“The diverging paths of industrialization in Latin America and East Asia”
Professor Advisor
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Agosin, Manuel
Professor Advisor
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De Gregorio, José
Author
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Cáceres De la Rivera, Exequiel Alonso
Admission date
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2025-08-05T19:04:50Z
Available date
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2025-08-05T19:04:50Z
Publication date
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2025
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/206077
Abstract
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This paper explains the divergence between Latin America and East Asia over the 20th cen-
tury as the result of their opposite industrialization strategies. Initially twice as rich as East
Asia, Latin America’s industrialization by import substitution (ISI) provided indiscriminate
protection to national industries without incentives to export and increased manufacturing
shares but failed to decrease those of agriculture. East Asia’s export-oriented industrializa-
tion (EOI) rested on performance based-protection targeting exports along strong structural
change. Employment emerges as the only dimension of manufacturing that raises per capita
income and growth in both the short and long run. A large productivity gap on agriculture
reveals a big potential to grow through labor reallocation from agriculture towards manufac-
turing. The importance of the domestic market size and the natural resource curse explain
the relative success of Brazil and Mexico applying ISI and Latin America’s problems to
industrialize given its history as commodity exporter. Growth accounting points at capital
as the main driver of East Asian success and TFP stagnation as the reason behind Latin
America’s low growth since the debt crisis of the 1980s.
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Lenguage
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en
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Publisher
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Universidad de Chile
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Type of license
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Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States