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Capitalist modernization and growth in small countries: El Salvador's experience in the neoliberal era

Authors

SEGOVIA CACERES, ALEXANDER ERNESTO

External publication

No

Means

The Elgar Companion to the Economies of Lat. America and the Caribb.

Scope

Capítulo de un Libro

Nature

Científica

JCR Quartile

0

SJR Quartile

0

Publication date

01/01/2025

Scopus Id

2-s2.0-105033079829

Abstract

In the first half of the 1990s El Salvador seemed to have found the formula that would finally take it out of underdevelopment, since after more than a decade of war, crisis and stagnation, the economy registered high growth accompanied by a reduction in unemployment and poverty. In that period, El Salvador was sold by the promoters of that paradigm as a success story that confirmed the virtuous relationship between capitalism and democracy. Unfortunately, this situation was short-lived, since from 1996 the economy entered a process of low and unstable growth. In this paper, I analyze the development of El Salvador during the ARENA governments (1989–2009), and the main argument I present is that in that period the problems of low growth and insufficient social development have to do, to a large extent, with the rentier behavior of the economic elites and their opposition to redistribution and the payment of taxes, with the conflicts between elites and between them and governments around economic models and economic management, with the existence of an extreme political and ideological polarization around the role of the state and the market, and with the institutional and fiscal weakness of the state. Added to these factors are the negative effects caused by violence and the occurrence of adverse natural phenomena, which in the Salvadoran case have become a structural restriction on growth. © The Editor and Contributors Severally 2025.

Keywords

Inflation; % reductions; Development-underdevelopment; Economic models; El Salvador; Elite; High growth; Model management; Social conflicts; Social development; State; Economic and social effects