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Hernando de Soto (economist)

Hernando Soto Polar (commonly known Hernando de Soto /dəˈst/; born June 2, 1941) is a Peruvian economist known for his work on the informal economy and on the importance of business and property rights.[1][2] His work on the developing world has earned him praise worldwide by numerous heads of state, particularly for his publication The Mystery of Capital and The Other Path. He is the current president of the Institute for Liberty and Democracy (ILD), a think tank devoted to promoting economic development in developing countries located in Lima, Peru.[3]

Hernando de Soto
De Soto in 2014
Born
Hernando Soto Polar

(1941-06-02) June 2, 1941 (age 82)
NationalityPeruvian
Academic career
InstitutionInstitute for Liberty and Democracy
FieldThe economics of the informal sector and property rights theory
Alma materUniversity of Geneva (BA)
Geneva Graduate Institute (MA)
Influences
ContributionsDead capital
Websitehttps://www.ild.org.pe

In Peru, de Soto's advisory has been recognized as inspiring the economic guidelines—including the loosening of economic regulation, the introduction of austerity measures and the utilization of neoliberal policies—that were ultimately adopted by the government of Alberto Fujimori and established in the 1993 Constitution of Peru.[4][5][6][7] The policies prescribed by de Soto resulted with Peru becoming macro-economically stable following the period of price controls and increased regulation established during the Lost Decade.[8][9] De Soto would go on to support Alberto's daughter, Keiko Fujimori, serving as an advisor during her presidential campaigns.[7][10][11] De Soto worked closely with various Peruvian governments, even serving as a negotiator for the Peru-United States Free Trade Agreement. After years of speculation, de Soto ran for the Peruvian presidency in the 2021 presidential election, placing fourth in an atomized race of 18 nominees.[12][13][14][15]

Internationally, de Soto helped inspire the Washington Consensus macroeconomic prescriptions and was credited by economist John Williamson, who coined the consensus' name.[16] He also supported the creation of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA),[17] with George H.W. Bush praising his promotion of free trade when announcing the North American agreement.[18][19][20] Other heads of state have recognized de Soto, including Bill Clinton, Vladimir Putin, Emmanuel Macron, Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher.[21][better source needed] The ILD has received praise from other people including Nobel laureate Milton Friedman, World Bank President James Wolfensohn, and former UN Secretary-General Javier Pérez de Cuéllar.[22]

Early life and education edit

De Soto was born on 2 June 1941 in Arequipa, Peru. His father José Alberto Soto was a Peruvian diplomat and lawyer.[23] After the 1948 military coup in Peru, his parents chose exile in Europe, taking their two young sons with them. His father worked for the International Labour Organization following their exile and would often send de Soto back to Peru during the summer months.[23]

In exile, de Soto was educated in Switzerland where he attended the International School of Geneva. He studied social psychology in National University of Saint Augustine in Arequipa, Peru. He returned to Geneva and received a bachelor's degree in economics from the University of Geneva. In 1967, he earned a master's degree in international law and economics from Graduate Institute of International Studies, also in Geneva.[24]

His younger brother Álvaro served in the Peruvian diplomatic corps in Lima, New York City and Geneva and was seconded to United Nations in 1982. He retired from the U.N. in 2007 with the title rank of Assistant Under-Secretary-General; his last position was as the UN Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process.[25]

There is some controversy around his surname, as his father's surname is Soto, while Hernando's one is de Soto. According to the Peruvian writer, and Nobel prize winner, Mario Vargas Llosa, he changed the surname in order to sound more "aristocratic".[26]

Economics career edit

Following his post-graduate studies, he worked as an economist for the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, a precursor to the World Trade Organization, as well as president of the Committee of the Copper Exporting Countries Organization, CEO of Universal Engineering Corporation and a principal for Swiss Bank Corporation.[23][27]

Founding of the Institute for Liberty and Democracy edit

De Soto returned to Peru on the behalf of gold placer investors at the age of 38 in 1979 at a time when neoliberal policy was moving from the fringes of economic theory to mainstream practice.[23][28][29] Upon de Soto's return in 1979, he met with Friedrich Hayek, a free market proponent who helped create the Mont Pelerin Society.[28] Hayek, who sought to promote neoliberalism through a network of "second hand dealers", choosing de Soto.[16] After making connections with Hayek, de Soto was acquainted with Sir Antony Fisher, a British businessman who created the Atlas Network, a nonprofit libertarian umbrella group that consolidated funds and research from businesses in the United States and Europe in order to create neoliberal organizations in developing countries.[28]

With the assistance and funding of Fisher and the Atlas Network, de Soto created the Institute for Liberty and Democracy (ILD) in 1981, one of the first neoliberal organizations in Latin America.[16][28] De Soto would later state "Anthony gave us enormous amounts of information and advice on how to get organized. ... It was on the basis of his vision that we designed the structure of the ILD".[28] In 1984, de Soto received further assistance from the United States president Ronald Reagan's administration, with the National Endowment for Democracy's Center for International Private Enterprise (CIPE) providing ILD with funding and education for advertising campaigns.[8][28] In 2003, the CIPE would later describe the ILD as being one of its most successful programs.[28] Other funding was then provided by United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and the Smith Richardson Foundation, with USAID assisting the ILD with staging international networks to propagate their ideals.[16] The ILD would then seek popular support in Peru by making informal housing their main concern.[28]

Fujimori government edit

Between 1988 and 1995, de Soto and the Institute for Liberty and Democracy (ILD) were mainly responsible for some four hundred initiatives, laws, and regulations that led to significant changes in Peru's economic system.[5][30] The ILD became involved with the Peruvian economy at the end of President Alan García's term.[28] De Soto's group began to grow and advertised to the Peruvian public promoting their legislative goals, borrowing some advertisements from American lotteries.[28]

De Soto then began to serve informally as "the President's personal representative" for the first three years of the administration of Alberto Fujimori. De Soto had originally been a part of the economics advisory team of the unsuccessful presidential candidate Mario Vargas Llosa in 1990, but Fujimori later requested de Soto's assistance in resolving the economic issues that were produced by the crisis of the 1980s. The New York Times described de Soto as an "overseas salesman" for the government of Alberto Fujimori in 1990, writing that he had represented the government when meeting with creditors and the United States representatives.[5] Others dubbed de Soto as the "informal president" for Fujimori.[8]

In a recommendation to Fujimori, de Soto called for a "shock" to Peru's economy.[8] De Soto convinced then-president Fujimori to travel to New York City in a meeting organized by the Peruvian Javier Pérez de Cuéllar, secretary-general of the United Nations, where they met with the heads of the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, and the Inter-American Development Bank, who convinced him to follow the guidelines for economic policy set by the international financial institutions.[8][31] The policies included a 300 percent tax increase, unregulated prices and privatizing two-hundred and fifty state-owned entities.[8] The policies of de Soto caused macroeconomic stability and a reduction in the rate of inflation, though Peru's poverty rate remained largely unchanged with over half of the population living in poverty in 1998.[6][8][32] Peru would not see increased growth until the 2000s commodities boom.[33][34]

University of Chicago political scientist Susan C. Stokes believes that de Soto's influence helped change the policies of Fujimori from a Keynesian to a neoliberal approach.[citation needed] De Soto also inspired Fujimori's anti-drug initiatives.[23] The Cato Institute and The Economist magazine have argued that de Soto's policy prescriptions brought him into conflict with and eventually helped to undermine the Shining Path (Sendero Luminoso) guerrilla movement. By granting titles to small coca farmers in the two main coca-growing areas, they argued that the Shining Path was deprived of safe havens, recruits and money, and the leadership was forced to cities where they were arrested.[35][36] Attacks were launched against the ILD and de Soto in light of the statements by Shining Path leader Abimael Guzmán, who saw ILD as a threat.[37][38]

Land title initiative edit

Between 1992 and 1994, de Soto's ILD piloted a land title program to formally register 200,000 Peruvian households and two years later, expanded the program to Lima and seven other metropolitan areas that held ninety percent of informal housing developments within Peru.[28] The program concluded in 2004 with 1.4 million households being registered and 920,000 land titles being provided.[28]

Contrary to de Soto's claims, the land title project provided no change to the access of credit to poor Peruvians.[28][39] The ILD's figures reported that homeowners also saw their hours at work increase by seventeen percent, while working at home decreased by forty-seven percent and child labor was reduced by twenty-eight percent, with the group stating that the latter two statistics were due to homeowners and their children no longer being required to defend their homes from seizure.[28] According to Timothy Mitchell, the ILD's findings were "implausible" since the conclusion was already framed by the ILD, neighborhoods were already collective with limited property conflicts and those included in the project were already pursuing work outside of their homes when they chose to become involved.[28] Following the findings, the ILD would distance itself from advocating credit access and instead promote increased work hours among formal landowners.[28]

Resignation and condemnation of Fujimori edit

De Soto resigned from his post as the "Personal Representative of the President" in January 1992, two months prior to the 1992 Peruvian coup d'état, and condemned Fujimori's motivations being influenced by Director of the National Intelligence Service Vladimiro Montesinos, hinting at signs of corruption. In his letter, he called into question "the validity of the anti-drug agreement" that Fujimori adopted. He stated his reasons to resigning as due to "drug trafficking from within the State that sabotages efforts in the fight against drugs", and reportedly due to differences with Montesinos.[40] Both Montesinos and Fujimori would later be indicted for corruption and violation of human rights.

Two months after de Soto resigned, Fujimori launched a self-coup which de Soto again condemned as "stupid, unproductive and blatantly unconstitutional".[41] According to de Soto, one month after the coup the Minister of Economy Carlos Boloña contacted de Soto in desperation, after dozens of countries sanctioned Peru economically by cutting it off from investment and credit in response to the undemocratic event. Boloña resigned from his ministerial post, and de Soto lastly travelled to the 1992 Organization of American States summit in the Bahamas with Fujimori and pressured him to accept democratic elections to prevent another macroeconomic crisis.[42]

International policy edit

Washington Consensus edit

De Soto was a main contributor to the Washington Consensus, a set of ten economic prescription requirements set by International Monetary Fund (IMF), World Bank and United States Department of the Treasury towards countries in economic crisis.[16][43] Neoliberal economists in the United States utilized de Soto's arguments as a way to promote the consensus.[16] English economist John Williamson, who coined the term "Washington Consensus", partly credited de Soto for the prescriptions, saying his work was "the outcome of the worldwide intellectual trends to which Latin America provided".[16] For United States presidents Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush, according to Kate Geohegan of Harvard University's Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies, "de Soto's ideas offered a compelling new framework for explaining the problem of economic underdevelopment that seemed to affirm the wisdom of neoliberal policies like adjustment lending".[16]

The Washington Consensus would result in socioeconomic exclusion and weakened trade unions in Latin America, resulting with unrest in the region. The consensus resulted with a shrinking middle class in Latin America that prompted dissatisfaction of neoliberalism, a turn to the political left and populist leaders by the late-1990s; in Bolivia, support for Evo Morales was established.[44][45][needs update]

North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) edit

Upon its signing, de Soto expressed support for the creation of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA).[46] When announcing NAFTA at the Annual Meeting of the Boards of Governors of the International Monetary Fund and World Bank Group on 27 September 1989, President George H. W. Bush – who had adopted de Soto's work for the United States' foreign policy towards the economies of developing countries[16] – praised de Soto for helping inspire free trade.[47]

In his speech announcing NAFTA at the 1989 meeting, Bush stated:[47][48]

All across the world, there has been an almost simultaneous rediscovery of the power created when individuals are given the freedom to act in their own best interests. ... True, we are here today mainly to discuss economic freedom. ... The Peruvian economist, Hernando de Soto, has helped us understand a worldwide economic phenomenon. ... When left alone by government, people everywhere organize their lives in remarkably similar ways. De Soto's prescription offers a clear and promising alternative to economic stagnation in Latin America and other parts of the world. ... All our nations have a responsibility to ensure a fair and open trading system.

According to de Soto in 1993, "the virtues of a modern society" were able to be introduced to Latin America as a result of NAFTA.[46] He would later say in 2001 that Mexico's economy and institution would progress due to NAFTA, concluding "All poor countries are lumped together and all rich countries are lumped together; there's this imitation effect".[49]

Advisory work edit

 
Hernando de Soto and Muammar Gaddafi in 2008 after Libya signed a contract with the Institute for Liberty and Democracy

Following its foundation in Peru, de Soto's institute, the ILD, has worked in dozens of countries.[50] Heads of state in over 35 countries have sought the ILD's services to discuss how ILD's theories on property rights could potentially improve their economies.[50] After the split with Fujimori, he and his institute designed similar programs in El Salvador, Haiti, Tanzania, and Egypt and has worked beside the World Bank, though the institute did not advocate for land title programs and instead promoted longer work hours.[28] De Soto has received criticism of having relationships with controversial political leaders such as Alberto Fujimori and Libyan president Muammar Gaddafi, with de Soto responding to such statements saying "I have advised dictators, but that is irrelevant".[51]

In 2006, de Soto served as a personal representative of President Alan García, and negotiated the Peru-United States Free Trade Agreement after 11 rounds of negotiation. In 2009, the ILD turned its attention back to Peru and the plight of the indigenous peoples of the Peruvian Amazon jungle. In response to Peru's President García's call to all Peruvians to present their proposals toward solving the problems leading to the bloody incidents in Bagua, the ILD assessed the situation and presented its preliminary findings. ILD published a short videotaped documentary, The Mystery of Capital among the Indigenous Peoples of the Amazon, summarizing its findings from indigenous communities in Alaska, Canada and the Peruvian jungle.[52]

After previously working with her father Alberto, de Soto joined Keiko Fujimori with her election campaigns for the 2011 and 2016 Peruvian general election when Fujimori committed to implementing de Soto's property rights reforms.[10][11] In an interview during the first campaign ok Keiko Fujimori, he also stated that Osama bin Laden's death was achieved thanks to land titling, a concept he holds as a way out of poverty.[53] As part of the Fuerza Popular team, he harshly criticized Peruvians for Change candidate Pedro Pablo Kuczynski, whom he described as a "deserter and coward." In an interview with the newspaper Perú21, De Soto said that Kuczynski "is a gringo who does not know Peru, because there are those who do. He is a foreigner to the Peruvian reality."[54]

Political career edit

2001 Peruvian general election edit

For the 2001 Peruvian general election, de Soto sought to run for president with his Popular Capital party, though he failed to register the party on time in order to participate.[23][55] At the time, he sought support from left-wing political groups for his candidacy, though they disagreed with his liberal economic policies.[55] He would later become a critic of such groups.[55]

After learning about de Soto's inability to register for the election, former president and leader of the APRA Alan Garcia offered the economist the APRA's presidential nomination. De Soto declined the offer, claiming that he would have been "a figurehead president susceptible to the whims of disciplined APRA congressmen". Later, Garcia offered de Soto the position of Prime Minister, a role that Alberto Fujimori had also offered de Soto. De Soto declined again, not wanting to be held accountable for Garcia's government policies.

2021 presidential campaign edit

De Soto announced his candidacy for president in September 2020 under the party Go on Country. Prior to the announcement, De Soto expressed hesitation to formally run for president lest politicizing and potentially delegitimizing work done by the ILD and himself on dead capital.

On 30 October 2020, De Soto presented his technical team, which included the former president of CONFIEP Miguel Vega Alvear, businessman Carlos Añaños, former Fujimori minister and first Vice President Francisco Tudela, former GEIN commander Marco Miyashiro, the former head of the Operation Chavín de Huantar José Williams, the diplomat Álvaro de Soto, among others.[56][57]

On December 14, 2020, de Soto shared an alleged secret poll in Beto Ortiz's show in Willax Televisión. That poll ranked him first. De Soto spoke in the interview that: "The way this (the cadres) comes to us is because people very close to the state apparatus, it seems, were outraged at the enormous difference between the polls they handle."[58]

In January 2021, a strike was filed that considered that the Go on Country electoral court had not been properly formed. This strike was declared unfounded by the JEE.[59]

Another strike was filed against him by a citizen, because he points out that Hernando de Soto "has entered in the Academic Training section of the resume, which has the academic degree 'demi license en sciences economiques' awarded by the University of Geneva, which would have been obtained in 1964.”. But since this degree or title is not registered with SUNEDU, false information would be declared and it should be excluded from the candidacy.[60][61]

On 24 February 2021, following an approach to advise Francisco Sagasti on the COVID-19 pandemic management in Peru, De Soto announced the first Peruvian shadow cabinet. Mainly composed of his campaign technical team, the main purpose of the opposition cabinet is to offer an alternative in order for the government to concur and apply during the crisis.[62][63]

De Soto rejected the exclusion of Rafael López Aliaga, an electoral rival in the 2021 elections, for which he appeared at the demonstration of his followers on the outskirts of the JNE, in which Lopez Aliaga was, who praised him.[64]

De Soto was caught in controversy surrounding Vacunagate, a scandal where political elites in Peru were able to be vaccinated against COVID-19 ahead of schedule.[65] He initially denied having received a COVID-19 vaccine "from any Peruvian", though it was later reported that he flew twice to the United States to be vaccinated.[65][66] During presidential debates de Soto promised to work with the United Nations to prevent foreign "criminals or poor people" from entering Peru, stating "Let their governments take care of them, we will take care of ours".[66] He proposed reforming Peru's education for less foreign reliance and increasing the health budget.[67]

Ultimately, de Soto placed fourth in an atomized race of 18 nominees.[12][13][14][15]

Main thesis edit

The main message of de Soto's work and writings is that no nation can have a strong market economy without adequate participation in an information framework that records ownership of property and other economic information.[68] Unreported, unrecorded economic activity results in that many small entrepreneurs lack legal ownership of their property, making it difficult for them to obtain credit, sell the business, or expand. They cannot seek legal remedies to business conflicts in court, since they do not have legal ownership. Lack of information on income prevents governments from collecting taxes and acting for the public welfare:

The existence of such massive exclusion generates two parallel economies, legal and extra legal. An elite minority enjoys the economic benefits of the law and globalization, while the majority of entrepreneurs are stuck in poverty, where their assets—adding up to more than US$10 trillion worldwide—languish as dead capital in the shadows of the law.[69]

To survive, to protect their assets, and to do as much business as possible, the extralegals create their own rules. But because these local arrangements are full of shortcomings and are not easily enforceable, the extralegals also create their own social, political and economic problems that affect the society at large.

Since the fall of the Berlin Wall, responsible nations around the developing world have worked hard to make the transition to a market economy, but have in general failed.[70] Populist leaders have used this failure of the free market system to wipe out poverty in the developing world to beat their "anti-globalization" drums. But the ILD believes that the real enemy is within the flawed legal systems of developing nations that make it virtually impossible for the majority of their people—and their assets—to gain a stake in the market. The people of these countries have talent, enthusiasm, and an astonishing ability to wring a profit out of practically nothing`.[69]

What the poor majority in the developing world do not have is easy access to the legal system which, in the advanced nations of the world and for the elite in their countries, is the gateway to economic success, for it is in the legal system where property documents are created and standardized according to law. That documentation builds a public memory that permits society to engage in such crucial economic activities as identifying and gaining access to information about individuals, their assets, their titles, rights, charges and obligations; establishing the limits of liability for businesses; knowing an asset's previous economic situation; assuring protection of third parties; and quantifying and valuing assets and rights.[71] These public memory mechanisms in turn facilitate such opportunities as access to credit, the establishment of systems of identification, the creation of systems for credit and insurance information, the provision for housing and infrastructure, the issue of shares, the mortgage of property and a host of other economic activities that drive a modern market economy.[72]

Work and research edit

Since 2008, de Soto has been refining his thesis about the importance of property rights to development in response to his organization's findings that a number of new global threats have "property rights distortions" at their root. In essays, that appeared from early 2009 into 2012 in media outlets in the U.S. and Europe, de Soto argued that the reason why the U.S. and European economies were mired in recession was the result of a "knowledge crisis" not a financial one.[73][74][75][76][77] He has termed housing assets as "dead capital," in his papers on household ownership and deeds.[78]

"Capitalism lives in two worlds," De Soto wrote in the Financial Times in January 2012. "There is the visible one of palm trees and Panamanian ships, but it is the other – made up of the property information cocooned in laws and records – that allows us to organize and understand fragments of reality and join them creatively."[79] De Soto argued that the knowledge in those public memory systems, which "helped Capitalism triumph," was distorted over the past 15 years or so. "Until this knowledge system is repaired," he wrote, "neither US nor European capitalism will recover."[80]

In another series of articles that appeared in US and Europe in 2011, de Soto used the findings of ILD field research in Egypt, Tunisia and Libya to make his case for "the economic roots of the Arab Spring."[81][82][83] The ongoing Arab revolutions, he argued, were "economic revolutions" driven mainly by the frustrations of 200 million ordinary Arabs who depended on the informal economy for their livelihoods.[82][83] He pointed to the ILD's earlier 2004 findings in Egypt, which revealed the nation's largest employer with 92% of the property in the informal economy – assets worth almost $247 billion.[81][84] Also, as proof of the extent of desperation among MENA’s entrepreneurs, he elaborated ILD's exclusive research on Mohamed Bouazizi, the Tunisian street vendor whose public self-immolation in protest of the expropriation of his goods and scale literally sparked the Jasmine Revolution in Tunisia, which spread unrest through the Arab world.[85][86][87]

After losing core funding from USAID, ILD laid off the majority of their employees from their San Isidro office. In 2014–2015, de Soto and a small team working out of his house began to attempt to guide the political process in Peru, as presidential elections were due to take place in 2016, by finding solutions to the ongoing national mining crisis. De Soto has been a strong advocate for the formalisation of the informal miners that are scattered throughout Peru.[88][89] Since 2014, several large national investment projects, including Las Bambas, and Tia Maria have been disrupted by violent protests by informal miners against government regulation and formal extractive industries.[90] In July 2015, de Soto alleged that former Shining Path militants who have taken up the ecological cause were paralyzing some $70 billion in mining investment in Peru.[91] Furthermore, recorded video debates between the former extremists and de Soto were published on ILD's YouTube channel and revealed that the Shining Path militants agree that property rights could be an important part of the solution to social conflicts in Peru.[92] De Soto's stated goal is to determine the roots of informal hostility against multinationals and identify what is needed to build a national social contract on extractive industries that could harmonize their property interests with those of multinationals as opposed to creating conflict.[91]

De Soto applies thesis to terrorism edit

In October 2014, de Soto published an article in The Wall Street Journal, "The Capitalist Cure for Terrorism", that stated an aggressive agenda for economic empowerment was needed in the Middle East in order to defeat terrorist groups like ISIL. He argued that the U.S. should promote an agenda similar to what was successfully used in Peru to defeat the Shining Path in the 1990s.[93] He also mentions in the article that local policymakers in the Middle East are missing the fact that if ordinary people cannot play the game legally, they will be far less able to resist a terrorist offensive. The article received praise among high-level global Right-Wing politicians such as US presidential candidates Rand Paul and Jeb Bush.[94][95]

Once again In January 2016, de Soto released his second article, How to Win the War on Terror, which focused on defeating terrorism through promoting strong property rights.[96] The article was distributed by Project Syndicate and published in dozens of countries and languages, including in Switzerland by the World Economic Forum in advance of their 2016 forum.[97][98]

De Soto challenges Thomas Piketty edit

In 2014, de Soto started to refute French economist Thomas Piketty’s thesis by arguing that his recent attacks against capital in his worldwide best seller book Capital in the 21st Century were unjustified.[99] His op-ed article challenging Piketty, ‘The Poor Against Piketty’ (French: Les pauvres contre Piketty) was first published in France's news magazine Le Point in April 2015.[100]

De Soto argued that Piketty's statistics ignore the ninety percent of the world population that lives in developing countries and former Soviet states, whose inhabitants produce and hold their capital in the informal sector.[101] Furthermore, he states that his institute's global research proves that most people actually want more rather than less capital. Finally, he argues that the wars against capital, which Piketty claims are coming, have already begun under Europe's nose in the form of the Arab Spring in the Middle East and North Africa.[102]

De Soto addresses Pope Francis edit

In February 2016, de Soto took a break from countering Piketty's work and wrote an article addressing Pope Francis’s trip to Mexico titled, A Mexican Impasse for the Pope.[103] The article encourages the Pope and the Vatican to address the lack of property rights among the poor in countries like Mexico as a solution to global refugee crises.[104][105]

A week later, de Soto published a second article in Fortune Magazine addressing the Pope's and US Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump’s public spat over building a wall on the Mexican-USA border. The article titled, What Pope Francis Should Really Say to Donald Trump, conveys five property rights related thoughts that the Pope should use to respond to Trump.[106] The article led to many different opinion articles featured in conservative outlets such as Breitbart and Investors Business Daily.[107][108]

Blockchain work edit

In May 2015, de Soto attended the 1st Annual Block Chain Summit hosted by British billionaire Richard Branson at his private Caribbean residence, Necker Island.[109][110] De Soto was one of three moderators, along with Michael J. Casey, former Wall Street Journal senior columnist and Matthew Bishop, editor at The Economist. Advocates of blockchain technology argue that it is well-suited to acting as a public ledger to help achieve de Soto's objective of formalising the informally held property rights of groups like the indigenous peoples of Peru.[111][112][113][114][115]

De Soto presented a property application of Bitcoin to Sheikh Nahyan bin Mubarak Al Nahyan of the United Arab Emirates and financial authorities of Abu Dhabi at a second Blockchain summit held in Abu Dhabi in 2015.[116]

Reception edit

Ideology edit

De Soto's promotion of liberalism in developing countries has faced criticism as supporting the exploitation of poorer nations.[117][118] Social scientist Joseph Hanlon described De Soto as "an economist of the far right" and that "the risk that people will be thrown off their land is fundamental to De Soto's system of bringing capitalism to the poor", summarizing that landlessness for some impoverished individuals "is intrinsic to his strategy".[119] The Guardian described de Soto as "a radical free-market economist".[120] Geohegan states that the United States government under President Ronald Reagan and his successor George H. W. Bush adopted de Soto's work as the main strategy of the United States' foreign policy towards developing countries since "de Soto's interpretation of underdevelopment seemed to validate the emerging 'neoliberal' US policies".[16] According to de Soto, Peru was not poor because of international inequality enforced by the globalized economy but due to Peru's own economic regulation.[16] Reagan – whose administration provided funding to found de Soto's ILD[28] – George H. W. Bush and Bush's successor Bill Clinton would continue promoting de Soto's work.[121] Timothy Mitchell says that de Soto's background as a European economist was often ignored by American neoliberals promoting him, writing that his popularity and experience "came to depend on his identity as a neoliberal from the third world, willing to describe the poverty of the global south as a self-inflicted injury unconnected to its relationship to the north".[118] Administrator of the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) Andrew Natsios would later advocate de Soto's work, stating "Instead of seeing the developing world as victims of capitalism, Hernando argues 'We're inflicting our own wounds' ... Since he is Peruvian, he can make this argument credibly".[118]

The promotion of neoliberalism by de Soto was not only utilized by officials in the United States; other neoliberal economists endorsed de Soto due to his origins from the developing world as well, with Mitchell stating that his background "transformed de Soto into a very useful asset for the neoliberal movement".[118] President of the Atlas Network, Alex Chaufen, said that de Soto was often discussed among the neoliberal community, stating "During the years I spent with Antony [Fisher] at Atlas, I couldn't recall any conversation, any speech about think tanks, any fundraising letter where he did not mention Hernando".[118]

As de Soto began to work with the government of Gloria Macapagal Arroyo in the Philippines in 2004, investigative journalism website Bulatlat described de Soto's work as "rich people's reformism", writing "The secret to de Soto's and ILD's popularity among political, economic and developmental elites ultimately lies in their unashamed conservatism, defense of the status quo and promise of capitalist wealth for the world's poor and exploited. ... Elites get to keep the property they value so much and can continue exploiting and oppressing while the poor – and historically exploited and oppressed – are diverted from systemic struggles by the chimera of becoming wealthy entrepreneurs themselves".[117] In his Planet of Slums, Mike Davis argues that de Soto, who Davis calls "the global guru of neo-liberal populism", is essentially promoting what the statist left in South America and India has always promoted individual land titling.[122] Davis argues that titling is the incorporation into the formal economy of cities, which benefits more wealthy squatters but is disastrous for poorer squatters, and especially tenants who simply cannot afford incorporation into the fully commodified formal economy.[122]

Property rights edit

De Soto's works on property rights has voiced diverse views on the effect of the titling of land.[123][124] The findings at the conclusion of his land title program under Alberto Fujimori found that providing land titles did not provide poor Peruvians with greater access to credit.[28] De Soto has been criticized for methodological and analytical reasons, while some activists have accused him of just wanting to be a representative figure of the prioritizing property rights movement.[125] Some state that his theory does not offer anything new compared to traditional land reform.[126][127] His emphasis on title formalization as the only reason behind economic growth in the United States has been subject to criticism.[128] Property formalization in the United States may have happened as a result of different reasons including establishment of law and order, increased state control, greater institutional integration, increased economic efficiency, increased tax revenue, and greater equality.[129]

Reception from scholars edit

Empirical studies by Argentine economists Sebastian Galiani and Ernesto Schargrodsky found a modest relationship between titling and credit market access (contradicting de Soto's research), but have also pointed out that families with titles "substantially increased housing investment, reduced household size, and improved the education of their children relative to the control group".[130][131] In a 2012 book by Yale University political science methodologist Thad Dunning, he argues that Galiani and Schargrodsky's studies provide "highly credible" claims because the studies rely on true randomization, whereas De Soto's study did not (and is thus vulnerable to confounding variables).[132]

"De Soto’s proposal is not wealth transfer, but wealth legalization. The poor of the world already possess trillions in assets now. De Soto is not distributing capital to anyone. By making them liquid, everyone’s capital pool grows dramatically".[133] While analysing Schaefer's arguments, Roy writes, "de Soto’s ideas are seductive precisely because they only guarantee the latter, but in doing so promise the former".[134][135] Robert J. Samuelson has argued against what he sees as de Soto's "single bullet" approach and has argued for a greater emphasis on culture and how local conditions affect people's perceptions of their opportunities.[136]

In the Journal of Economic Literature, Christopher Woodruff of the University of California, San Diego criticized de Soto for overestimating the amount of wealth that land titling now informally owned property could unlock and argues that "de Soto's own experience in Peru suggests that land titling by itself is not likely to have much effect. Titling must be followed by a series of politically challenging steps. Improving the efficiency of judicial systems, rewriting bankruptcy codes, restructuring financial market regulations, and similar reforms will involve much more difficult choices by policymakers."[137][138]

Reception from governmental officials edit

The argument for private and often individualist property regime comes under the question of societal legitimacy, may not be justified even if de Soto eyes bringing a unified system in a state or unification with the global economy.[133]

His work has also received praise from two United Nations secretaries-general: Kofi Annan – "Hernando de Soto is absolutely right, that we need to rethink how we capture economic growth and development"[139] – and Javier Pérez de Cuéllar – "A crucial contribution. A new proposal for change that is valid for the whole world."[140] UN Special Rapporteur on the right to food, Olivier De Schutter, has questioned the insistence on titling as a means to protect security of tenure based on the risk that titling will undermine customary forms of tenure and insufficiently protect the rights of land users that depend on the commons, as well as the fear that titling schemes may lead to further reconcentration of land ownership.

A study commissioned by DFID, an agency of the U.K. government, further summarized many of the complications arising from implementing de Soto's policy recommendations when insufficient attention is paid to the local social context.[141]

Reception from activists edit

Grassroots controlled and directed shack dwellers movements like Abahlali baseMjondolo in South Africa and the Homeless Workers' Movement (Movimento dos Trabalhadores Sem Teto – MTST) in Brazil[142][143] have strenuously argued against individual titling and for communal and democratic systems of collective land tenure because this offers protection to the poorest and prevents 'downward raiding' in which richer people displace squatters once their neighborhoods are formalized.

Publications edit

Neoliberal politicians and organizations promoted de Soto's publications, with their endorsements and awards making his books bestsellers.[144] Since the publication of The Mystery of Capital in 2000 and subsequent translations, his ideas have become increasingly influential in the field of development economics. Scholars have disputed that there is a significant relationship between land titles and credit market access.

In the World Development journal, a 1990 article by R. G. Rossini and J. J. Thomas of the London School of Economics questioned the statistical basis of de Soto's claims about the size of the informal economy in his first book The Other Path.[145] The ILD responded in the same journal that Rossini and Thomas’ observations "neither [addressed] the central theme of the book, nor [did it address] the main body of quantitative evidence displayed to substantiate the importance of economic and legal barriers that give rise to informal activities. Instead, [they focused] exclusively on four empirical estimates that the book [mentioned] only in passing".[146]

On January 31, 2012, de Soto and his publisher were fined by the Peruvian intellectual property rights organization INDECOPI for excluding the names of co-authors Enrique Ghersi and Mario Ghibellini in newer editions of his 1986 book The Other Path.[147][148][149][150]

Relationship with elites edit

An article by Madeleine Bunting for The Guardian (UK) claimed that de Soto's suggestions would in some circumstances cause more harm than benefit and referred to The Mystery of Capital as "an elaborate smokescreen" used to obscure the issue of the power of the globalized elite. She cited de Soto's employment history as evidence of his bias in favor of the powerful.[151] Reporter John Gravois also criticized de Soto for his ties to power circles, exemplified by his attendance at the Davos World Economic Forum. In response, de Soto told Gravois that this proximity to power would help de Soto educate the elites about poverty. Ivan Osorio of the Competitive Enterprise Institute has argued against Gravois's allegations, claiming that Gravois has misinterpreted many of de Soto's recommendations.[152]

Awards and accolades edit

Time magazine chose De Soto as one of the five leading Latin American innovators of the century in its special May 1999 issue "Leaders of the New Millennium", and included him among the 100 most influential people in the world in 2004.[153] De Soto was also listed as one of the 15 innovators "who will reinvent your future" according to Forbes magazine's 85th anniversary edition.[154] In January 2000, Entwicklung und Zusammenarbeit, the German development magazine, described de Soto as one of the most important development theoreticians.[155] In October 2016, de Soto was honored with the Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Prize, awarded by the William & Mary Law School during the 13th Annual Brigham-Kanner Property Rights Conference, in recognition of his tireless advocacy of property rights reform as a tool to alleviate global poverty.[156] Hernando de Soto is honorary co-chair for the World Justice Project.[157]

Among the prizes he has received are:[23][27]

1990

1995

  • The Freedom Prize (Switzerland)

2002

2003

  • Received the Downey Fellowship at Yale University
  • The Democracy Hall of Fame International Award from the National Graduate University (USA)

2004

2005

  • An honorary Doctor of Letters from the University of Buckingham (United Kingdom),
  • The Americas Award (USA)
  • Was named the Most Outstanding of 2004 for Economic Development at Home and Abroad by the Peruvian National Assembly of Rectors
  • The Prize of Deutsche Stiftung Eigentum for exceptional contributions to the theory of property rights
  • The 2004 IPAE Award by the Peruvian Institute of Business Administration
  • The Academy of Achievement's Golden Plate Award 2005 (USA) in tribute to his outstanding accomplishments
  • The BearingPoint, Forbes magazine's seventh Compass Award for Strategic Direction
  • Was named as a "Fellow of the Class of 1930" by Dartmouth College.

2006

2007

  • The Poder BCG Business Awards 2007, granted by Poder Magazine and the Boston Consulting Group, for the "Best Anti-Poverty Initiative"
  • The anthology Die Zwölf Wichtigsten Ökonomen der Welt (The World's Twelve Most Influential Economists, 2007), included a profile of de Soto among a list that begins with Adam Smith and includes such recent winners of the Nobel Prize in Economics as Joseph Stiglitz and Amartya Sen.
  • The 2007 Humanitarian Award in recognition of his work to help poor people participate in the market economy.

2009

  • Honorary patron of the University Philosophical Society of Trinity College, Dublin for having excelled in public life and made a worthy contribution to society.
  • The inaugural Hernando de Soto Award for Democracy awarded by the Center for International Private Enterprise (CIPE) in recognition of his extraordinary achievements in furthering economic freedom in Peru and throughout the developing world.[160]

2010

  • The Hayek Medal for his theories on liberal development policy ("market economy from below") and for the appropriate implementation of his concepts by two Peruvian presidents.
  • The Medal of the Presidency of the Italian Republic (Council of Ministers) in recognition of his contribution toward the betterment of humankind and having worked for the future of the earth through his commitment.

2016

2017

Publications edit

Books edit

De Soto has published two books about economic development: The Other Path: The Invisible Revolution in the Third World in 1986 in Spanish (with a new edition in 2002 titled The Other Path, The Economic Answer to Terrorism) and in 2000, The Mystery of Capital: Why Capitalism Triumphs in the West and Fails Everywhere Else (ISBN 978-0465016150). Both books have been international bestsellers, translated into some 30 languages.

The original Spanish-language title of The Other Path is El Otro Sendero, an allusion to de Soto's alternative proposals for development in Peru, countering the attempts of the "Shining Path" ("Sendero Luminoso") to win the support of Peru's poor. Based on five years' worth of ILD research into the causes of massive informality and legal exclusion in Peru, the book was also a direct intellectual challenge to the Shining Path, offering to the poor of Peru not the violent overthrow of the system but "the other path" out of poverty, through legal reform. In response, the Senderistas added de Soto to their assassination list. In July 1992, the terrorists sent a second car bomb into ILD headquarters in Lima, killing 3 and wounding 19.

In addition, he has written, with Francis Cheneval, Swiss Human Rights Book Volume 1: Realizing Property Rights, published in 2006 – a collection of papers presented at an international symposium in Switzerland in 2006 on the urgency of property rights in impoverished countries for small business owners, women, and other vulnerable groups, such as the poor and political refugees. The book includes a paper on the ILD's work in Tanzania delivered by Hernando de Soto.[163]

  • De Soto, Hernando. The Other Path: The Invisible Revolution in the Third World. Harpercollins, 1989. ISBN 0-06-016020-9
  • De Soto, Hernando. The Mystery of Capital: Why Capitalism Triumphs in the West and Fails Everywhere Else. Basic Books, 2000. ISBN 0-465-01614-6
  • De Soto, Hernando. The Other Path: The Economic Answer to Terrorism. Basic Books, 2002. ISBN 0-465-01610-3
  • De Soto, Hernando and Francis Cheneval. Swiss Human Rights Book Volume 1: Realizing Property Rights, 2006. ISBN 978-3-907625-25-5
  • Smith, Barry et al. (eds.). The Mystery of Capital and the Construction of Social Reality, Chicago: Open Court, 2008. ISBN 0-8126-9615-8

See also edit

References edit

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External links edit

  • Institute for Liberty and Democracy official website.
  • "Slumdogs vs. Millionaires", Newsweek's Barrett Sheridan interviews Hernando de Soto
  • The Great Issues Forum 2009-06-19 at the Wayback Machine, video of Naomi Klein, Joseph Stiglitz, and Hernando de Soto discussing the financial crisis
  • , speech by Hernando de Soto at the 2009 ESRI 2010-01-02 at the Wayback Machine International User Conference
  • The Munk Debate on Foreign Aid, 2009. Stephen Lewis and Paul Collier against Peruvian economist Hernando de Soto and Dambisa Moyo, a Zambian-born critic of foreign aid.
  • , video of conversation
  • – an interview with Hernando de Soto By Gustavo Wensjoe 2008
  • Transcript of an interview for the PBS documentary Commanding Heights.
  • A highly critical review in the British newspaper The Guardian
  • in Foreign Affairs, arguing that de Soto underestimates the importance of culture
  • Soto's publication list
  • The Power of the Poor – Documentary about de Soto's work by Free to Choose Media
  • Appearances on C-SPAN

hernando, soto, economist, this, spanish, name, first, paternal, surname, soto, second, maternal, family, name, polar, hernando, soto, polar, commonly, known, hernando, soto, born, june, 1941, peruvian, economist, known, work, informal, economy, importance, bu. In this Spanish name the first or paternal surname is De Soto and the second or maternal family name is Polar Hernando Soto Polar commonly known Hernando de Soto d e ˈ s oʊ t oʊ born June 2 1941 is a Peruvian economist known for his work on the informal economy and on the importance of business and property rights 1 2 His work on the developing world has earned him praise worldwide by numerous heads of state particularly for his publication The Mystery of Capital and The Other Path He is the current president of the Institute for Liberty and Democracy ILD a think tank devoted to promoting economic development in developing countries located in Lima Peru 3 Hernando de SotoDe Soto in 2014BornHernando Soto Polar 1941 06 02 June 2 1941 age 82 Arequipa PeruNationalityPeruvianAcademic careerInstitutionInstitute for Liberty and DemocracyFieldThe economics of the informal sector and property rights theoryAlma materUniversity of Geneva BA Geneva Graduate Institute MA InfluencesMilton Friedman Friedrich Hayek Bruno LeoniContributionsDead capitalWebsitehttps www ild org pe In Peru de Soto s advisory has been recognized as inspiring the economic guidelines including the loosening of economic regulation the introduction of austerity measures and the utilization of neoliberal policies that were ultimately adopted by the government of Alberto Fujimori and established in the 1993 Constitution of Peru 4 5 6 7 The policies prescribed by de Soto resulted with Peru becoming macro economically stable following the period of price controls and increased regulation established during the Lost Decade 8 9 De Soto would go on to support Alberto s daughter Keiko Fujimori serving as an advisor during her presidential campaigns 7 10 11 De Soto worked closely with various Peruvian governments even serving as a negotiator for the Peru United States Free Trade Agreement After years of speculation de Soto ran for the Peruvian presidency in the 2021 presidential election placing fourth in an atomized race of 18 nominees 12 13 14 15 Internationally de Soto helped inspire the Washington Consensus macroeconomic prescriptions and was credited by economist John Williamson who coined the consensus name 16 He also supported the creation of the North American Free Trade Agreement NAFTA 17 with George H W Bush praising his promotion of free trade when announcing the North American agreement 18 19 20 Other heads of state have recognized de Soto including Bill Clinton Vladimir Putin Emmanuel Macron Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher 21 better source needed The ILD has received praise from other people including Nobel laureate Milton Friedman World Bank President James Wolfensohn and former UN Secretary General Javier Perez de Cuellar 22 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Economics career 2 1 Founding of the Institute for Liberty and Democracy 2 2 Fujimori government 2 2 1 Land title initiative 2 2 2 Resignation and condemnation of Fujimori 2 3 International policy 2 3 1 Washington Consensus 2 3 2 North American Free Trade Agreement NAFTA 2 4 Advisory work 3 Political career 3 1 2001 Peruvian general election 3 2 2021 presidential campaign 4 Main thesis 5 Work and research 5 1 De Soto applies thesis to terrorism 5 2 De Soto challenges Thomas Piketty 5 3 De Soto addresses Pope Francis 5 4 Blockchain work 6 Reception 6 1 Ideology 6 2 Property rights 6 2 1 Reception from scholars 6 2 2 Reception from governmental officials 6 2 3 Reception from activists 6 3 Publications 6 4 Relationship with elites 7 Awards and accolades 8 Publications 8 1 Books 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksEarly life and education editDe Soto was born on 2 June 1941 in Arequipa Peru His father Jose Alberto Soto was a Peruvian diplomat and lawyer 23 After the 1948 military coup in Peru his parents chose exile in Europe taking their two young sons with them His father worked for the International Labour Organization following their exile and would often send de Soto back to Peru during the summer months 23 In exile de Soto was educated in Switzerland where he attended the International School of Geneva He studied social psychology in National University of Saint Augustine in Arequipa Peru He returned to Geneva and received a bachelor s degree in economics from the University of Geneva In 1967 he earned a master s degree in international law and economics from Graduate Institute of International Studies also in Geneva 24 His younger brother Alvaro served in the Peruvian diplomatic corps in Lima New York City and Geneva and was seconded to United Nations in 1982 He retired from the U N in 2007 with the title rank of Assistant Under Secretary General his last position was as the UN Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process 25 There is some controversy around his surname as his father s surname is Soto while Hernando s one is de Soto According to the Peruvian writer and Nobel prize winner Mario Vargas Llosa he changed the surname in order to sound more aristocratic 26 Economics career editFollowing his post graduate studies he worked as an economist for the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade a precursor to the World Trade Organization as well as president of the Committee of the Copper Exporting Countries Organization CEO of Universal Engineering Corporation and a principal for Swiss Bank Corporation 23 27 Founding of the Institute for Liberty and Democracy edit De Soto returned to Peru on the behalf of gold placer investors at the age of 38 in 1979 at a time when neoliberal policy was moving from the fringes of economic theory to mainstream practice 23 28 29 Upon de Soto s return in 1979 he met with Friedrich Hayek a free market proponent who helped create the Mont Pelerin Society 28 Hayek who sought to promote neoliberalism through a network of second hand dealers choosing de Soto 16 After making connections with Hayek de Soto was acquainted with Sir Antony Fisher a British businessman who created the Atlas Network a nonprofit libertarian umbrella group that consolidated funds and research from businesses in the United States and Europe in order to create neoliberal organizations in developing countries 28 With the assistance and funding of Fisher and the Atlas Network de Soto created the Institute for Liberty and Democracy ILD in 1981 one of the first neoliberal organizations in Latin America 16 28 De Soto would later state Anthony gave us enormous amounts of information and advice on how to get organized It was on the basis of his vision that we designed the structure of the ILD 28 In 1984 de Soto received further assistance from the United States president Ronald Reagan s administration with the National Endowment for Democracy s Center for International Private Enterprise CIPE providing ILD with funding and education for advertising campaigns 8 28 In 2003 the CIPE would later describe the ILD as being one of its most successful programs 28 Other funding was then provided by United States Agency for International Development USAID and the Smith Richardson Foundation with USAID assisting the ILD with staging international networks to propagate their ideals 16 The ILD would then seek popular support in Peru by making informal housing their main concern 28 Fujimori government edit Between 1988 and 1995 de Soto and the Institute for Liberty and Democracy ILD were mainly responsible for some four hundred initiatives laws and regulations that led to significant changes in Peru s economic system 5 30 The ILD became involved with the Peruvian economy at the end of President Alan Garcia s term 28 De Soto s group began to grow and advertised to the Peruvian public promoting their legislative goals borrowing some advertisements from American lotteries 28 De Soto then began to serve informally as the President s personal representative for the first three years of the administration of Alberto Fujimori De Soto had originally been a part of the economics advisory team of the unsuccessful presidential candidate Mario Vargas Llosa in 1990 but Fujimori later requested de Soto s assistance in resolving the economic issues that were produced by the crisis of the 1980s The New York Times described de Soto as an overseas salesman for the government of Alberto Fujimori in 1990 writing that he had represented the government when meeting with creditors and the United States representatives 5 Others dubbed de Soto as the informal president for Fujimori 8 In a recommendation to Fujimori de Soto called for a shock to Peru s economy 8 De Soto convinced then president Fujimori to travel to New York City in a meeting organized by the Peruvian Javier Perez de Cuellar secretary general of the United Nations where they met with the heads of the International Monetary Fund the World Bank and the Inter American Development Bank who convinced him to follow the guidelines for economic policy set by the international financial institutions 8 31 The policies included a 300 percent tax increase unregulated prices and privatizing two hundred and fifty state owned entities 8 The policies of de Soto caused macroeconomic stability and a reduction in the rate of inflation though Peru s poverty rate remained largely unchanged with over half of the population living in poverty in 1998 6 8 32 Peru would not see increased growth until the 2000s commodities boom 33 34 University of Chicago political scientist Susan C Stokes believes that de Soto s influence helped change the policies of Fujimori from a Keynesian to a neoliberal approach citation needed De Soto also inspired Fujimori s anti drug initiatives 23 The Cato Institute and The Economist magazine have argued that de Soto s policy prescriptions brought him into conflict with and eventually helped to undermine the Shining Path Sendero Luminoso guerrilla movement By granting titles to small coca farmers in the two main coca growing areas they argued that the Shining Path was deprived of safe havens recruits and money and the leadership was forced to cities where they were arrested 35 36 Attacks were launched against the ILD and de Soto in light of the statements by Shining Path leader Abimael Guzman who saw ILD as a threat 37 38 Land title initiative edit Between 1992 and 1994 de Soto s ILD piloted a land title program to formally register 200 000 Peruvian households and two years later expanded the program to Lima and seven other metropolitan areas that held ninety percent of informal housing developments within Peru 28 The program concluded in 2004 with 1 4 million households being registered and 920 000 land titles being provided 28 Contrary to de Soto s claims the land title project provided no change to the access of credit to poor Peruvians 28 39 The ILD s figures reported that homeowners also saw their hours at work increase by seventeen percent while working at home decreased by forty seven percent and child labor was reduced by twenty eight percent with the group stating that the latter two statistics were due to homeowners and their children no longer being required to defend their homes from seizure 28 According to Timothy Mitchell the ILD s findings were implausible since the conclusion was already framed by the ILD neighborhoods were already collective with limited property conflicts and those included in the project were already pursuing work outside of their homes when they chose to become involved 28 Following the findings the ILD would distance itself from advocating credit access and instead promote increased work hours among formal landowners 28 Resignation and condemnation of Fujimori edit De Soto resigned from his post as the Personal Representative of the President in January 1992 two months prior to the 1992 Peruvian coup d etat and condemned Fujimori s motivations being influenced by Director of the National Intelligence Service Vladimiro Montesinos hinting at signs of corruption In his letter he called into question the validity of the anti drug agreement that Fujimori adopted He stated his reasons to resigning as due to drug trafficking from within the State that sabotages efforts in the fight against drugs and reportedly due to differences with Montesinos 40 Both Montesinos and Fujimori would later be indicted for corruption and violation of human rights Two months after de Soto resigned Fujimori launched a self coup which de Soto again condemned as stupid unproductive and blatantly unconstitutional 41 According to de Soto one month after the coup the Minister of Economy Carlos Bolona contacted de Soto in desperation after dozens of countries sanctioned Peru economically by cutting it off from investment and credit in response to the undemocratic event Bolona resigned from his ministerial post and de Soto lastly travelled to the 1992 Organization of American States summit in the Bahamas with Fujimori and pressured him to accept democratic elections to prevent another macroeconomic crisis 42 International policy edit Washington Consensus edit De Soto was a main contributor to the Washington Consensus a set of ten economic prescription requirements set by International Monetary Fund IMF World Bank and United States Department of the Treasury towards countries in economic crisis 16 43 Neoliberal economists in the United States utilized de Soto s arguments as a way to promote the consensus 16 English economist John Williamson who coined the term Washington Consensus partly credited de Soto for the prescriptions saying his work was the outcome of the worldwide intellectual trends to which Latin America provided 16 For United States presidents Ronald Reagan and George H W Bush according to Kate Geohegan of Harvard University s Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies de Soto s ideas offered a compelling new framework for explaining the problem of economic underdevelopment that seemed to affirm the wisdom of neoliberal policies like adjustment lending 16 The Washington Consensus would result in socioeconomic exclusion and weakened trade unions in Latin America resulting with unrest in the region The consensus resulted with a shrinking middle class in Latin America that prompted dissatisfaction of neoliberalism a turn to the political left and populist leaders by the late 1990s in Bolivia support for Evo Morales was established 44 45 needs update North American Free Trade Agreement NAFTA edit Upon its signing de Soto expressed support for the creation of the North American Free Trade Agreement NAFTA 46 When announcing NAFTA at the Annual Meeting of the Boards of Governors of the International Monetary Fund and World Bank Group on 27 September 1989 President George H W Bush who had adopted de Soto s work for the United States foreign policy towards the economies of developing countries 16 praised de Soto for helping inspire free trade 47 In his speech announcing NAFTA at the 1989 meeting Bush stated 47 48 All across the world there has been an almost simultaneous rediscovery of the power created when individuals are given the freedom to act in their own best interests True we are here today mainly to discuss economic freedom The Peruvian economist Hernando de Soto has helped us understand a worldwide economic phenomenon When left alone by government people everywhere organize their lives in remarkably similar ways De Soto s prescription offers a clear and promising alternative to economic stagnation in Latin America and other parts of the world All our nations have a responsibility to ensure a fair and open trading system According to de Soto in 1993 the virtues of a modern society were able to be introduced to Latin America as a result of NAFTA 46 He would later say in 2001 that Mexico s economy and institution would progress due to NAFTA concluding All poor countries are lumped together and all rich countries are lumped together there s this imitation effect 49 Advisory work edit nbsp Hernando de Soto and Muammar Gaddafi in 2008 after Libya signed a contract with the Institute for Liberty and Democracy Following its foundation in Peru de Soto s institute the ILD has worked in dozens of countries 50 Heads of state in over 35 countries have sought the ILD s services to discuss how ILD s theories on property rights could potentially improve their economies 50 After the split with Fujimori he and his institute designed similar programs in El Salvador Haiti Tanzania and Egypt and has worked beside the World Bank though the institute did not advocate for land title programs and instead promoted longer work hours 28 De Soto has received criticism of having relationships with controversial political leaders such as Alberto Fujimori and Libyan president Muammar Gaddafi with de Soto responding to such statements saying I have advised dictators but that is irrelevant 51 In 2006 de Soto served as a personal representative of President Alan Garcia and negotiated the Peru United States Free Trade Agreement after 11 rounds of negotiation In 2009 the ILD turned its attention back to Peru and the plight of the indigenous peoples of the Peruvian Amazon jungle In response to Peru s President Garcia s call to all Peruvians to present their proposals toward solving the problems leading to the bloody incidents in Bagua the ILD assessed the situation and presented its preliminary findings ILD published a short videotaped documentary The Mystery of Capital among the Indigenous Peoples of the Amazon summarizing its findings from indigenous communities in Alaska Canada and the Peruvian jungle 52 After previously working with her father Alberto de Soto joined Keiko Fujimori with her election campaigns for the 2011 and 2016 Peruvian general election when Fujimori committed to implementing de Soto s property rights reforms 10 11 In an interview during the first campaign ok Keiko Fujimori he also stated that Osama bin Laden s death was achieved thanks to land titling a concept he holds as a way out of poverty 53 As part of the Fuerza Popular team he harshly criticized Peruvians for Change candidate Pedro Pablo Kuczynski whom he described as a deserter and coward In an interview with the newspaper Peru21 De Soto said that Kuczynski is a gringo who does not know Peru because there are those who do He is a foreigner to the Peruvian reality 54 Political career edit2001 Peruvian general election edit For the 2001 Peruvian general election de Soto sought to run for president with his Popular Capital party though he failed to register the party on time in order to participate 23 55 At the time he sought support from left wing political groups for his candidacy though they disagreed with his liberal economic policies 55 He would later become a critic of such groups 55 After learning about de Soto s inability to register for the election former president and leader of the APRA Alan Garcia offered the economist the APRA s presidential nomination De Soto declined the offer claiming that he would have been a figurehead president susceptible to the whims of disciplined APRA congressmen Later Garcia offered de Soto the position of Prime Minister a role that Alberto Fujimori had also offered de Soto De Soto declined again not wanting to be held accountable for Garcia s government policies 2021 presidential campaign edit See also 2021 Peruvian general election De Soto announced his candidacy for president in September 2020 under the party Go on Country Prior to the announcement De Soto expressed hesitation to formally run for president lest politicizing and potentially delegitimizing work done by the ILD and himself on dead capital On 30 October 2020 De Soto presented his technical team which included the former president of CONFIEP Miguel Vega Alvear businessman Carlos Ananos former Fujimori minister and first Vice President Francisco Tudela former GEIN commander Marco Miyashiro the former head of the Operation Chavin de Huantar Jose Williams the diplomat Alvaro de Soto among others 56 57 On December 14 2020 de Soto shared an alleged secret poll in Beto Ortiz s show in Willax Television That poll ranked him first De Soto spoke in the interview that The way this the cadres comes to us is because people very close to the state apparatus it seems were outraged at the enormous difference between the polls they handle 58 In January 2021 a strike was filed that considered that the Go on Country electoral court had not been properly formed This strike was declared unfounded by the JEE 59 Another strike was filed against him by a citizen because he points out that Hernando de Soto has entered in the Academic Training section of the resume which has the academic degree demi license en sciences economiques awarded by the University of Geneva which would have been obtained in 1964 But since this degree or title is not registered with SUNEDU false information would be declared and it should be excluded from the candidacy 60 61 On 24 February 2021 following an approach to advise Francisco Sagasti on the COVID 19 pandemic management in Peru De Soto announced the first Peruvian shadow cabinet Mainly composed of his campaign technical team the main purpose of the opposition cabinet is to offer an alternative in order for the government to concur and apply during the crisis 62 63 De Soto rejected the exclusion of Rafael Lopez Aliaga an electoral rival in the 2021 elections for which he appeared at the demonstration of his followers on the outskirts of the JNE in which Lopez Aliaga was who praised him 64 De Soto was caught in controversy surrounding Vacunagate a scandal where political elites in Peru were able to be vaccinated against COVID 19 ahead of schedule 65 He initially denied having received a COVID 19 vaccine from any Peruvian though it was later reported that he flew twice to the United States to be vaccinated 65 66 During presidential debates de Soto promised to work with the United Nations to prevent foreign criminals or poor people from entering Peru stating Let their governments take care of them we will take care of ours 66 He proposed reforming Peru s education for less foreign reliance and increasing the health budget 67 Ultimately de Soto placed fourth in an atomized race of 18 nominees 12 13 14 15 Main thesis editThe main message of de Soto s work and writings is that no nation can have a strong market economy without adequate participation in an information framework that records ownership of property and other economic information 68 Unreported unrecorded economic activity results in that many small entrepreneurs lack legal ownership of their property making it difficult for them to obtain credit sell the business or expand They cannot seek legal remedies to business conflicts in court since they do not have legal ownership Lack of information on income prevents governments from collecting taxes and acting for the public welfare The existence of such massive exclusion generates two parallel economies legal and extra legal An elite minority enjoys the economic benefits of the law and globalization while the majority of entrepreneurs are stuck in poverty where their assets adding up to more than US 10 trillion worldwide languish as dead capital in the shadows of the law 69 To survive to protect their assets and to do as much business as possible the extralegals create their own rules But because these local arrangements are full of shortcomings and are not easily enforceable the extralegals also create their own social political and economic problems that affect the society at large Since the fall of the Berlin Wall responsible nations around the developing world have worked hard to make the transition to a market economy but have in general failed 70 Populist leaders have used this failure of the free market system to wipe out poverty in the developing world to beat their anti globalization drums But the ILD believes that the real enemy is within the flawed legal systems of developing nations that make it virtually impossible for the majority of their people and their assets to gain a stake in the market The people of these countries have talent enthusiasm and an astonishing ability to wring a profit out of practically nothing 69 What the poor majority in the developing world do not have is easy access to the legal system which in the advanced nations of the world and for the elite in their countries is the gateway to economic success for it is in the legal system where property documents are created and standardized according to law That documentation builds a public memory that permits society to engage in such crucial economic activities as identifying and gaining access to information about individuals their assets their titles rights charges and obligations establishing the limits of liability for businesses knowing an asset s previous economic situation assuring protection of third parties and quantifying and valuing assets and rights 71 These public memory mechanisms in turn facilitate such opportunities as access to credit the establishment of systems of identification the creation of systems for credit and insurance information the provision for housing and infrastructure the issue of shares the mortgage of property and a host of other economic activities that drive a modern market economy 72 Work and research editSince 2008 de Soto has been refining his thesis about the importance of property rights to development in response to his organization s findings that a number of new global threats have property rights distortions at their root In essays that appeared from early 2009 into 2012 in media outlets in the U S and Europe de Soto argued that the reason why the U S and European economies were mired in recession was the result of a knowledge crisis not a financial one 73 74 75 76 77 He has termed housing assets as dead capital in his papers on household ownership and deeds 78 Capitalism lives in two worlds De Soto wrote in the Financial Times in January 2012 There is the visible one of palm trees and Panamanian ships but it is the other made up of the property information cocooned in laws and records that allows us to organize and understand fragments of reality and join them creatively 79 De Soto argued that the knowledge in those public memory systems which helped Capitalism triumph was distorted over the past 15 years or so Until this knowledge system is repaired he wrote neither US nor European capitalism will recover 80 In another series of articles that appeared in US and Europe in 2011 de Soto used the findings of ILD field research in Egypt Tunisia and Libya to make his case for the economic roots of the Arab Spring 81 82 83 The ongoing Arab revolutions he argued were economic revolutions driven mainly by the frustrations of 200 million ordinary Arabs who depended on the informal economy for their livelihoods 82 83 He pointed to the ILD s earlier 2004 findings in Egypt which revealed the nation s largest employer with 92 of the property in the informal economy assets worth almost 247 billion 81 84 Also as proof of the extent of desperation among MENA s entrepreneurs he elaborated ILD s exclusive research on Mohamed Bouazizi the Tunisian street vendor whose public self immolation in protest of the expropriation of his goods and scale literally sparked the Jasmine Revolution in Tunisia which spread unrest through the Arab world 85 86 87 After losing core funding from USAID ILD laid off the majority of their employees from their San Isidro office In 2014 2015 de Soto and a small team working out of his house began to attempt to guide the political process in Peru as presidential elections were due to take place in 2016 by finding solutions to the ongoing national mining crisis De Soto has been a strong advocate for the formalisation of the informal miners that are scattered throughout Peru 88 89 Since 2014 several large national investment projects including Las Bambas and Tia Maria have been disrupted by violent protests by informal miners against government regulation and formal extractive industries 90 In July 2015 de Soto alleged that former Shining Path militants who have taken up the ecological cause were paralyzing some 70 billion in mining investment in Peru 91 Furthermore recorded video debates between the former extremists and de Soto were published on ILD s YouTube channel and revealed that the Shining Path militants agree that property rights could be an important part of the solution to social conflicts in Peru 92 De Soto s stated goal is to determine the roots of informal hostility against multinationals and identify what is needed to build a national social contract on extractive industries that could harmonize their property interests with those of multinationals as opposed to creating conflict 91 De Soto applies thesis to terrorism edit In October 2014 de Soto published an article in The Wall Street Journal The Capitalist Cure for Terrorism that stated an aggressive agenda for economic empowerment was needed in the Middle East in order to defeat terrorist groups like ISIL He argued that the U S should promote an agenda similar to what was successfully used in Peru to defeat the Shining Path in the 1990s 93 He also mentions in the article that local policymakers in the Middle East are missing the fact that if ordinary people cannot play the game legally they will be far less able to resist a terrorist offensive The article received praise among high level global Right Wing politicians such as US presidential candidates Rand Paul and Jeb Bush 94 95 Once again In January 2016 de Soto released his second article How to Win the War on Terror which focused on defeating terrorism through promoting strong property rights 96 The article was distributed by Project Syndicate and published in dozens of countries and languages including in Switzerland by the World Economic Forum in advance of their 2016 forum 97 98 De Soto challenges Thomas Piketty edit In 2014 de Soto started to refute French economist Thomas Piketty s thesis by arguing that his recent attacks against capital in his worldwide best seller book Capital in the 21st Century were unjustified 99 His op ed article challenging Piketty The Poor Against Piketty French Les pauvres contre Piketty was first published in France s news magazine Le Point in April 2015 100 De Soto argued that Piketty s statistics ignore the ninety percent of the world population that lives in developing countries and former Soviet states whose inhabitants produce and hold their capital in the informal sector 101 Furthermore he states that his institute s global research proves that most people actually want more rather than less capital Finally he argues that the wars against capital which Piketty claims are coming have already begun under Europe s nose in the form of the Arab Spring in the Middle East and North Africa 102 De Soto addresses Pope Francis edit In February 2016 de Soto took a break from countering Piketty s work and wrote an article addressing Pope Francis s trip to Mexico titled A Mexican Impasse for the Pope 103 The article encourages the Pope and the Vatican to address the lack of property rights among the poor in countries like Mexico as a solution to global refugee crises 104 105 A week later de Soto published a second article in Fortune Magazine addressing the Pope s and US Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump s public spat over building a wall on the Mexican USA border The article titled What Pope Francis Should Really Say to Donald Trump conveys five property rights related thoughts that the Pope should use to respond to Trump 106 The article led to many different opinion articles featured in conservative outlets such as Breitbart and Investors Business Daily 107 108 Blockchain work edit In May 2015 de Soto attended the 1st Annual Block Chain Summit hosted by British billionaire Richard Branson at his private Caribbean residence Necker Island 109 110 De Soto was one of three moderators along with Michael J Casey former Wall Street Journal senior columnist and Matthew Bishop editor at The Economist Advocates of blockchain technology argue that it is well suited to acting as a public ledger to help achieve de Soto s objective of formalising the informally held property rights of groups like the indigenous peoples of Peru 111 112 113 114 115 De Soto presented a property application of Bitcoin to Sheikh Nahyan bin Mubarak Al Nahyan of the United Arab Emirates and financial authorities of Abu Dhabi at a second Blockchain summit held in Abu Dhabi in 2015 116 Reception editIdeology edit De Soto s promotion of liberalism in developing countries has faced criticism as supporting the exploitation of poorer nations 117 118 Social scientist Joseph Hanlon described De Soto as an economist of the far right and that the risk that people will be thrown off their land is fundamental to De Soto s system of bringing capitalism to the poor summarizing that landlessness for some impoverished individuals is intrinsic to his strategy 119 The Guardian described de Soto as a radical free market economist 120 Geohegan states that the United States government under President Ronald Reagan and his successor George H W Bush adopted de Soto s work as the main strategy of the United States foreign policy towards developing countries since de Soto s interpretation of underdevelopment seemed to validate the emerging neoliberal US policies 16 According to de Soto Peru was not poor because of international inequality enforced by the globalized economy but due to Peru s own economic regulation 16 Reagan whose administration provided funding to found de Soto s ILD 28 George H W Bush and Bush s successor Bill Clinton would continue promoting de Soto s work 121 Timothy Mitchell says that de Soto s background as a European economist was often ignored by American neoliberals promoting him writing that his popularity and experience came to depend on his identity as a neoliberal from the third world willing to describe the poverty of the global south as a self inflicted injury unconnected to its relationship to the north 118 Administrator of the United States Agency for International Development USAID Andrew Natsios would later advocate de Soto s work stating Instead of seeing the developing world as victims of capitalism Hernando argues We re inflicting our own wounds Since he is Peruvian he can make this argument credibly 118 The promotion of neoliberalism by de Soto was not only utilized by officials in the United States other neoliberal economists endorsed de Soto due to his origins from the developing world as well with Mitchell stating that his background transformed de Soto into a very useful asset for the neoliberal movement 118 President of the Atlas Network Alex Chaufen said that de Soto was often discussed among the neoliberal community stating During the years I spent with Antony Fisher at Atlas I couldn t recall any conversation any speech about think tanks any fundraising letter where he did not mention Hernando 118 As de Soto began to work with the government of Gloria Macapagal Arroyo in the Philippines in 2004 investigative journalism website Bulatlat described de Soto s work as rich people s reformism writing The secret to de Soto s and ILD s popularity among political economic and developmental elites ultimately lies in their unashamed conservatism defense of the status quo and promise of capitalist wealth for the world s poor and exploited Elites get to keep the property they value so much and can continue exploiting and oppressing while the poor and historically exploited and oppressed are diverted from systemic struggles by the chimera of becoming wealthy entrepreneurs themselves 117 In his Planet of Slums Mike Davis argues that de Soto who Davis calls the global guru of neo liberal populism is essentially promoting what the statist left in South America and India has always promoted individual land titling 122 Davis argues that titling is the incorporation into the formal economy of cities which benefits more wealthy squatters but is disastrous for poorer squatters and especially tenants who simply cannot afford incorporation into the fully commodified formal economy 122 Property rights edit De Soto s works on property rights has voiced diverse views on the effect of the titling of land 123 124 The findings at the conclusion of his land title program under Alberto Fujimori found that providing land titles did not provide poor Peruvians with greater access to credit 28 De Soto has been criticized for methodological and analytical reasons while some activists have accused him of just wanting to be a representative figure of the prioritizing property rights movement 125 Some state that his theory does not offer anything new compared to traditional land reform 126 127 His emphasis on title formalization as the only reason behind economic growth in the United States has been subject to criticism 128 Property formalization in the United States may have happened as a result of different reasons including establishment of law and order increased state control greater institutional integration increased economic efficiency increased tax revenue and greater equality 129 Reception from scholars edit Empirical studies by Argentine economists Sebastian Galiani and Ernesto Schargrodsky found a modest relationship between titling and credit market access contradicting de Soto s research but have also pointed out that families with titles substantially increased housing investment reduced household size and improved the education of their children relative to the control group 130 131 In a 2012 book by Yale University political science methodologist Thad Dunning he argues that Galiani and Schargrodsky s studies provide highly credible claims because the studies rely on true randomization whereas De Soto s study did not and is thus vulnerable to confounding variables 132 De Soto s proposal is not wealth transfer but wealth legalization The poor of the world already possess trillions in assets now De Soto is not distributing capital to anyone By making them liquid everyone s capital pool grows dramatically 133 While analysing Schaefer s arguments Roy writes de Soto s ideas are seductive precisely because they only guarantee the latter but in doing so promise the former 134 135 Robert J Samuelson has argued against what he sees as de Soto s single bullet approach and has argued for a greater emphasis on culture and how local conditions affect people s perceptions of their opportunities 136 In the Journal of Economic Literature Christopher Woodruff of the University of California San Diego criticized de Soto for overestimating the amount of wealth that land titling now informally owned property could unlock and argues that de Soto s own experience in Peru suggests that land titling by itself is not likely to have much effect Titling must be followed by a series of politically challenging steps Improving the efficiency of judicial systems rewriting bankruptcy codes restructuring financial market regulations and similar reforms will involve much more difficult choices by policymakers 137 138 Reception from governmental officials edit The argument for private and often individualist property regime comes under the question of societal legitimacy may not be justified even if de Soto eyes bringing a unified system in a state or unification with the global economy 133 His work has also received praise from two United Nations secretaries general Kofi Annan Hernando de Soto is absolutely right that we need to rethink how we capture economic growth and development 139 and Javier Perez de Cuellar A crucial contribution A new proposal for change that is valid for the whole world 140 UN Special Rapporteur on the right to food Olivier De Schutter has questioned the insistence on titling as a means to protect security of tenure based on the risk that titling will undermine customary forms of tenure and insufficiently protect the rights of land users that depend on the commons as well as the fear that titling schemes may lead to further reconcentration of land ownership A study commissioned by DFID an agency of the U K government further summarized many of the complications arising from implementing de Soto s policy recommendations when insufficient attention is paid to the local social context 141 Reception from activists edit Grassroots controlled and directed shack dwellers movements like Abahlali baseMjondolo in South Africa and the Homeless Workers Movement Movimento dos Trabalhadores Sem Teto MTST in Brazil 142 143 have strenuously argued against individual titling and for communal and democratic systems of collective land tenure because this offers protection to the poorest and prevents downward raiding in which richer people displace squatters once their neighborhoods are formalized Publications edit Neoliberal politicians and organizations promoted de Soto s publications with their endorsements and awards making his books bestsellers 144 Since the publication of The Mystery of Capital in 2000 and subsequent translations his ideas have become increasingly influential in the field of development economics Scholars have disputed that there is a significant relationship between land titles and credit market access In the World Development journal a 1990 article by R G Rossini and J J Thomas of the London School of Economics questioned the statistical basis of de Soto s claims about the size of the informal economy in his first book The Other Path 145 The ILD responded in the same journal that Rossini and Thomas observations neither addressed the central theme of the book nor did it address the main body of quantitative evidence displayed to substantiate the importance of economic and legal barriers that give rise to informal activities Instead they focused exclusively on four empirical estimates that the book mentioned only in passing 146 On January 31 2012 de Soto and his publisher were fined by the Peruvian intellectual property rights organization INDECOPI for excluding the names of co authors Enrique Ghersi and Mario Ghibellini in newer editions of his 1986 book The Other Path 147 148 149 150 Relationship with elites edit An article by Madeleine Bunting for The Guardian UK claimed that de Soto s suggestions would in some circumstances cause more harm than benefit and referred to The Mystery of Capital as an elaborate smokescreen used to obscure the issue of the power of the globalized elite She cited de Soto s employment history as evidence of his bias in favor of the powerful 151 Reporter John Gravois also criticized de Soto for his ties to power circles exemplified by his attendance at the Davos World Economic Forum In response de Soto told Gravois that this proximity to power would help de Soto educate the elites about poverty Ivan Osorio of the Competitive Enterprise Institute has argued against Gravois s allegations claiming that Gravois has misinterpreted many of de Soto s recommendations 152 Awards and accolades editTime magazine chose De Soto as one of the five leading Latin American innovators of the century in its special May 1999 issue Leaders of the New Millennium and included him among the 100 most influential people in the world in 2004 153 De Soto was also listed as one of the 15 innovators who will reinvent your future according to Forbes magazine s 85th anniversary edition 154 In January 2000 Entwicklung und Zusammenarbeit the German development magazine described de Soto as one of the most important development theoreticians 155 In October 2016 de Soto was honored with the Brigham Kanner Property Rights Prize awarded by the William amp Mary Law School during the 13th Annual Brigham Kanner Property Rights Conference in recognition of his tireless advocacy of property rights reform as a tool to alleviate global poverty 156 Hernando de Soto is honorary co chair for the World Justice Project 157 Among the prizes he has received are 23 27 1990 The Fisher Prize from the Atlas Network 1995 The Freedom Prize Switzerland 2002 The Goldwater Award USA Adam Smith Award from the Association of Private Enterprise Education USA The CARE Canada Award for Outstanding Development Thinking Canada 2003 Received the Downey Fellowship at Yale University The Democracy Hall of Fame International Award from the National Graduate University USA 2004 The Templeton Freedom Prize USA The Milton Friedman Prize for Advancing Liberty USA 35 The Royal Decoration of the Most Admirable Order of the Direkgunabhorn 5th Class Thailand 2005 An honorary Doctor of Letters from the University of Buckingham United Kingdom The Americas Award USA Was named the Most Outstanding of 2004 for Economic Development at Home and Abroad by the Peruvian National Assembly of Rectors The Prize of Deutsche Stiftung Eigentum for exceptional contributions to the theory of property rights The 2004 IPAE Award by the Peruvian Institute of Business Administration The Academy of Achievement s Golden Plate Award 2005 USA in tribute to his outstanding accomplishments The BearingPoint Forbes magazine s seventh Compass Award for Strategic Direction Was named as a Fellow of the Class of 1930 by Dartmouth College 2006 The 2006 Bradley Prize for outstanding achievement by the Bradley Foundation 158 The 2006 Innovation Award Social and Economic Innovation from The Economist magazine December 2 2006 for the promotion of property rights and economic development 159 2007 The Poder BCG Business Awards 2007 granted by Poder Magazine and the Boston Consulting Group for the Best Anti Poverty Initiative The anthology Die Zwolf Wichtigsten Okonomen der Welt The World s Twelve Most Influential Economists 2007 included a profile of de Soto among a list that begins with Adam Smith and includes such recent winners of the Nobel Prize in Economics as Joseph Stiglitz and Amartya Sen The 2007 Humanitarian Award in recognition of his work to help poor people participate in the market economy 2009 Honorary patron of the University Philosophical Society of Trinity College Dublin for having excelled in public life and made a worthy contribution to society The inaugural Hernando de Soto Award for Democracy awarded by the Center for International Private Enterprise CIPE in recognition of his extraordinary achievements in furthering economic freedom in Peru and throughout the developing world 160 2010 The Hayek Medal for his theories on liberal development policy market economy from below and for the appropriate implementation of his concepts by two Peruvian presidents The Medal of the Presidency of the Italian Republic Council of Ministers in recognition of his contribution toward the betterment of humankind and having worked for the future of the earth through his commitment 2016 The 2016 Brigham Kanner Property Rights Prize from William amp Mary Law School during a ceremony in The Hague Netherlands in October 2016 161 2017 Recipient of the Global Award for Entrepreneurship Research 2017 162 Publications editBooks edit De Soto has published two books about economic development The Other Path The Invisible Revolution in the Third World in 1986 in Spanish with a new edition in 2002 titled The Other Path The Economic Answer to Terrorism and in 2000 The Mystery of Capital Why Capitalism Triumphs in the West and Fails Everywhere Else ISBN 978 0465016150 Both books have been international bestsellers translated into some 30 languages The original Spanish language title of The Other Path is El Otro Sendero an allusion to de Soto s alternative proposals for development in Peru countering the attempts of the Shining Path Sendero Luminoso to win the support of Peru s poor Based on five years worth of ILD research into the causes of massive informality and legal exclusion in Peru the book was also a direct intellectual challenge to the Shining Path offering to the poor of Peru not the violent overthrow of the system but the other path out of poverty through legal reform In response the Senderistas added de Soto to their assassination list In July 1992 the terrorists sent a second car bomb into ILD headquarters in Lima killing 3 and wounding 19 In addition he has written with Francis Cheneval Swiss Human Rights Book Volume 1 Realizing Property Rights published in 2006 a collection of papers presented at an international symposium in Switzerland in 2006 on the urgency of property rights in impoverished countries for small business owners women and other vulnerable groups such as the poor and political refugees The book includes a paper on the ILD s work in Tanzania delivered by Hernando de Soto 163 De Soto Hernando The Other Path The Invisible Revolution in the Third World Harpercollins 1989 ISBN 0 06 016020 9 De Soto Hernando The Mystery of Capital Why Capitalism Triumphs in the West and Fails Everywhere Else Basic Books 2000 ISBN 0 465 01614 6 De Soto Hernando The Other Path The Economic Answer to Terrorism Basic Books 2002 ISBN 0 465 01610 3 De Soto Hernando and Francis Cheneval Swiss Human Rights Book Volume 1 Realizing Property Rights 2006 ISBN 978 3 907625 25 5 Smith Barry et al eds The Mystery of Capital and the Construction of Social Reality Chicago Open Court 2008 ISBN 0 8126 9615 8See also editContributions to liberal theory Crony capitalism Dependency theory Documentality Liberalism Mercantilism Milton Friedman The Other Path The Economic Answer to TerrorismReferences edit Mitchell Timothy 2005 The work of economics how a discipline makes its world European Journal of Sociology 46 2 299 doi 10 1017 S000397560500010X de Soto became the country s leading advocate of neoliberal reorganization En unas elecciones impredecibles la unica certeza en Peru es que habra segunda vuelta France 24 2021 04 05 Retrieved 2021 04 07 Institute for Liberty and Democracy Hernando de Soto Detailed Bio accessed 16 March 2013 Burt Jo Marie 25 September 2007 Peru Facade of Democracy Crumbles NACLA Retrieved 2020 12 11 a b c Brooke James 1990 11 27 A Peruvian Is Laying Out Another Path The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2020 09 26 a b Stokes Susan 1997 Are Parties What s Wrong with Democracy in Latin America CiteSeerX 10 1 1 569 1490 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b Borda Luis 2016 05 08 Hernando de Soto Alberto Fujimori fue victima de la seduccion de Montesinos RPP Peru in Spanish Retrieved 2020 12 11 a b c d e f g Pee Robert 2018 The Reagan Administration the Cold War and the Transition to Democracy Promotion Palgrave Macmillan pp 178 180 ISBN 978 3319963815 Peru seeks to maintain growth as demand for commodities falls Oxford Business Group 2016 02 14 Archived from the original on 2021 04 10 Retrieved 2020 12 07 a b Peru economist Hernando de Soto endorses Keiko Fujimori Peru Reports 2016 05 08 Retrieved 2020 12 11 a b De Soto says Fujimori backs Peru anti poverty plan Reuters in German 2011 05 26 Retrieved 2020 12 11 dead link a b El Comercio Sebastian Martinez Ortiz 2020 09 25 Hernando de Soto sera el candidato presidencial de Avanza Pais afirma dirigente El Comercio in Spanish Retrieved 2020 09 26 a b El Comercio Ana Bazo Reisman 2021 04 11 Hernando de Soto el candidato que empezo pequeno y ahora roza la segunda vuelta El Comercio in Spanish Retrieved 2021 04 18 a b Conteo rapido Ipsos al 100 de Elecciones 2021 Pedro Castillo y Keiko Fujimori disputarian segunda vuelta de Elecciones Generales de Peru del 2021 Peru Libre Fuerza Popular Ganadores Lima Callao Departamentos Regiones presidente congresistas Resultados Elecciones 2021 pandemia Covid 19 Presidente del Peru Congreso Parlamento Andino ELECCIONES 2021 El Comercio in Spanish 2021 04 14 Retrieved 2021 05 23 a b CORREO NOTICIAS 2021 04 12 Flash electoral Ipsos resultados boca de urna Conteo rapido Elecciones generales de Peru de 2021 ganadores segunda vuelta Candidatos presidenciales PERU Correo in Spanish Retrieved 2021 05 23 a b c d e f g h i j k Pee Robert 2018 The Reagan Administration the Cold War and the Transition to Democracy Promotion Palgrave Macmillan pp 168 187 ISBN 978 3319963815 Rohter Larry 1993 11 21 THE WORLD Latin America Finds Harmony in Convergence The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2021 04 09 Source for President George H W Bush s remarks Text of Remarks by the President to the World Bank International Monetary Fund Annual Meeting 27 September 1989 announcing NAFTA Press release The Department of State Bulletin United States Department of State 89 2 Bureau of Public Affairs 1989 The Milton Friedman Prize for Advancing Liberty Cato Institute 2004 05 06 Retrieved 2021 04 09 Hernando de Soto s Biography Cato Institute Retrieved 2020 09 28 Praise for de Soto and Institute for Liberty and Democracy Cato Institute Retrieved 2020 09 28 a b c d e f g Cablegate Bio for GOP Special Trade Envoy Hernando de Soto Scoop 28 August 2006 Retrieved 2020 12 11 The New York Times 1987 02 22 In defense of the black market The New York Times Alvaro de Soto End of Mission Report PDF Retrieved 31 August 2015 Elecciones 2021 Homonimo del socio de la conquista o Hernando Soto 9 April 2021 a b ILD President De Soto www ild org pe Retrieved 2020 12 11 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Mitchell Timothy 2005 The work of economics how a discipline makes its world European Journal of Sociology 46 2 299 310 doi 10 1017 S000397560500010X Source Investors Business Daily Monday November 6 2006 p A4 Leaders amp Success Article by IBD Reinhardt Kraus The Globalist Biography of Hernando de Soto Archived 2006 09 11 at the Wayback Machine Paul Lewis July 1990 NEW PERU LEADER IN ACCORD ON DEBT The New York Times Retrieved 16 August 2018 Pee Robert 2018 The Reagan Administration the Cold War and the Transition to Democracy Promotion Palgrave Macmillan pp 187 188 ISBN 978 3319963815 Johnson Toni 9 February 2010 Peru s Mineral Wealth and Woes Council on Foreign Relations Retrieved 10 April 2021 Gacs David 7 January 2014 How Peru Could Survive The End Of The Commodities Supercycle Business Insider Retrieved 10 April 2021 a b Hernando de Soto s Biography Retrieved 16 August 2018 The economist versus the terrorist The Economist 30 January 2003 http nsarchive gwu edu NSAEBB NSAEBB64 peru33 pdf bare URL PDF The Other Path www ild org pe Retrieved 16 August 2018 Cockburn Calderon J 2000 Regularization of Land in Peru Landlines Cambridge MA Lincoln Institute of Land Policy Gorriti Gustavo 1992 01 31 Dimite el asesor de Fujimori para la lucha antidroga El Pais in Spanish ISSN 1134 6582 Retrieved 2021 04 06 Hernando de Soto El 5 de abril fue una estupidez antiproductivo e inconstitucional www ild org pe Retrieved 2021 04 06 LR Redaccion 2016 04 04 Hernando de Soto El 5 de abril fue una estupidez antiproductivo e inconstitucional VIDEO larepublica pe in Spanish Retrieved 2021 04 06 Williamson John What Washington Means by Policy Reform in Williamson John ed Latin American Readjustment How Much has Happened Washington Peterson Institute for International Economics 1989 Rovira Kaltwasser Cristobal 2010 Moving Beyond the Washington Consensus The Resurgence of the Left in Latin America Internationale Politik und Gesellschaft 3 Friedrich Ebert Foundation 52 62 Hellinger Daniel 2014 Comparative Politics of Latin America Democracy at Last Routledge ISBN 9781134070077 a b Rohter Larry 1993 11 21 THE WORLD Latin America Finds Harmony in Convergence The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2021 04 09 a b The Department of State Bulletin United States Department of State 89 2 Bureau of Public Affairs 1989 The Milton Friedman Prize for Advancing Liberty Cato Institute 2004 05 06 Retrieved 2021 04 09 Interview with Hernando de Soto Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis www minneapolisfed org Retrieved 2021 04 09 a b Achievements www ild org pe Retrieved 16 August 2018 Once frases que han marcado la agitada campana electoral de Peru en medio de la pandemia EFE in Spanish 2021 04 06 Retrieved 2021 04 07 Enrique Escalante Edwar 2009 09 30 Peru The Mystery of Capital among the Indigenous People of the Amazon Hacer Latin America Retrieved 31 July 2015 Hernando de Soto Gracias a la titulacion se atrapo a Osama Bin Laden Servindi Servicios de Comunicacion Intercultural www servindi org Retrieved 2021 05 17 Entrevista al Presidente del Instituto Libertad y Democracia ILD www ild org pe Retrieved 2021 05 17 a b c Tapia De Soto busco alianza con la izquierda el 2001 La Republica in Spanish 2004 11 28 Retrieved 2020 12 11 Hernando de Soto integra a su equipo tecnico a Julia Principe y Marco Miyashiro VIDEO www latina pe in Spanish 31 October 2020 Retrieved 2021 05 11 LR Redaccion 2021 01 14 Avanza Pais una estructura de campana en proceso larepublica pe in Spanish Retrieved 2021 05 11 Hernando De Soto afirma que lidera la verdadera encuesta nacional El Buho in Spanish 2020 12 15 Retrieved 2021 05 17 Elecciones 2021 Declaran infundada una de las dos tachas presentadas contra Hernando de Soto Avanza Pais nndc POLITICA El Comercio in Spanish 2021 01 20 Retrieved 2021 05 14 Hernando de Soto se defendio ante tacha que pone en duda sus grados academicos America Noticias in Spanish Retrieved 2021 05 17 Hernando de Soto muestra las constancias que acreditan sus titulos en la Universidad de Ginebra y la PUCP Caretas Politica Caretas in Spanish 2021 01 15 Retrieved 2021 05 17 Hernando de Soto presento Gabinete de oposicion para dar propuestas al Gobierno rpp pe in Spanish 2021 02 24 Retrieved 2021 02 24 Hernando de Soto presento a los miembros del gabinete de oposicion Quienes son caretas pe in Spanish 2021 02 24 Retrieved 2021 02 24 PERU21 NOTICIAS 2021 03 06 Rafael Lopez Aliaga elecciones 2021 El JNE le dio la razon a Rafael Lopez Aliaga y a George Forsyth y vuelven a la carrera POLITICA Peru21 in Spanish Retrieved 2021 05 14 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link a b Explainer Peru s 2021 General Elections Council of the Americas 6 April 2021 Retrieved 2021 04 11 a b Un candidato peruano prometio no dejar entrar a pobres extranjeros Que se ocupen sus paises infobae in European Spanish 31 March 2021 Retrieved 2021 04 04 Hernando de Soto conozca las principales propuestas del candidato presidencial de Avanza Pais Diario Expreso 2021 04 03 Retrieved 2021 04 04 The Destruction of Economic Facts by Hernando de Soto April 28 2010 Bloomberg BusinessWeek Accessed online May 2 2011 1 a b de Soto Hernando 2000 The Mystery of Capital UK Black Swan de Soto 2000 1 Barry Smith Searle and De Soto The New Ontology of the Social World permanent dead link in Barry Smith David Mark and Isaac Ehrlich eds The Mystery of Capital and the Construction of Social Reality Chicago Open Court 2008 35 51 Institute for Liberty and Democracy The ILD s war against exclusion p 19 2009 Sheridan Barrett 2009 02 20 Economy Slumdogs vs Wall Street Millionaires Newsweek Retrieved 16 August 2015 The Destruction of Economic Facts Bloomberg com 28 April 2011 Retrieved 16 August 2015 Soto Hernando de 25 March 2009 Toxic Assets Were Hidden Assets The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 16 August 2015 Soto Hernando de 20 January 2006 What if you can t prove you had a house The New York Times Retrieved 16 August 2015 The Knowledge Crisis Strategy ild org pe Retrieved 16 August 2015 Illana Melzer and Kecia Rust October 6 2020 Household resilience is tied to the house www magzter com Magzter Finweek English Retrieved October 6 2020 Knowledge lies at the heart over western capitalism Financial Times Retrieved 16 August 2015 Knowledge lies at the heart of western capitalism Financial Times Retrieved 16 August 2015 a b Soto Hernando de 26 February 2013 The Secret to Reviving the Arab Spring s Promise Property Rights The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 16 August 2015 a b The free market secret of the Arab revolution Financial Times Retrieved 16 August 2015 a b The real Mohamed Bouazizi Foreign Policy 16 December 2011 Retrieved 16 August 2015 The Economic Roots of the Arab Spring Council of foreign relations Retrieved 16 August 2015 The Real Mohamed Bouazizi Foreign Policy 16 December 2011 Retrieved 16 August 2015 Economic Inclusion Democracy and the Arab Spring CIPE Development 11 February 2013 Retrieved 16 August 2015 Arab Spring unrest was ignited by entrepreneurs facing constraints Economist Daily News Egypt 8 June 2013 Retrieved 16 August 2015 Juliaca Hernando de Soto propondra formalizacion a mineros Archived from the original on 9 February 2017 Retrieved 16 August 2018 Gestion Redaccion 11 July 2015 Hernando de Soto propone hacer a las comunidades accionistas de las mineras Archived from the original on 16 November 2017 Retrieved 16 August 2018 Conga Tia Maria y Las Bambas 30 September 2015 Retrieved 16 August 2018 a b Balbi Mariella 5 July 2015 De Soto Hay US 70 mil mlls de inversion minera paralizada El Comercio Retrieved 16 August 2018 Institute for Liberty and Democracy 8 July 2015 Hernando de Soto Y Anti Mineros Segmento 1 Archived from the original on 2021 12 12 Retrieved 16 August 2018 via YouTube Soto Hernando de 10 October 2014 The Capitalist Cure for Terrorism The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 16 August 2018 NationalJournal Archived from the original on 2015 11 25 Retrieved 2015 11 24 Rand Paul on ISIS Benghazi and Bringing U S Troops Home Newsweek 11 December 2014 Retrieved 16 August 2018 How to win the war on terror Retrieved 16 August 2018 This is how we can win the war on terror World Economic Forum Retrieved 16 August 2018 Tiempo Casa Editorial El 23 January 2016 Como ganarle la guerra al terrorismo Analisis El Tiempo Retrieved 16 August 2018 Hernando de Soto refuted the theories of Thomas Piketty El Comercio 4 May 2015 Retrieved 31 July 2015 Les pauvres contre Piketty Le Point in French 2015 04 16 Retrieved 2017 01 28 Why Thomas Piketty is wrong about capital in the 21st century The Independent Retrieved 31 July 2015 Canoy Marcel Why De Soto owns Piketty Retrieved 31 July 2015 Soto Hernando de 11 February 2016 A Mexican Impasse for the Pope by Hernando de Soto Retrieved 16 August 2018 The Pope and property rights 15 February 2016 Archived from the original on 2016 02 16 Retrieved 16 August 2018 Helping those without rights to step out of the shadows 12 February 2016 Retrieved 16 August 2018 What Pope Francis Should Really Say to Donald Trump Retrieved 16 August 2018 Daily Investor s Business 2016 02 19 Pope Francis Keeps Listening To The Wrong Peruvian Investor s Business Daily Retrieved 2017 01 28 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a first has generic name help Pope Francis and Economist Hernando de Soto Agree on One Thing Free the Poor by Protecting Their Property Rights The Stream The Stream 2016 02 17 Retrieved 2017 01 28 Bitfury Block Chain Summit www blockchainsummit io Retrieved 16 August 2018 Shaping serendipity 16 June 2015 Retrieved 16 August 2018 Venture capitalist Bill Tai My summer reading list commentary CNBC July 2015 Casey Michael J BitBeat Grand Plans for Bitcoin From Necker Island The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 2017 01 28 CULMINA CUMBRE QUE REUNE A LAS MENTES MAS BRILLANTES DEL MUNDO Retrieved 2017 01 28 Techonomy Report Techonomy Magazine 2015 www ifoldsflip com Archived from the original on 2020 10 22 Retrieved 2017 01 28 Could blockchain technology help the world s poor World Economic Forum Retrieved 2017 01 28 Brad Kamloops De Soto Speaks at a Block Chain Summit in Abu Dhabi ild org pe Archived from the original on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2017 01 28 a b Nicolas Sandra July 2004 GMA s de Soto Rich People s Reformist Bulatlat a b c d e Mitchell Timothy 2005 The work of economics how a discipline makes its world European Journal of Sociology 46 2 306 doi 10 1017 S000397560500010X Hanlon Joseph September 2004 Renewed Land Debate and the Cargo Cult in Mozambique Journal of Southern African Studies 30 3 Routledge 612 613 doi 10 1080 0305707042000254128 S2CID 154688275 People don t want any of them Peru election sees unpredictable contest The Guardian 2021 04 11 Retrieved 2021 04 11 UNC News release Noted economist de Soto to discuss property rights www unc edu Retrieved 16 August 2018 a b Mike Davis Planet of Slums Verso 2006 pp 79 82 Bruce J Migot Adholla S Eds 1994 Searching for Land Tenure Security in Africa Kendall Hunt Dubuque Pinckney T C and P K Kimuyu 1994 Land Tenure Reform in East Africa Good Bad or Unimportant Journal of African Economies 3 1 1 28 Sjaastada Espen and Ben Cousins 2008 Formalisation of Land Rights In the South An Overview Land Use Policy 26 1 9 Gilbert Alan 2002 On the mystery of capital and the myths of Hernando de Soto What difference does legal title make International Development Planning Review 24 1 1 19 Deininger Klaus 2003 Land Policies for Growth and Poverty Reduction Washington DC World Bank Madrick Jeff 2001 The Charms of Property The New York Review of Books Sjaastada Espen and Ben Cousins 2008 Formalisation of Land Rights In the South An Overview Land Use Policy 26 1 9 Galiani Sebastian Schargrodsky Ernesto 2010 10 01 Property rights for the poor Effects of land titling Journal of Public Economics 94 9 10 700 729 doi 10 1016 j jpubeco 2010 06 002 hdl 10419 127622 ISSN 0047 2727 Galiani Sebastian and Ernesto Schargrodsky Property Rights for the Poor Effects of Land Titling Ronald Coase Institute Working Paper Series revised January 2009 Dunning Thad 2012 Introduction Natural Experiments in the Social Sciences pp 5 12 doi 10 1017 cbo9781139084444 002 ISBN 9781139084444 Retrieved 2020 04 01 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help a b Dey Biswas Sattwick 2014 Land Rights Formalization in India Examining de Soto through the lens of Rawls theory of justice FLOOR Working paper 18 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 29 March 2022 Retrieved 16 August 2018 Roy Dayabati 2013 Rural Politics in India Political Stratification and Governance in West Bengal Cambridge University Press pp 152 Platteau J P 1996 The Evolutionary Theory of Land Rights as Applied To Sub Saharan Africa A Critical Assessment Development and Change 27 1 29 85 Samuelson Robert J January February 2001 The Spirit of Capitalism Foreign Affairs 80 1 205 211 doi 10 2307 20050053 JSTOR 20050053 Archived from the original on 12 March 2008 Woodruff Christopher Review Review of de Soto s The Mystery of Capital Journal of Economic Literature Vol 39 No 4 Dec 2001 pp 1215 23 permanent dead link Clift Jeremy People in Economics Hernando de Soto Finance amp Development December 2003 PDF Retrieved 16 August 2018 TRANSCRIPT OF PRESS CONFERENCE BY SECRETARY GENERAL KOFI ANNAN AT INTERNATIONAL LABOUR ORGANIZATION GENEVA 16 JULY 2001 Meetings Coverage and Press Releases www un org Retrieved 16 August 2018 Penguin Books www booksattransworld co uk Retrieved 16 August 2018 Daley Elizabeth and Mary Hobley Land Changing Contexts Changing Relationships Changing Rights for DFID s Urban Rural Change Team September 2005 Archived from the original on 2011 06 08 Retrieved 2010 01 06 MTST Movimento dos Trabalhadores Sem Teto Archived 2008 07 06 at the Wayback Machine Home Friends of the MST www mstbrazil org Retrieved 16 August 2018 Mitchell Timothy 2005 The work of economics how a discipline makes its world European Journal of Sociology 46 2 307 308 doi 10 1017 S000397560500010X Rossini R G and J J Thomas The size of the informal sector in Peru A critical comment on Hernando de Soto s El Otro Sendero in World Development Volume 18 Issue 1 January 1990 pp 125 35 A reply World Development 18 1 137 145 1 January 1990 doi 10 1016 0305 750X 90 90108 A Peru Condenan por infraccion a derecho moral de paternidad a economista Hernando de Soto IP Tango weblog for intellectual property law and practice for Latin America Retrieved 21 June 2014 Sancionan a Hernando de Soto por violacion de propiedad intelectual ECONOMIA El Comercio 31 January 2012 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2015 07 21 Retrieved 2015 07 17 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link INDECOPI sanciona a autor de la obra El Otro Sendero y a Editorial Norma Portal INDECOPI Archived from the original on 2015 09 24 Retrieved 2015 07 21 Bunting Madeleine 11 September 2000 Fine words flawed ideas The Guardian Osorio Ivan Will the Real Hernando de Soto Please Stand Up originally published as Osorio Op ed in Tech Central Station February 2 2005 Archived from the original on December 2 2008 Retrieved January 6 2010 Sullivan Andrew 26 April 2004 The 2004 TIME 100 TIME Time Retrieved 16 August 2018 A Celebration Of Business Innovators And Ideas Forbes com www forbes com Retrieved 2021 05 14 Hans Heinrich Bass und Markus Wauschkuhn Hernando de Soto die Legalisierung des Faktischen in E Z Entwicklung und Zusammenarbeit 2000 Nr 1 S 15 18 Archived 2013 07 30 at the Wayback Machine William amp Mary Law School Internationally Renowned Peruvian Economist de Soto Honored at 13th Property Rights Conference law wm edu Retrieved 2016 11 29 About Archived from the original on 2010 02 03 Retrieved 2010 02 23 Bradley Foundation Prizes Archived 2010 07 13 at the Wayback Machine Search The Economist Retrieved 16 August 2018 CIPE 25 cipe advomation com Archived from the original on 22 December 2009 Retrieved 16 August 2018 William amp Mary Hernando de Soto to receive 2016 Brigham Kanner Property Rights Prize www wm edu Retrieved 16 August 2018 2017 Hernando de Soto Global Award for Entrepreneurship Research 2 March 2020 De Soto Hernando and Francis Cheneval Swiss Human Rights Book Volume 1 Realizing Property Rights 2006 Archived 2008 11 21 at the Wayback MachineExternal links editInstitute for Liberty and Democracy official website Slumdogs vs Millionaires Newsweek s Barrett Sheridan interviews Hernando de Soto The Great Issues Forum Archived 2009 06 19 at the Wayback Machine video of Naomi Klein Joseph Stiglitz and Hernando de Soto discussing the financial crisis Mapping the Invisible speech by Hernando de Soto at the 2009 ESRI Archived 2010 01 02 at the Wayback Machine International User Conference The Munk Debate on Foreign Aid 2009 Stephen Lewis and Paul Collier against Peruvian economist Hernando de Soto and Dambisa Moyo a Zambian born critic of foreign aid Afternoon of Conversation Andrea Mitchell Madeleine Albright Hernando De Soto video of conversation The Rule of Law an interview with Hernando de Soto By Gustavo Wensjoe 2008 Transcript of an interview for the PBS documentary Commanding Heights A highly critical review in the British newspaper The Guardian An essay by Robert Samuelson in Foreign Affairs arguing that de Soto underestimates the importance of culture Soto s publication list The Power of the Poor Documentary about de Soto s work by Free to Choose Media Appearances on C SPAN Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hernando de Soto economist amp oldid 1220967160, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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