and mining, unequal wealth distribution and dependency on state intervention.[99][110]

The agrarian production in Chile contracted from 1950 onwards.[111] A government plan set up in 1954 to address this ended with meager results and in 1958 a new plan was presented.[111]

Structural reforms (1958–1970) edit

The 1958 agriculture plan allowed CORFO to develop investments in dairy plants, refrigerated slaughterhouses, sugar refineries and transport infrastructure.[111]

Statism and collectivism (1970–1973) edit

Salvador Allende won the 1970 Chilean presidential election as leader of the Unidad Popular ("Popular Unity") coalition. His economic policy included a number of measures referred to as the Vuskovic Plan. Under this the Chilean copper mines were nationalized. Their revenue represent a large share of the Chilean government budget revenue.

During 1972, the macroeconomic problems continued to mount.[112] Inflation surpassed 200 percent, and the fiscal deficit surpassed 13 percent of GDP.[112] Domestic credit to the public sector grew at almost 300 percent, and international reserves dipped below US$77 million.[112] Real wages fell 25 percent in 1972.[113]

At the same time, the United States conducted a campaign to deepen the inflation crisis.[114]

Neoliberal reforms (1973–1990) edit

 
Image of Chilean vineyard in the foothills of the Andes near Santiago. Chile is now the fifth largest exporter of wines in the world, and the ninth largest producer.

From an economic point of view, the era can be divided into two periods.[112] The first, from 1973 to the Crisis of 1982, corresponds to the period when most of the reforms were implemented.[112] The period ended with the international debt crisis and the collapse of the Chilean economy.[112] At that point, unemployment was extremely high, above 20 percent, and a large proportion of the banking sector had become bankrupt.[112] During that first period, an economic policy that emphasized export expansion was implemented.[112] Some economists argue that the economic recovery of the second period, from 1982 to 1990, was due to Pinochet's nationalisation of banks and reintroduction to the private market in 1984.[115]

Monetarist shock therapy and "seven modernizations" (1973–1982) edit

 
Chilean (orange) and average Latin American (blue) rates of growth of GDP (1971–2007).

After the military took over the government in 1973, a period of dramatic economic changes began.[112] The military junta appointed a group of Chilean economists who had been educated in the United States at the University of Chicago. The Chicago Boys advocated laissez-faire, free-market, neoliberal, and fiscally conservative policies, in stark contrast to the extensive nationalization and centrally-planned economic programs supported by Allende,[116] and the import substitution industrialization and structuralist economics supported by Chilean governments since the Great Depression. In a shock therapy, Chile was drastically transformed from an economy with a protected market, with strong government intervention, into a liberalized, world-integrated economy, where market forces were left free to guide most of the economy's decisions.[112][116] Before 1973 the role of the state was to promote investment and industrialization. The Chicago Boys restricted government intervention and public enterprise activities. Businesses and lands expropriated during the presidency of Allende were re-privatized (with the exception of the copper mines). Price controls were abolished, import liberalized, the financial market and capital flows were deregulated. Labor unions were suppressed. Direct taxes and progressive taxes were reduced or abolished while indirect taxes were raised.[117] The central bank raised interest rates from 49.9% to 178%. Thereby inflation could be lowered[118] at the expected price of a sharp recession.[119] When unemployment doubled some public work programmes were installed.[120]

Year 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982
Inflation (%) 508.1 376.0 340.0 174.0 63.5 30.3 38.9 31.2 9.5 20.7

Initial support by the business community dried out when contractionary monetary policies and hasty liberalizations caused a drop in manufacturing output of 26% in 1975.[121] The first period advocating a Monetarist shock therapy and “seven Modernisations” is marked by a high rate of business bankruptcies and a significant loss of manufacturing share of GDP. The Chicago Boys argued that this was due to a lack of competitiveness caused by the development strategy supported before 1973. Chilean economist Ricardo Ffrench-Davis counters that the cause for those bankruptcies cannot necessarily be addressed to outright inefficiencies since the severe recessions (around 1973, 1975 and 1981), real interest rates at an average of 38%, hasty import liberalization and an artificially high exchange rate revaluation were the decisive factors of business mortality.[122]

After the recession of 1975 the economy expanded from 1977 to 1980 with high growth rates. It made Chile a showcase for Monetarists and economic liberals. Milton Friedman called it in his Newsweek column from January 25, 1982, a Miracle of Chile. Nevertheless, the economic growth rate of the whole 1975–1980 period was below the potential Chilean growth rate.[123]

The boom ended in the economic crisis of 1982. The Latin American debt crisis had a devastating impact on every Latin American country, but Chile was hit hardest with a GDP declined by 14%, while Latin American GDP diminished by 3.2% within the same period.[124] Besides the Petrodollar recycling and the 1979 energy crisis there were some specific Chilean reasons for the crisis too. The Chicago Boys had expected that since the government had achieved a fiscal surplus and the decision for external borrowing was left to private agents a foreign exchange crisis would not occur. But in an effort to fight inflation Dollarization was introduced which lead to a Peso revaluation that caused high current account deficits which led to an increase in foreign lending. Additionally capital controls were abandoned and the financial market deregulated which led to an undamped increase in private foreign borrowing.[125] The debt crisis led to a bank run which led to an economic crisis.

With the economic crisis of 1982, the "monetarist experiment" came to be widely regarded as a failure.[126][127][128][129]

Pragmatic neoliberalism (1982–1990) edit

Finance minister Sergio de Castro rejected a competitive devaluation of the Peso even in 1982 despite a quickly growing rate of business bankruptcies. He argued that only the strongest and fittest should survive, but with a deepening financial and economic crisis that position became unbearable and he had to resign.[130] The economic crisis of 1981 led to the replacement of all the Chicago Boys.[131] Pragmatic economists had to socialize the two biggest Chilean banks in 1982 and another seven collapsing banks in 1983. The Central Bank of Chile socialized much of the foreign debt.[132] The public expenditure quota rose above 34%, even higher than during the presidency of socialist Salvador Allende.[133]

The pragmatic Chicago Boy Hernán Büchi was appointed as finance minister in 1985. He revived Bank regulation by founding the Superintendencia de Bancos e Instituciones Financieras (SBIF) and established capital controls to avoid another financial crisis. He also established ProChile, a Chilean government agency specialized in the promotion of exports.[134] A further promotion of exports were fostered by cheap government credit and subsidies. Some tariffs were raised up to 35%. The socialized banks and some profitable public companies were re-privatized.[134]

The pragmatic economic policy after the crisis of 1982 is appreciated for bringing constant economic growth.[135][136]

Concertación era (1990–2010) edit

 
Gross domestic product per capita at constant PPP prices, 1950–2017. Latin America in orange, and Chile in blue (PPP, Current international dollars).

After the return to Democracy the Presidents Patricio Aylwin (1990–1993) and Eduardo Frei Ruiz-Tagle (1994–1999) avoided radical change in favour of a “change in continuity”. To raise the lower income groups the share of government social spending was raised and a tax reform increased fiscal income. In 1990 the labor code was reformed with the aim to legitimate unions in order to balance the bargaining powers of employers and employees. Also in 1990 a tripartite agreement between government, unions and employers provided for an increase in the real minimum wage of 28% until 1993. In the first half of the 1990s a significant success on poverty reduction and a bit more equitable income distribution was achieved.[137]

poverty rate (%).[138]
1987 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000
45.1 38.6 32.6 27.5 23.3 21.7 20.6
 
Fishfarm in Fjord near La Junta, 2009. Chile is the second largest producer of salmon in the world.[139]

Capital controls such as a reserve requirement for foreign loans and a tax on foreign currency loans helped to prevent another financial crisis when many southern American countries suffered from the impact of the Tequila crisis.[140] Nevertheless, the capital controls were not adapted to the disproportionate real appreciation of the peso and excessive capital inflows in 1996–1997. Thus Chile was affected by the 1997 Asian financial crisis and witnessed a financial and economic crisis, albeit a relatively short one.[141]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ These cities were often in fact more of villages or towns due to their size.

References edit

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Bibliography edit

External links edit

  • [2] Economía y democracia. Los casos de Chile y México – by J.L. Saez Lozano, CEPAL
  • Global Trade Watch paper on recent Chilean economic policy history

economic, history, chile, economy, chile, shifted, substantially, over, time, from, heterogeneous, economies, diverse, indigenous, peoples, early, husbandry, oriented, economy, finally, material, export, large, service, sector, chile, recent, economic, history. The economy of Chile has shifted substantially over time from the heterogeneous economies of the diverse indigenous peoples to an early husbandry oriented economy and finally to one of raw material export and a large service sector Chile s recent economic history since 1973 has been the focus of an extensive debate from which neoliberalism acquired its modern meaning 1 2 Chile emerged into independence as a rural economy on what was the periphery of the Spanish Empire A period of relative free trade that began with independence in the 1810s brought a modernizing development of certain sectors of the Chilean economy This was accompanied by formation of a local business class a novelty in Chile Chile experienced its first modern economic crisis with the Long depression in the 1870s The exploitation of lucrative nitrate deposits of the north conquered in the War of the Pacific 1879 1884 marked a whole epoch in the history of Chile and the economic legacy of nitrate has been widely debated When Chile became an independent nation in 1818 it was the poorest clarification needed territory in the Americas 3 4 by the 1890s it had become richer clarification needed than Sweden and twice as rich than Japan 5 and it became one of the 15 richest clarification needed nations in the world 6 a position it would retain for decades even as late as the 1950s it remained richer clarification needed than its former colonial master Spain and almost as rich as Germany 7 However starting in the late 1920s the Chilean economy began a steady decline with 1950 industrial capacity inferior to what it had been forty years previously 5 It was not until the late 1970s that this decline started to revert 8 Since that time the Chilean economy has generally grown although it has yet to regain its former status In the first half of the 20th century Chile suffered severe economic recessions including the Great Depression This period saw the rapid urbanization of the country and a state led partial industrialization that began in 1939 Large scale copper mining replaced nitrate extraction as the country s main source of wealth Chilean agriculture remained one of the most undeveloped sectors of economy and was stagnant despite land reforms in the 1960s and 1970s from 1930 to 1980 In the mid 1970s under the influence of the Chicago Boys Pinochet s military dictatorship initiated profound changes oriented to a neoliberal economic model The democratic governments that succeeded the dictatorship since 1990 have largely continued its economic policies but increased social spending and reduced poverty Chilean exports and GDP per capita rose steadily through the 1980s and 1990s until the Asian crisis of 1997 after which economic growth slowed somewhat In the post 1973 period there has been a rise in outsourcing self employment informal employment and an increase in women s share in the labor force 9 Contents 1 Pre Hispanic economy 2 Colonial economy 2 1 Spanish conquest 1541 1600 2 2 Century of suet 1600 1687 2 3 Century of wheat 1687 1810 2 4 Independence Era 1810 1830 3 Liberalism 3 1 Early republican boom 1830 1873 3 2 Saltpetre Republic 1873 1914 3 3 Crisis and restructuring 1914 1938 4 Internal growth era 4 1 Partial industrialization 1938 1958 4 2 Structural reforms 1958 1970 4 3 Statism and collectivism 1970 1973 5 Neoliberal reforms 1973 1990 5 1 Monetarist shock therapy and seven modernizations 1973 1982 5 2 Pragmatic neoliberalism 1982 1990 6 Concertacion era 1990 2010 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 External linksPre Hispanic economy editIn the Far North the Pre Hispanic economy of indigenous groups were divided among those that practised agriculture and were sedentary and the Changos that lived as coastal hunter gatherers The sedentary groups raised llamas and practised irrigation techniques Bone necklaces gold and copper objects interpreted as luxury goods suggest according to Villalobos et al certain level of social stratification among the sedentary groups 10 At the time of the arrival of the first Spaniards to Chile the largest indigenous population concentration was in the area spanning from Itata River to Chiloe Archipelago 11 In this area indigenous groups practised glade agriculture among the forests 12 The forests provided firewood fibre and allowed the production of planks 12 Agriculture type varied while some Mapuches and Huilliches practised a slash and burn type of agriculture some more labour intensive agriculture is known to have been developed by Mapuches around Budi Lake raised fields and the Lumaco and Puren valleys canalized fields 13 14 Pre Hispanic agriculture extended as far south as the Guaitecas Archipelago 44 S were indigenous Chonos cultivated Chiloe potatoes 15 Tools are known to have been relatively simple In addition the Mapuche and Huilliche economy was complemented with chilihueque raising 14 The southern coast was particularly rich in molluscs algaes crustaceans and fish 12 The fjords and channels of the Chilean Far South excluding Chiloe Archipelago were inhabited by nomadic canoe using hunter gatherers These groups included the Chonos the Alacaluf and the Yaghans 16 Colonial economy edit nbsp Founding of Santiago in 1541 The new cities were important for the economic order that emerged in Chile during its conquest Spanish conquest 1541 1600 edit The conquest of Chile was not carried out directly by the Spanish Crown but by Spaniards that formed enterprises for those purposes and gathered financial resources and soldiers for the enterprise by their own 17 In 1541 an expedition enterprise led by Pedro de Valdivia founded Santiago initiating the conquest of Chile The first years were harsh for the Spaniards mainly due to their poverty indigenous rebellions and frequent conspirations 18 The second founding of La Serena in 1549 initially founded in 1544 but destroyed by natives was followed by the founding of numerous new cities in southern Chile halting only after Valdivia s death in 1553 18 The Spanish colonization of the Americas was characterized by the establishments of cities in the middle of conquered territories With the founding of each city a number of conquistadores became vecinos of that city being granted a solar and possibly also a chacra in the outskirts of the city or a hacienda or estancia in more far away parts of the countryside Apart from land natives were also distributed among Spaniards since they were considered vital for carrying out any economic activity 19 Beyond subsistence the 16th century economy of Chile was oriented towards large scale production Spanish colonizers used large amounts of indigenous labour following the slave labour system used in the sugar cane plantations of the Mediterranean islands and Macaronesia This system of labour successively killed the production base leading to the imposition of the encomienda system by the Spanish Crown in order to prevent excesses In Chile Spanish settlers managed to continue to exploit indigenous labour under slave like conditions despite the implementation of the encomienda Rich Spanish settlers had over time to face opposition to their mode of production by Jesuits Spanish officials and indigenous Mapuches 20 nbsp All mainland Spanish settlements red dots south of Biobio River were destroyed by 1604 The initial Spanish settlers of Chiloe Archipelago conquered in 1567 21 attempted to base their economy on gold extraction and a hispanic mediterranean agricultural model This activity ended in a general failure given the unsuitable conditions of the archipelago 22 Spaniards however reoriented their activities into logging Fitzroya 22 Century of suet 1600 1687 edit The collapse of the Spanish cities in the south following the battle of Curalaba 1598 meant for the Spaniards the loss of both the main gold districts and the largest indigenous labour sources 23 After those dramatic years the colony of Chile became concentrated in the central valley which became increasingly populated explored and economically exploited Following a tendency common in the whole Spanish America haciendas were formed as the economy moved away from mining and into agriculture and husbandry 24 Compared to the 16th and 18th centuries Chilean mining activity in the 17th century was very limited 25 Over the course of the 17th century the indigenous population of Chile declined making the encomiendas less and less important 24 Chilean encomenderos who had encomiendas in Cuyo across the Andes introduced to Chile indigenous Huarpes who they hired to other Spanish without encomiendas 26 nbsp 1744 engraving published in Relacion historica del viaje a la America meridional The image shows cattle in the Chilean countryside including a square for cattle slaughter In the 17th century economy of the Viceroyalty of Peru Chile s husbandry and agriculture based economy had a peripheral role contrasting to ore rich districts like Potosi and the wealthy city of Lima Husbandry products made up the bulk of Chilean exports to the rest of the viceroyalty These products included suet charqui and leather This trade made Chilean historian Benjamin Vicuna Mackenna label the 17th century the century of suet Spanish Siglo del sebo 27 Other products exported included dry fruits mules wines and minor amounts of copper 27 Trade with Peru was controlled by merchants from Lima that enjoyed protection by the Spanish authorities in Lima 28 In addition to the exports to coastal Peru Chile also exported products inland to Upper Peru through the port of Arica 27 Trade inside Chile was small since cities were tiny and self sufficient 27 Generally the extraction of wood had little importance in colonial Chile but Chiloe Archipelago and Valdivia were exceptions 29 These two areas exported planks to Peru 29 With the destruction of Valdivia in 1599 Chiloe gained increased importance as the only locale that could supply the Viceroyalty of Peru with Fitzroya wood 22 In 1641 the first large shipment of Fitzroya wood left Chiloe 22 Century of wheat 1687 1810 edit See also Bourbon reforms and Chilean wheat cycle In the 1650 1800 period the Chilean lower classes grew considerably in size 30 To deal with the poor and landless population a policy of founding cities note 1 and granting lands in their surroundings was implemented 30 From 1730 to 1820 a large number of farmers settled in the outskirts of old cities or formed new cities 31 Settling as a farmer in the outskirts of old cities La Serena Valparaiso Santiago and Concepcion was overall more popular than joining a new city since it secured a larger consumer market for agricultural products 32 Chilean haciendas latifundia engaged little in the supply of Chilean cities but focused on international exports for revenues 33 without Chile Lima would not exist Viceroy Jose de Armendariz in 1736 34 Chile begun exporting cereals to Peru in 1687 when Peru was struck by both an earthquake and a stem rust epidemic 28 Chilean soil and climatic conditions were better for cereal production than those of Peru and Chilean wheat was cheaper and of better quality than Peruvian wheat 28 35 According to historians Villalobos et al the 1687 events were only the detonant factor for exports to start 28 The Chilean Central Valley La Serena and Concepcion were the districts that came to be involved in cereal export to Peru 28 It should be pointed out that compared with the 19th century the area cultivated with wheat was very small and production modest 35 Initially Chilean latifundia could not meet the wheat demand due to a labour shortage so had to incorporate temporal workers in addition to the permanent staff Another response by the latifundia to labour shortages was to act as merchants buying wheat produced by independent farmers or from farmers that hired land In the period 1700 to 1850 this second option was overall more lucrative 36 The 1687 Peru earthquake also ended a Peruvian wine boom as the earthquake destroyed wine cellars and mud containers used for wine storage 37 The gradual decline of Peruvian wine even caused Peru to import some wine from Chile as it happened in 1795 when Lima imported 5 000 troves Spanish botijas from Concepcion in southern Chile 37 38 This particular export showed the emergence of Chile relative to Peru as a wine making region 37 Haciendas of central Chile are believed to had become labour saturated by 1780 generating an excess population that could not be incorporated into their economy 39 Some of this population settled in the outskirts of larger cities while other migrated to the mining districts of Norte Chico 39 Chile saw an unprecedented revival of its mining activity in the 18th century with annual gold production rising from 400 to 1000 kg over the course of the century and the silver annual production rising from 1000 to 5000 kg in the same interval 40 In the 18th century the shipbuilding industry in Valdivia one of the city s main economic activities reached its peak building numerous ships including frigates 41 42 Other shipyards of Chile included those of Concepcion and Chiloe Archipelago 43 The Chiloe shipyards constructed the bulk of the ships in Chile until the mid 18th century 43 In 1794 a new shipyards was established the mouth of Maule River present day Constitucion 43 Despite some navigators expressing that Valdivia had better conditions than Guayaquil in Ecuador this last port was the chief shipyard of the Spanish Empire in the Pacific 41 43 nbsp Smuggling became increasingly common in the 18th century Chile Governor Francisco Antonio Garcia Carrasco in picture was involved in a smuggling scandal Direct trade with Spain over the Straits of Magellan and Buenos Aires begun first in the 18th century constituting primarily an export route for gold silver and copper from Chilean mining By the same time Spain s trade monopoly with its colonies was successively weakened by smugglers from England France and United States 44 Independence Era 1810 1830 edit See also Chilean Independence War The independence wars in Chile 1810 1818 and Peru 1809 1824 had a negative impact on the Chilean economy Trade was disrupted and armies in Chile pillaged the countryside The war made commerce a high risk activity and royalist Peru then the only market for Chilean agricultural products was closed to commerce with independent Chile The Guerra a muerte phase was particularly destructive for the Biobio area and ended only to see a period of outlaw banditry e g Pincheira brothers occur until the late 1820s Chilean mining activity came out of the independence wars with relatively little damage 45 Trade with Peru did not fully recover after the independence struggles instead commerce with United States France and United Kingdom took off in the 1820s 45 During the Chilean Independence War the scarcity of weapons in the Chilean market forced the patriots to do large weapon purchases abroad or to the ships that anchored at Chilean ports 46 In addition to the finance of the Chilean army the nascent Chilean state had also to wholly finance the Chilean Argentine Army of the Andes after San Martin begun to disobey the orders from Argentina and the Freedom Expedition of Peru originally thought to be financed in part by Argentina 46 47 An expensive loan of 1 000 000 taken in 1822 in London in order to finance the independence struggle became a heavy burden for the Chilean state and took decades to pay off 46 Finance minister Diego Jose Benavente attempted to reform the tax system but met severe opposition to many measures 46 To pay off the loan the Chilean state granted the company Sociedad Portales Cea y Cia a sales monopoly of tobacco in Chile but this activity ended in failure 46 Liberalism editEarly republican boom 1830 1873 edit nbsp A modern Chilean steamboat and primitive rafts in Huasco in the 1850s illustrates the uneven modernization of the Chilean economy See also Chilean silver rush and Chilean wheat cycle In the early republican period Chilean international trade grew considerably 48 Merchants from countries like England Italy Germany and the United States settled in Chile 48 Chile was officially open to trade to all nations since 1811 but applied protectionist policies to favour domestic production in a manner that has been called neomercantilism 48 Chile s relative openness to international trade contrasted with contemporary truly protectionistic policies of Peru and Argentina 48 The 1830 1870 period was one of the greatest growth for the Chilean economy and was largely indebted to two export booms the copper and silver mining in Norte Chico and the Chilean wheat cycle 49 The overall development resulted in Chile becoming one of the high income countries in South America 50 nbsp Chanarcillo train station Atacama Chile 1862 Following the discovery of silver at Agua Amarga 1811 and Arqueros 1825 the Norte Chico mountains north of La Serena were exhaustively prospected 51 52 53 In 1832 prospector Juan Godoy found a silver outcrop reventon 50 km south of Copiapo in Chanarcillo 51 The finding attracted thousands of people to the place and generated significant wealth 52 After the discovery of Chanarcillo many other ores were discovered near Copiapo well into the 1840s 51 Copiapo experienced a large demographic and urbanistic growth during the rush 51 The town became a centre for trade and services of a large mining district 52 The mining zone slowly grew northwards into the diffuse border with Bolivia 53 At the end of the silver rush rich miners had diversified their assets into banking agriculture trade and commerce all over Chile 51 nbsp Cornelio Saavedra Rodriguez in a meeting with the main Mapuche loncos of Araucania in 1869 With the Occupation of the Araucania that culminated in the 1880s new lands were made available for non indigenous agriculture In the 19th century access to the Californian and Australian markets made wheat export a very lucrative activity 54 In the mid 19th century these countries experienced large gold rushes which created a large demand for wheat Chile was at the time the only wheat producer of some importance in the Pacific 55 At the same time as the wheat cycle new irrigation canals were built and apiculture and some machines introduced into Chilean agriculture 56 Apart from that new markets were explored for Chilean agricultural products 56 The wheat boom did not last for long by 1855 California managed to supply itself with wheat and from 1858 onwards it went over to export wheat to Chile 55 The Australian gold rush of 1851 had the effect of decreasing the labour used in agriculture forcing the colony to import wheat from Chile sustaining Chilean wheat exports whilst the Californian market vanished 55 After the gold rushes of California and Australia were over these regions begun exporting wheat competing with Chilean wheat 56 forcing from the mid 1860s onwards wheat exports to be shifted to England 54 Between 1850 and 1875 the area cultivated with wheat and barley for export in Chile rose from 120 to 450 ha 57 The cycle came to an end in the late 1870s due to the increased technification of agriculture in the United States and Argentina plus the competition of Russia and Canada 54 58 The end of the wheat cycle added to the already difficult situation that Chilean economy was passing through in the 1870s In the mid 19th century the value relationship established by law between gold and silver coin undervalued silver coins causing the flight of silver from Chile due to better prices in the international market and a scarcity of silver coins in Chile With the abolition of the silver standard in most countries that begun in Germany in 1871 the unadjusted Chilean rate that had previously undervalued silver came to undervalue gold instead 59 Following independence in 1820 Valdivia entered a period of economic decline 60 This was because Valdivia was since colonial times isolated from Central Chile by hostile Mapuche territory and depended heavily upon seaborne trade with the port of Callao in Peru 60 With independence this intra colonial traded ended but was not substituted by new routes 60 German immigrants that arrived from 1850 to 1875 transformed the economy of Valdivia and the whole Southern Chile Among the achievements of the Germans immigrants was the deepening of division of labour the introduction of wage labour in agriculture and the establishment of Chile s first beer brewery in Valdivia in 1851 by Carl Anwandter 60 61 Until the mid 19th century more than 80 of Chilean population remained rural working in agriculture or mining and was to a large degree self sufficient to produce articles of consume 62 Saltpetre Republic 1873 1914 edit The neutrality of this section is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met May 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message This section may lend undue weight to certain ideas incidents or controversies Please help to create a more balanced presentation Discuss and resolve this issue before removing this message May 2015 This section may present fringe theories without giving appropriate weight to the mainstream view and explaining the responses to the fringe theories Please help improve it or discuss the issue on the talk page May 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message See also War of the Pacific and Long Depression nbsp Antofagasta in 1879 in a photograph of Eduardo Clifford Spencer and Carlos Diaz Escudero It is calculated that more than 1 000 000 had been invested in the region 63 Starting in 1873 Chile s economy deteriorated 64 Chilean wheat exports were outcompeted by production in Canada Russia and Argentina Chilean copper was largely replaced in international markets by copper from the United States and Rio Tinto in Spain 58 65 Chile s silver mining income also dropped 58 In the mid 1870s Peru nationalized its nitrate industry affecting both British and Chilean interests 64 Contemporaries considered the crisis the worst ever of independent Chile 64 Chilean newspaper El Ferrocarril predicted 1879 to be a year of mass business liquidation 64 In 1878 then President Anibal Pinto expressed his concern through the following statement 58 64 If a new mining discovery or some novelty of that sort does not come to improve the actual situation the crisis that has long been felt will worsen Anibal Pinto president of Chile 1878 nbsp View of Humberstone a saltpetre work from the Saltpetre Republic epoch It was during this context of economic crisis that Chile became involved the costly War of the Pacific 1879 1883 seizing control of mineral rich provinces of Peru and Bolivia The notion that Chile entered the war to obtain economical gains has been a topic of debate among historians 58 66 67 The crisis in has also been considered by Jorge Pinto Rodriguez a force behind the new pulse of conquest of indigenous lands that took place in Araucania in the 1870s 58 68 When Chile found herself in command of the then still Peruvian province of Tarapaca during the War of the Pacific and being subjected to pressure from Peru s creditors who threatened Chile s credit in Europe if their claims were not met the Chilean government essentially had two options to nationalize the industry for Chile that is to pay the Peruvian debt certificates or to recognize the holders of the Peruvian debt certificates which John Thomas North hurried to purchase at knock down prices as the owner of the assets On June 11 1881 Chile issued a decree in favor of the second option and to enact an export tax upon the export of saltpeter The Chilean war debts the impossibility to assume the financial obligations of nitrate certificates and the will to deflate European opposition to the annexation were the reasons to the decree that was criticized in Chile after the war 69 As the victor and possessor of a new coastal territory following the War of the Pacific Chile benefited by gaining a lucrative territory with significant mineral income The national treasury grew by 900 percent between 1879 and 1902 due to taxes coming from the newly acquired lands 70 British involvement and control of the nitrate industry rose significantly 71 but from 1901 to 1921 Chilean ownership increased from 15 to 51 72 The growth of Chilean economy sustained in its saltpetre monopoly 73 meant compared to the previous growth cycle 1832 1873 that the economy became less diversified and overly dependent on a single natural resource 58 In addition the Chilean nitrate used worldwide as fertilizer was sensitive to economic downturns as farmers made cuts on fertilizer use one of their earliest economic measures in the face of economic decline 73 It has been questioned on whether the nitrate wealth conquered in the War of the Pacific was a resource curse or not 74 During the Nitrate Epoch the government increased public spending but was however accused of squandering money 58 The 1870s saw of industries like sugar refineries confectioneries and shoe and textile factories emerge 75 Since the 1880s some scholars argue that Chile was en route to becoming an industrialized nation before 1914 economist Ducoing claims no industrialization took place but rather a modernization process 76 nbsp View of the harbour of Valparaiso 1908 1919 Until the opening of the Panama Canal Valparaiso was one of the principal ports of the Pacific Starting in 1878 the Chilean state increased the issuing of new banknotes fiat currency causing the Chilean peso to devaluate 77 When the War of the Pacific began in 1879 the government issued more fiat currency in order to afford the costly war and continued to do so in 1880 and 1881 78 In 1881 the country prepared for a return to the gold standard and to gradually eliminate fiat currency 78 However during the Chilean Civil War in 1891 the government of Jose Manuel Balmaceda issued more fiat money to finance this new war 78 By 1891 a dispute begun between those who supported a return to gold convertibility of money oreros and those who opposed convertibility papeleros 77 In 1892 the oreros succeeded in having the convertibility of currency approved by law and in December 1895 non convertible legal tender was pulled out of circulation 77 In 1898 the convertible regime collapsed once again in the face of severe economic instability crop failure war scare and was abolished 78 Issuing of fiat money then continued until 1907 but from there on currency was issued with convertibility to gold or saltpetre mining related legal titles 78 nbsp Chilean hawker in the early 20th century The establishment of the Buenos Aires Mendoza railroad in 1885 ended the lengthy and costly trade with carts that connected these two regions of Argentina and facilitated cattle exports from the pampas to Chile albeit in the last portion of the route the cattle had to walk over the high mountain passes of the Andes 37 79 These imports resulted in a lowering of meat prices in Chile 79 Sociedad Nacional de la Agricultura National Agriculture Society a landowners organization pushed for a tariff on Argentine cattle and in 1897 the tariff was passed in a bill at the Chilean congress 79 The unpopular tariff resulted a massive protest in that degenerated into a destructive riot in Santiago in October 1905 79 Chilean wine exports to Argentina were hampered by the lack of effective land transport and a series of war scares This situation changed after the Pactos de Mayo were signed in 1902 and the inauguration of the Transandine Railway in 1909 making war unlikely and trade across the Andes easier Both governments agreed to sign a free trade agreement The Argentine winegrowers association Centro Vitivinicola Nacional seeing Chilean wines as a threat to domestic industry protested vigorously against the agreement Their complaints in conjunction with that of Chilean cattle farmers represented by Sociedad Nacional de la Agricultura ended up tearing down the plans for a free trade agreement between Argentina and Chile 80 The rapid economic expansion of the late 19th century occurred not only in the northern regions but also in the extreme south where in Tierra del Fuego a gold rush was triggered in 1884 fueled economic growth in Punta Arenas and attracted a considerable amount of European immigrants 81 Tierra del Fuego and much of Magallanes Region also experienced a boom in the sheepherding industry since the 1880s accompanied by colonization of the sparsely populated Patagonian grasslands 82 In the South Central Araucania the Chilean invasion of native Mapuche territory caused the economy of Araucania to change from being based on sheep and cattle herding to one based on agriculture and wood extraction 83 The Mapuches loss of land following the occupation caused severe erosion since Mapuches continued to practice large scale livestock herding in limited areas 84 Crisis and restructuring 1914 1938 edit Further information Great Depression in Chile nbsp View of Sewell a town created to serve El Teniente during the early days of the large scale copper mining Gran Mineria The opening of Panama Canal in 1914 caused a severe drop in traffic along Chilean ports due to shifts in the maritime trade routes 82 85 86 In addition to this international trade collapsed and state income was reduced to half of its previous value after the start of the World War I in 1914 87 88 The Haber process first applied on an industrial scale in 1913 and later used as part of Germany s war effort due to its lack of access to Chilean saltpetre ended Chile s monopoly on nitrate and led to an economic decline in Chile 72 89 90 While saltpetre mining gradually waned in importance copper mining rose exporting raw materials to a level unprecedented in the history of Chile 72 91 By 1929 copper exports had reached the same values as saltpetre exports and in 1937 the value of copper exports largely surpassed that of saltpetre 92 In the 1920 1937 period both industries had combined a 70 83 share of the value of Chilean exports 92 In the 20th century two new economic actors rose to prominence in Chile the state and capital from the United States 72 Beginning in 1905 United States based companies came to develop and control copper mining in Chile 72 93 The main companies were Anaconda Copper in control of Chuquicamata Kennecott Copper Corporation in control of El Teniente and Andes Copper in control of Potrerillos 72 94 Between the 1910s and 1930 United States investments in Chile had a tenfold increase the bulk of which was directed to mining activities 92 The increased influence of the United States in Chilean economy did not only manifested itself in copper mining but also in foreign trade After the First World War the United States became the prime importer of Chilean goods and in the 1930s it overtook the United Kingdom s place as the prime source of Chilean imports 92 Edwin W Kemmerer a Money Doctor was invited to Chile in 1925 to deal with monetary policy and inflation problems which were considered one of the principal economic problems of Chile at the time 92 95 The visit by Kemmerer was used to back up monetary policies already outlined by Chileans 92 These reforms included the creation of a central bank the establishment of a government budget law and general bank law 95 All these reforms were established by rule by decree by Arturo Alessandri who had been reestablished in power following a coup d etat against him in 1924 where the coup makers protested among other things against inflation 92 95 Gold convertibility was established in 1925 95 As result of these reforms Chile managed to tame inflation to such degree that the 1920s were the decade with less inflation in the 1890 1980 period 92 Another consequence of the reforms was an increased easyness by Chile to obtain loans not only in the United States but also in the United Kingdom Switzerland and Germany 92 In the years after the visit of Kemmerer there was a sharp increase in foreign investments 92 nbsp Soup kitchen to feed the unemployed in 1932 The Great Depression that begun 1929 was felt strongly in Chile from 1930 to 1932 96 Saltpetre and copper exports collapsed 96 The World Economic Survey of the League of Nations declared Chile the worst affected nation by the depression 96 The crisis caused the authoritarian regime of Carlos Ibanez del Campo to fall in July 1931 followed by a succession of short lived governments until the election of Arturo Alessandri in December 1932 96 The economic crisis rose the levels of unemployment and caused a migration of unemployed saltpetre miners from the north to Santiago 96 Miners constituted around 6 of the active population but made up more than half of the unemployed during the crisis 92 Numerous soup kitchens sprang up in Santiago while homeless people begun to dwell in caves in the hills around the city 96 The state responded to the crisis by gradually raising tariffs increasing internal demand and increasing control over the flux and use of foreign currency 88 92 97 Quotas and licences were established for imports and the gold convertibility was once again abolished in 1931 92 98 These policies contributed to an industrial recovery and for the industry to already by 1934 surpass the levels of activity of 1929 88 In the 1930s the massive industrial growth was spearheaded by the textile industry but non metallic mining chemical industries and machine and transport factories did also expand 88 99 Overall industry recovered and expanded faster than the traditional exports in the post depression period 100 The Great Depression brought initially a period of deflation of Chilean currency followed by inflation in 1931 and 1932 The inflation was brought under control momentarily after 1932 but resurfaced again in 1936 98 The 1900 1930 period was the one of largest growth of agriculture in the 20th century until the 1980s 101 Despite of this conditions in for rural workers remained harsh with Tancredo Pinochet denouncing the poor conditions of workers in the hacienda of president Juan Luis Sanfuentes during his presidency 1915 1920 101 Within a dual sector economic model the Chilean hacienda has been characterized as a prime example of a primitive and rural component 76 McBride a British who visited Chile in the 1930s is reported to have been astounded to see haciendas with agricultural methods that reminds of ancient Egypt Greece or Palestine 102 The Faculty of Economical Science of the University of Chile was established in 1937 coinciding with the spread of Keynesian economics 97 Internal growth era editPartial industrialization 1938 1958 edit See also Ley Reservada del Cobre Industrialization became a state policy from 1938 onwards 76 99 This policy line became possible after the victory of the Popular Front a coalition including communists and socialists in the 1938 elections 103 The perceived success of the Soviet economy the fast growth of other centralized European economies and the influence of Keynesian economics helped to establish development inwards ideas in Chile paving the way for active state involvement in the nation s economy 103 104 These tendencies were reinforced in 1948 with the establishment of ECLAC CEPAL in Spanish in Santiago and the arrival of Raul Prebisch in 1950 as director of it 104 105 Chile s development inwards policies were part of a regional phenomenon with Argentina Brazil and Uruguay applying similar policies 105 In the aftermath of the disastrous 1939 Chillan earthquake the government created CORFO Spanish acronym for Production Development Corporation to help in the reconstruction of the country and to industrialize the country mechanize the agriculture and help mining to develop 106 107 To finance CORFO loans were taken by the government the bulk of the taxes were raised and copper mining in particular got an additional tax 107 One of the early tasks of CORFO was to solve the old problem of the ironworks 108 In doing so it injected capital and granted loans to the Compania Electro Siderurgica e Industrial de Valdivia the inheritor to the failed Altos Hornos y Acerias de Corral 108 In 1947 CORFO begun the construction of a large steel mill in Huachipato near Concepcion which in 1950 begun operating as Compania de Acero del Pacifico 108 Another division of CORFO engaged in oil exploration making a breakthrough discovery in northern Tierra del Fuego in 1945 Extraction began in 1949 and in 1950 the state created ENAP National Petroleum Company to deal with oil extraction and prospection Until 1960 most oil extracted in Chile came from Tierra del Fuego 109 Industrial activity experienced enormous growth in the 1940s it expanded at least 6 1 annually in that decade 99 The industries share of GDP rose from 16 7 to 23 7 in the 1940 1955 period 99 Starting in 1953 the growth rate of Chilean economy decreased to an annual average of 0 7 but increased to an annual average of 2 4 3 0 in the 1957 1960 period 99 The decline in the economic growth from 1953 onwards was variously attributed to excessive state intervention neglect of agriculture and mining unequal wealth distribution and dependency on state intervention 99 110 The agrarian production in Chile contracted from 1950 onwards 111 A government plan set up in 1954 to address this ended with meager results and in 1958 a new plan was presented 111 Structural reforms 1958 1970 edit Further information Chilean land reform This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it August 2013 The 1958 agriculture plan allowed CORFO to develop investments in dairy plants refrigerated slaughterhouses sugar refineries and transport infrastructure 111 Statism and collectivism 1970 1973 edit Further information Vuskovic plan and Chilean nationalization of copper This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it August 2013 Salvador Allende won the 1970 Chilean presidential election as leader of the Unidad Popular Popular Unity coalition His economic policy included a number of measures referred to as the Vuskovic Plan Under this the Chilean copper mines were nationalized Their revenue represent a large share of the Chilean government budget revenue During 1972 the macroeconomic problems continued to mount 112 Inflation surpassed 200 percent and the fiscal deficit surpassed 13 percent of GDP 112 Domestic credit to the public sector grew at almost 300 percent and international reserves dipped below US 77 million 112 Real wages fell 25 percent in 1972 113 At the same time the United States conducted a campaign to deepen the inflation crisis 114 Neoliberal reforms 1973 1990 editSee also Military dictatorship of Chile 1973 1990 nbsp Image of Chilean vineyard in the foothills of the Andes near Santiago Chile is now the fifth largest exporter of wines in the world and the ninth largest producer From an economic point of view the era can be divided into two periods 112 The first from 1973 to the Crisis of 1982 corresponds to the period when most of the reforms were implemented 112 The period ended with the international debt crisis and the collapse of the Chilean economy 112 At that point unemployment was extremely high above 20 percent and a large proportion of the banking sector had become bankrupt 112 During that first period an economic policy that emphasized export expansion was implemented 112 Some economists argue that the economic recovery of the second period from 1982 to 1990 was due to Pinochet s nationalisation of banks and reintroduction to the private market in 1984 115 Monetarist shock therapy and seven modernizations 1973 1982 edit nbsp Chilean orange and average Latin American blue rates of growth of GDP 1971 2007 After the military took over the government in 1973 a period of dramatic economic changes began 112 The military junta appointed a group of Chilean economists who had been educated in the United States at the University of Chicago The Chicago Boys advocated laissez faire free market neoliberal and fiscally conservative policies in stark contrast to the extensive nationalization and centrally planned economic programs supported by Allende 116 and the import substitution industrialization and structuralist economics supported by Chilean governments since the Great Depression In a shock therapy Chile was drastically transformed from an economy with a protected market with strong government intervention into a liberalized world integrated economy where market forces were left free to guide most of the economy s decisions 112 116 Before 1973 the role of the state was to promote investment and industrialization The Chicago Boys restricted government intervention and public enterprise activities Businesses and lands expropriated during the presidency of Allende were re privatized with the exception of the copper mines Price controls were abolished import liberalized the financial market and capital flows were deregulated Labor unions were suppressed Direct taxes and progressive taxes were reduced or abolished while indirect taxes were raised 117 The central bank raised interest rates from 49 9 to 178 Thereby inflation could be lowered 118 at the expected price of a sharp recession 119 When unemployment doubled some public work programmes were installed 120 Year 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982Inflation 508 1 376 0 340 0 174 0 63 5 30 3 38 9 31 2 9 5 20 7Initial support by the business community dried out when contractionary monetary policies and hasty liberalizations caused a drop in manufacturing output of 26 in 1975 121 The first period advocating a Monetarist shock therapy and seven Modernisations is marked by a high rate of business bankruptcies and a significant loss of manufacturing share of GDP The Chicago Boys argued that this was due to a lack of competitiveness caused by the development strategy supported before 1973 Chilean economist Ricardo Ffrench Davis counters that the cause for those bankruptcies cannot necessarily be addressed to outright inefficiencies since the severe recessions around 1973 1975 and 1981 real interest rates at an average of 38 hasty import liberalization and an artificially high exchange rate revaluation were the decisive factors of business mortality 122 After the recession of 1975 the economy expanded from 1977 to 1980 with high growth rates It made Chile a showcase for Monetarists and economic liberals Milton Friedman called it in his Newsweek column from January 25 1982 a Miracle of Chile Nevertheless the economic growth rate of the whole 1975 1980 period was below the potential Chilean growth rate 123 The boom ended in the economic crisis of 1982 The Latin American debt crisis had a devastating impact on every Latin American country but Chile was hit hardest with a GDP declined by 14 while Latin American GDP diminished by 3 2 within the same period 124 Besides the Petrodollar recycling and the 1979 energy crisis there were some specific Chilean reasons for the crisis too The Chicago Boys had expected that since the government had achieved a fiscal surplus and the decision for external borrowing was left to private agents a foreign exchange crisis would not occur But in an effort to fight inflation Dollarization was introduced which lead to a Peso revaluation that caused high current account deficits which led to an increase in foreign lending Additionally capital controls were abandoned and the financial market deregulated which led to an undamped increase in private foreign borrowing 125 The debt crisis led to a bank run which led to an economic crisis With the economic crisis of 1982 the monetarist experiment came to be widely regarded as a failure 126 127 128 129 Pragmatic neoliberalism 1982 1990 edit Finance minister Sergio de Castro rejected a competitive devaluation of the Peso even in 1982 despite a quickly growing rate of business bankruptcies He argued that only the strongest and fittest should survive but with a deepening financial and economic crisis that position became unbearable and he had to resign 130 The economic crisis of 1981 led to the replacement of all the Chicago Boys 131 Pragmatic economists had to socialize the two biggest Chilean banks in 1982 and another seven collapsing banks in 1983 The Central Bank of Chile socialized much of the foreign debt 132 The public expenditure quota rose above 34 even higher than during the presidency of socialist Salvador Allende 133 The pragmatic Chicago Boy Hernan Buchi was appointed as finance minister in 1985 He revived Bank regulation by founding the Superintendencia de Bancos e Instituciones Financieras SBIF and established capital controls to avoid another financial crisis He also established ProChile a Chilean government agency specialized in the promotion of exports 134 A further promotion of exports were fostered by cheap government credit and subsidies Some tariffs were raised up to 35 The socialized banks and some profitable public companies were re privatized 134 The pragmatic economic policy after the crisis of 1982 is appreciated for bringing constant economic growth 135 136 Concertacion era 1990 2010 editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it August 2013 nbsp Gross domestic product per capita at constant PPP prices 1950 2017 Latin America in orange and Chile in blue PPP Current international dollars After the return to Democracy the Presidents Patricio Aylwin 1990 1993 and Eduardo Frei Ruiz Tagle 1994 1999 avoided radical change in favour of a change in continuity To raise the lower income groups the share of government social spending was raised and a tax reform increased fiscal income In 1990 the labor code was reformed with the aim to legitimate unions in order to balance the bargaining powers of employers and employees Also in 1990 a tripartite agreement between government unions and employers provided for an increase in the real minimum wage of 28 until 1993 In the first half of the 1990s a significant success on poverty reduction and a bit more equitable income distribution was achieved 137 poverty rate 138 1987 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 200045 1 38 6 32 6 27 5 23 3 21 7 20 6 nbsp Fishfarm in Fjord near La Junta 2009 Chile is the second largest producer of salmon in the world 139 Capital controls such as a reserve requirement for foreign loans and a tax on foreign currency loans helped to prevent another financial crisis when many southern American countries suffered from the impact of the Tequila crisis 140 Nevertheless the capital controls were not adapted to the disproportionate real appreciation of the peso and excessive capital inflows in 1996 1997 Thus Chile was affected by the 1997 Asian financial crisis and witnessed a financial and economic crisis albeit a relatively short one 141 See also editEconomy of Chile Chilean nationalization of copper The Shock Doctrine Economic history of Latin AmericaNotes edit These cities were often in fact more of villages or towns due to their size References edit Boas Taylor C Gans Morse Jordan 2009 Neoliberalism From New Liberal Philosophy to Anti Liberal Slogan PDF Studies in Comparative International Development 44 2 137 doi 10 1007 s12116 009 9040 5 S2CID 4811996 p 149 Boas Taylor C Gans Morse Jordan 2009 Neoliberalism From New Liberal Philosophy to Anti Liberal Slogan Studies in Comparative International Development vol 44 no 2 p 137 doi 10 1007 s12116 009 9040 5 ISSN 0039 3606 Rice Kate Cerda Maritza 2019 De la Colonia mas pobre al pais mas desarrollado Fact Checking UC in Spanish Facultad de Comunicaciones Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile Retrieved 2020 11 20 Andrades Rivas Eduardo 2020 07 02 La incultura en que Espana mantenia a sus colonias Dos topicos del mito fundacional republicano en Chile Scientific Electronic Library Online Retrieved 2020 11 20 a b Ducoing Cristian 2014 04 20 Cuando Chile era mas rico que Suecia Universidad de Valparaiso Noticias Retrieved 2020 11 20 Bolt Jutta van Zanden Jan Luiten 2020 11 02 Maddison style estimates of the evolution of the world economy A new 2020 update Groningen Growth and Development Centre Faculty of Economics and Business University of Groningen via Maddison Project Database de Gregorio Jose 2005 Crecimiento Economico en Chile Evidencia Fuentes y Perspectivas Centro de Estudios Publicos p 6 Luders Rolf 2011 Comentario al Libro de Gabriel Salazar Mercaderes Empresarios y Capitalistas Chile Siglo XIX Centro de Estudios Publicos p 13 Salazar amp Pinto 2002 pp 184 187 Villalobos et al 1974 pp 21 22 Otero 2006 p 36 a b c Otero 2006 pp 21 22 Dillehay Tom D Pino Quivira Mario Bonzani Renee Silva Claudia Wallner Johannes Le Quesne Carlos 2007 Cultivated wetlands and emerging complexity in south central Chile and long distance effects of climate change Antiquity 81 2007 949 960 a b Villalobos et al 1974 p 50 Bird Junius 1946 The Alacaluf In Steward Julian H ed Handbook of South American Indians Bulletin 143 Vol I Bureau of American Ethnology pp 55 79 Villalobos et al 1974 p 57 Villalobos et al 1974 p 87 a b Villalobos et al 1974 pp 97 99 Villalobos et al 1974 pp 109 113 Salazar 1985 pp 23 25 Hanisch Walter 1982 La Isla de Chiloe Academia Superior de Ciencias Pedagogicas de Santiago pp 11 12 a b c d Torrejon Fernando Cisternas Marco Alvial Ingrid and Torres Laura 2011 Consecuencias de la tala maderera colonial en los bosques de alece de Chiloe sur de Chile Siglos XVI XIX Magallania Vol 39 2 75 95 Salazar amp Pinto 2002 p 15 a b Villalobos et al 1974 pp 160 165 Villalobos et al 1974 p 168 Villalobos et al 1974 pp 166 170 a b c d in Spanish Villalobos Sergio Retamal Avila Julio and Serrano Sol 2000 Historia del pueblo Chileno Vol 4 p 154 a b c d e Villalobos et al 1974 pp 155 160 a b Villalobos et al 1974 p 225 a b Salazar 1985 p 49 Salazar 1985 p 58 Salazar 1985 p 52 Salazar 1985 p 88 Quoted in Diego Barros Arana s Historia general de Chile Vol 16 Santiago 1884 1902 p 74 a b Collier Simon and Sater William F 2004 A History of Chile 1808 2002 Cambridge University Press p 10 Salazar 1985 pp 40 41 a b c d Lacoste Pablo 2004 La vid y el vino en America del Sur el desplazamiento de los polos vitivinicolas siglos XVI al XX Revista Universum 19 2 62 93 doi 10 4067 s0718 23762004000200005 1 del Pozo Jose 2004 Historia del vino chileno Editorial Universitaria pp 35 45 a b Salazar 1985 pp 153 154 Villalobos et al 1974 pp 226 227 a b Guarda 1973 pp 45 47 Isabel Montt Pinto 1971 Breve Historia de Valdivia Buenos Aires Santiago Editorial Francisco de Aguirre p 55 a b c d Leon Saenz Jorge 2009 Los astilleros y la indutria matitima en el Pacifico americano Siglos XVI a XIX Dialogos Revista Electronica de Historia 10 1 44 90 Salazar amp Pinto 2002 pp 16 17 a b Villalobos et al 1974 pp 406 413 a b c d e Villalobos et al 1974 pp 416 420 Simon Collier William F Sater A history of Chile 1808 1994 Cambridge University Press 1999 p 39 ISBN 0 521 56075 6 a b c d Salazar amp Pinto 2002 pp 19 21 Salazar amp Pinto 2002 p 23 Baten Jorg 2016 A History of the Global Economy From 1500 to the Present Cambridge University Press p 137 ISBN 9781107507180 a b c d e Villalobos et al 1974 pp 469 472 a b c Los ciclos mineros del cobre y la plata Memoria Chilena a b Bethell Leslie 1993 Chile Since Independence Cambridge University Press p 13 14 a b c in Spanish La Hacienda 1830 1930 Memoria Chilena a b c Villalobos et al 1974 pp 481 485 a b c in Spanish Economia chilena durante el siglo XIX Cristian Sepulveda Irribarra Salazar amp Pinto 2002 p 102 a b c d e f g h Salazar amp Pinto 2002 pp 25 29 Villalobos et al 1974 pp 595 603 a b c d Bernedo Pinto Patricio 1999 Los industriales alemanes de Valdivia 1850 1914 PDF Historia 32 5 42 Vergara Jorge Ivan Gundermann Hans 2012 Constitution and internal dynamics of the regional identitary in Tarapaca and Los Lagos Chile Chungara in Spanish University of Tarapaca 44 1 115 134 doi 10 4067 s0717 73562012000100009 Retrieved 25 December 2013 Salazar amp Pinto 2002 pp 133 134 Bulnes 1920 43 a b c d e Palma Gabriel Trying to Tax and Spend Oneself out of the Dutch Disease The Chilean Economy from the War of the Pacific to the Great Depression p 217 240 Villalobos et al 1974 pp 603 605 Ortega Luis 1984 Nitrates Chilean Entrepreneurs and the Origins of the War of the Pacific Journal of Latin American Studies 16 2 337 380 doi 10 1017 S0022216X00007100 S2CID 145179549 Sater William F 1973 Chile During the First Months of the War of the Pacific 5 1 pages 133 138 ed Cambridge at the University Press Journal of Latin American Studies 37 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Pinto Rodriguez Jorge 1992 Crisis economica y expansion territorial la ocupacion de la Araucania en la segunda mitad del siglo XIX Estudios Sociales 72 John L Rector 29 November 2005 The History of Chile Palgrave Macmillan pp 102 ISBN 978 1 4039 6257 7 Crow The Epic of Latin America p 180 Foster John B amp Clark Brett 2003 Ecological Imperialism The Curse of Capitalism accessed September 2 2005 The Socialist Register 2004 pp 190 192 Also available in print from Merlin Press a b c d e f Salazar amp Pinto 2002 pp 124 125 a b Brown J R 1963 Nitrate Crises Combinations and the Chilean Government in the Nitrate Age The Hispanic American Historical Review 43 2 230 246 doi 10 2307 2510493 JSTOR 2510493 Ducoing Ruiz C A Miro M B 2012 13 Avoiding the Dutch disease The Chilean industrial sector in the nitrate trade cycle 1870 1938 PDF permanent dead link Salazar amp Pinto 2002 p 135 a b c Ducoing Ruiz C A 2012 Capital formation in machinery and industrialization Chile 1844 1938 PDF a b c Millan Augusto 2001 Historia de la mineria del oro en Chile Home Base New York The Pentagon p 113 a b c d e Clavel Carlos Jeftanivic Pedro Causas de la emision en Chile 1878 1919 PDF Revista de Economia 27 34 a b c d Benjamin S 1997 Meat and Strength The Moral Economy of a Chilean Food Riot Cultural Anthropology 12 pp 234 268 Lacoste Pablo 2004 Vinos carnes ferrocarriles y el Tratado de Libre Comercio entre Argentina y Chile 1905 1910 Historia 31 I 97 127 archived from the original on 2013 12 17 retrieved 2013 08 03 Martinic Beros Mateo Cronica de las Tierras del Canal Beagle 1973 Editorial Francisco de Aguirre S A pp 65 75 a b Martinic Beros Mateo 2001 La actividad industrial en Magallanes entre 1890 y mediados del siglo XX Historia 34 Pinto Rodriguez Jorge 2011 Ganaderia y empresarios ganaderos de la Araucania 1900 1960 Historia 44 2 369 400 Bengoa 2000 pp 262 263 John Lawrence Rector 2005 The History of Chile pp xxvi Figueroa Victor Gayoso Jorge Oyarzun Edgardo Planas Lenia Investigacion aplicada sobre Geografia Urbana Un caso practico en la ciudad de Valdivia Archived October 25 2014 at the Wayback Machine Gestion Turistica UACh Villalobos et al 1974 p 649 a b c d Salazar amp Pinto 2002 pp 141 142 Philip amp Phyllis Morris From Fertile Minds review American Scientist 2001 Nobel Award to Haber PDF The New York Times 3 February 1920 Retrieved 11 October 2010 Villalobos et al 1974 pp 773 775 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Drake Paul W 1984 La mision Kemmerer en Chile Consejeros norteamericanos estabilizacion y endeudamiento 1925 1932 PDF Cuadernos de historia 4 31 59 La nacionalizacion de la gran mineria del cobre 1964 1971 De las grandes trasnacionales mineras a codelco Memoria chilena retrieved June 30 2013 Villalobos et al 1974 p 605 a b c d Villalobos et al 1974 pp 764 765 a b c d e f El impacto de la Gran Depresion en Chile De la prosperidad a la pobreza Memoria chilena retrieved June 30 2013 permanent dead link a b Villalobos et al 1974 pp 762 763 a b Villalobos et al 1974 pp 767 768 a b c d e f Salazar amp Pinto 2002 pp 143 144 Lee C H 1969 The Effects of the Depression on Primary Producing Countries Journal of Contemporary History 4 4 139 155 doi 10 1177 002200946900400409 S2CID 161609090 a b Salazar amp Pinto 2002 pp 106 107 McCutchen McBride George 1936 Wright J K ed Chile Land and Society New York American Geographical Society p 177 a b Luders Rolf J 1998 The Comparative Economic Performance of Chile 1810 1995 PDF Estudios de Economia 25 2 217 249 a b Salazar amp Pinto 2002 pp 35 45 a b Bulmer Thomas V 2003 The Economic History of Latin America Since Independence Cambridge University Press p 257 Ley que crea la CORFO Memoria historica camara de diputados in Spanish retrieved June 30 2013 a b Cordporacion de Fomento a la Produccion 1939 1952 Memoria chilena in Spanish retrieved June 30 2013 permanent dead link a b c Villalobos et al 1974 p 780 781 Martinic Mateo 1982 La Tierra de los Fuegos Punta Arenas Chile Municipalidad de Porvenir pp 164 171 Salazar amp Pinto 2002 p 145 a b c Naranjo Eduardo 1997 Den Auktoritara Staten och Ekonomisk Utveckling i Chile Ph D University of Lund a b c d e f g h i j Edwards Sebastian Edwards Alexandra Cox 1994 Economic Crisis and the Military Coup In Hudson Rex A ed Chile a country study 3rd ed Washington D C Federal Research Division Library of Congress pp 148 149 ISBN 0 8444 0828 X OCLC 30623747 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a CS1 maint postscript link Macroeconomic Stability and Income Inequality in Chile United States Senate Report 1975 Covert Action in Chile 1963 1973 U S Government Printing Office Washington D C Valenzuela Arturo 2002 A Nation of Enemies New York W W Norton p 197 198 a b K Remmer 1979 Public Policy and Regime Consolidation The First Five Years of the Chilean Junta 441 461 Journal of the Developing Areas a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Ricardo Ffrench Davis Economic Reforms in Chile From Dictatorship to Democracy University of Michigan Press 2002 ISBN 978 0 472 11232 6 p 10 Anil Hira Ideas and Economic Policy in Latin America Praeger Publishers 1998 ISBN 0 275 96269 5 p 81 Milton Friedman Two Lucky People The University of Chicago Press 1998 ISBN 0 226 26414 9 p 405 Anil Hira Ideas and Economic Policy in Latin America Praeger Publishers 1998 ISBN 0 275 96269 5 p 80 81 Jeffry A Frieden Debt Development and Democracy Modern Political Economy and Latin America 1965 1985 Princeton University Press 1992 ISBN 978 0 691 00399 3 Ricardo Ffrench Davis Economic Reforms in Chile From Dictatorship to Democracy University of Michigan Press 2002 ISBN 978 0 472 11232 6 p 15 Ricardo Ffrench Davis Economic Reforms in Chile From Dictatorship to Democracy University of Michigan Press 2002 ISBN 978 0 472 11232 6 p 11 Ricardo Ffrench Davis Economic Reforms in Chile From Dictatorship to Democracy University of Michigan Press 2010 ISBN 978 0 472 11232 6 p 18 Ricardo Ffrench Davis Economic Reforms in Chile From Dictatorship to Democracy University of Michigan Press 2002 ISBN 978 0 472 11232 6 p 10 Carlos Fortin The Failure of Repressive Monetarism Chile 1973 83 In Third World Quarterly vol 6 no 2 Apr 1984 p 310 326 see also Jean Dreze Amartya Kumar Sen Hunger and Public Action Oxford University Press 1991 p 231 Milton Friedman Two Lucky People The University of Chicago Press 1998 ISBN 0 226 26414 9 p 406 Sebastian Edwards Alejandra Cox Edwards Monetarism and Liberalization the Chilean Experiment University of Chicago Press 1991 p XVII and p 165 Eduardo Silva From Dictatorship to Democracy The Business State Nexus in Chile s Economic Transformation 1975 1994 in Comparative Politics Vol 28 No 3 Apr 1996 p 299 320 308 f Karin Fischer The Influence of Neoliberals in Chile before during and after Pinochet in Mirowski P Plehwe D The Road from Mont Pelerin The Making of the Neoliberal Thought Collective Cambridge London Harvard University Press 2009 p 305 346 330 Eduardo Silva From Dictatorship to Democracy The Business State Nexus in Chile s Economic Transformation 1975 1994 In Comparative Politics Bd 28 Nr 3 Apr 1996 S 299 320 308 f Anil Hira Ideas and Economic Policy in Latin America Praeger Publishers 1998 ISBN 0 275 96269 5 p 85 Robert G Wesson Politics policies and economic development in Latin America Hoover Press 1984 ISBN 0 8179 8062 8 p 8 a b Anil Hira Ideas and Economic Policy in Latin America Praeger Publishers 1998 ISBN 0 275 96269 5 p 87 Enrique R Carrasco Autocratic Transitions to Liberalism A Comparison of Chilean and Russian Structural Adjustment In Law and Contemporary Problems Bd 5 S 99 126 hier S 101 Fn 5 J M Albala Bertrand Monetarism and Liberalization The Chilean Experiment With a New Afterword In The Economic Journal vol 102 no 414 Sep 1992 p 1258 1260 p 1259f Jorge Nef The Chilean Model Fact and Fiction In Latin American Perspectives vol 30 no 5 Sep 2003 p 16 40 Eduardo Silva From Dictatorship to Democracy The Business State Nexus in Chile s Economic Transformation 1975 1994 In Comparative Politics vol 28 1996 p 299 320 Ricardo Ffrench Davis Economic Reforms in Chile From Dictatorship to Democracy University of Michigan Press Ann Arbour 2002 Ricardo Ffrench Davis Economic Reforms in Chile From Dictatorship to Democracy University of Michigan Press 2002 ISBN 978 0 472 11232 6 p 16 17 Ricardo Ffrench Davis Economic Reforms in Chile From Dictatorship to Democracy University of Michigan Press 2002 ISBN 978 0 472 11232 6 p 194 Amcham Chile Ricardo Ffrench Davis Economic Reforms in Chile From Dictatorship to Democracy University of Michigan Press 2002 ISBN 978 0 472 11232 6 p 19 Ricardo Ffrench Davis Economic Reforms in Chile From Dictatorship to Democracy University of Michigan Press 2002 ISBN 978 0 472 11232 6 p 20 21Bibliography editBengoa Jose 2000 Historia del pueblo mapuche Siglos XIX y XX in Spanish Seventh ed LOM ediciones ISBN 956 282 232 X Guarda Gabriel 1973 La economia de Chile Austral antes de la colonizacion alemana Valdivia Universidad Austral de Chile Otero Luis 2006 La huella del fuego Historia de los bosques nativos Poblamiento y cambios en el paisaje del sur de Chile Pehuen Editores ISBN 956 16 0409 4 Salazar Gabriel 1985 Labradores Peones y Proletarios 3rd ed LOM Ediciones ISBN 956 282 269 9 Salazar Gabriel Pinto Julio 2002 Historia contemporanea de Chile III La economia mercados empresarios y trabajadores LOM Ediciones ISBN 956 282 172 2 Villalobos Sergio Silva Osvaldo Silva Fernando Estelle Patricio 1974 Historia De Chile 14th ed Editorial Universitaria ISBN 956 11 1163 2 Bulnes Gonzalo 1920 Chile and Peru the causes of the war of 1879 Santiago Chile Imprenta Universitaria Sater William F 2007 Andean Tragedy Fighting the War of the Pacific 1879 1884 Lincoln and London University of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 0 8032 4334 7 Farcau Bruce W 2000 The Ten Cents War Chile Peru and Bolivia in the War of the Pacific 1879 1884 Westport Connecticut London Praeger Publishers ISBN 978 0 275 96925 7 Retrieved January 17 2010 External links edit 2 Economia y democracia Los casos de Chile y Mexico by J L Saez Lozano CEPAL Global Trade Watch paper on recent Chilean economic policy history Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Economic history of Chile amp oldid 1185340629 Militaries and Chicago Boys 281973 1990 29, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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