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Democracy, Distributional Conflicts and Macroeconomic Policymaking in Argentina, 1983-89*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 January 2018
Extract
In December 1983, when Raúl Alfonsín and his Radical party assumed responsibility for Argentina's transition from authoritarian dictatorship to democracy, the economy was mired in deep crisis. Rather than a repetition of the familiar “stop-go” cycles of previous decades, the mid-1980s crisis was more structural in nature, stemming from a perverse logic deeply rooted in contemporary Argentine capitalism. Few Argentines, regardless of ideological persuasion, doubted that major reforms were imperative if the country's post-1930 model of import-substitution industrialization was to avoid total collapse. For Argentina's fledgling democracy, the task at hand could not have been more daunting — to reverse what Alfonsín himself had referred to as “50 years of decadence.”
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- Research Article
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- Copyright © University of Miami 1990
Footnotes
This research was supported by a Fulbright American Republics Research Award and was conducted from July-October 1989 while the author was a visiting researcher at the Centro de Estudios de Estado y Sociedad (CEDES) in Buenos Aires. Earlier versions were presented at the XVI International Congress of the Latin American Studies Association, Miami, 1-3 December 1989, and at the Inter-American Dialogue, Washington, DC, 18-19 April 1990. Useful criticism and comments on previous versions were received from Carlos Acuña, Catalina Smolovitz, Lila Milutin, Atilio Borón, Laurence Whitehead, Guido DiTella, Eduardo Feldman, Jeff Stark, and Eduardo Gamarra.
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