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(Date Posted:12/12/2008 1:01 AM)
‘Rethinking Foreign Investment for Development: Lessons from the Americas’ edited by Kevin P. Gallagher and Daniel Chudnovsky
ISBN: 9781843313168; List Price:
£60.00 / $100.00
Available for
sale at a discount on www.amazon.co.uk
or www.amazon.com.
After almost
twenty-five years of experimenting with the neo-liberal economic reforms
collectively known as “Washington Consensus” policies, Latin Americans are
starting to re-assess the merits of these policies – at the voting booth. Many
newly elected governments are beginning to scrutinize the role of foreign
direct investment (FDI) in particular, and some nations have gone so far as to
nationalize foreign firms. Without
endorsing or condoning the actions taken by these governments, this volume
demonstrates that it is quite rational for governments in the region to
re-evaluate the role of FDI for their development paths. The great promise of FDI by multinational
corporations is that capital will flow into your country and be a source of
dynamic growth. Beyond boosting income and employment, the hope was that
manufacturing FDI would bring knowledge spillovers that would build the skill
and technological capacities of local firms, catalyzing broad-based economic
growth; and environmental spillovers that would mitigate the domestic
ecological impacts of industrial transformation. Consisting of country case studies and
comparative analyses from Latin American and U.S.-based political economists,
this volume finds that when FDI did materialize if often fell far short of
generating the necessary linkages required to make FDI work for sustainable
economic development.
Kevin P. Gallagher is assistant professor of international relations at Boston University. He is the author of The Enclave Economy:
Foreign Investment and Sustainable Development in Mexico’s
Silicon Valley (with Lyuba Zarsky), and Free Trade and the Environment: Mexico, NAFTA,
and Beyond.
Daniel Chudnovsky (1944-2007) was Director of the Centro de
Investigaciones para la Transformación (CENIT) and Professor at the Universidad
de San Andrés.
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