Critical Sociology: The Chilean "Economic Miracle": An Empirical Critique
Critical Sociology: The Chilean "Economic Miracle": An Empirical Critique
Critical Sociology: The Chilean "Economic Miracle": An Empirical Critique
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The Chilean "Economic Miracle":
An Empirical Critique
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Growth .
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impressive growth rates were recorded after the steep GDP drop of 1982
and the much lesser drop of 1983. Once again the publicists of the free
market evoked the religious metaphors in which recovery is mistaken for
growth. But, again, overall growth throughout the 1980s has been far
from miraculous: GDP per capita grew at a 1.2 percent average rate
between 1980 and 1989, below the 1.7 percent average yearly rate for
1950-72 (EI Mercurio,1990a).
Particular areas of the economy have shown some dynamism, notably
the export of primary products. Mining, fishing, forestry and agriculture
accounted for 88 percent of total exports in 1987. Within each of these
categories, export is concentrated upon a few commodities: copper in
mining, grapes and apples in agriculture, fish meal in the maritime indus-
try. In addition, this primary export activity tends increasingly to focus on
productive processes that result in little value added to the product
concerned. For example, the export of wood pulp grows more than the
export of cellulose, which in turn grows faster than the export of paper.
Foreign firms are strongly represented in each major sector of export
activity: in fishing a Chilean-New Zealand consortium is prominent;
American firms figure greatly in the organization of external sales of
fruits; even in mining where the state copper company Codelco domi-
nates copper exports, foreign firms - U. S., Swiss, Australian - have
significant holdings. The point is that even where the economy shows
some dynamism, the activity contributes little to the development of a
Given the size of the debt they had to manage, Pinochet’s bureaucrats
certainly had the opportunity to become experts on debt management.
Encouraged by the liberalization of imports and the deregulation of the
banking system, Chilean foreign debt exploded during the late 1970s and
the early 1980s, growing 300 percent between 1974 and 1986 (Remmer,
1989:172). Per capita bank debt in Chile was $1000 in 1982 compared
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may, for example, point to the dramatic lowering of external debt with
commercial banks in the 1980s from $14.3 billion to $6.5 billion in 1988,
a drop of $7.8 billion. What this neglects is the astronomical growth of
debt with multilateral lending institutions, such as the International
Monetary Fund, the World Bank, etc., during the same period. Debt with
the World Bank and the Inter-American Development Bank grew at an
annual average of $600 million between 1983 and 1987, or about 40
percent per year (Ffrench-Davis and De Gregorio, 1985:24). This
increase in multilateral debt made the giant payoffs to the commercial
banks possible (Ffrench-Davis, 1988:129). This debt will have to be
repaid, cannot be restructured and cannot be expanded indefinitely
(Somerville, 1990:297). No less a figure than Hernan Somerville,
Pinochet’s chief debt negotiator during the mid-1980s, says that the
multilateral debt is the &dquo;biggest external debt problem facing Chile.&dquo; He
assures us that the problem is &dquo;perfectly manageable,&dquo; holding out the
hope that the reduction of the debt with commercial banks will lead to
fresh loans (Somerville, 1990:297). But early help from this quarter seems
unlikely; commercial bank loans from abroad to Chile have been falling
steadily throughout the 1980s (Ffrench-Davis, 1988:128).
Debt-equity swaps are singled out by Christian as an area of special
expertise enjoyed by Chilean free marketeers. The principle involved in
such swaps is familiar from corporate bankruptcy proceedings. Creditors
to an enterprise in the process of reorganization may be given shares and
of course claims on a portion of hoped-for future profits in exchange for
the extinction of outstanding debt and interest payments. Latin American
debtor nations, among others, have applied this principle to their own
foreign debt obligations in the following way. Foreign debts of a given
country are purchased in hard currency at a high discount rate, then sold
at a lower discount rate for foreign currency of the debtor country; the
debt purchased has been converted into local currency at the original
rate. Funds obtained may be used to buy shares in an existing enterprise,
or improve plant and equipment, etc. Theoretically, creditor banks bene-
fit by reducing outstanding loans of dubious quality; debtor nations see
their debt reduced; purchasers of the obligation receive local currency at
a cost lower than could be expected from local financial markets or from
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Selling off the patrimony of the state has played a great role in the
history of the dictatorship. In 1970 CORFO, the state development
corporation, controlled 46 enterprises. The regime’s first task was to
return to private hands the large number of firms which had been nation-
alized under Allende during 1970-73. By 1973 some 460 firms and 19
banks had been incorporated in CORFO (Renner, 1989:158). By the end
of the Pinochet decade the process of privatization had gone well beyond
the Allende interventions: by 1980 CORFO controlled roughly two
dozen firms (Vergara, 1985:90).
This first wave of privatization involved large government subsidies for
the purchasers. The firms were sold below their book value, in many cases
to political allies of the regime in non-competitive circumstances. One
researcher estimated that the subsidy averaged 40 percent of book value.
Another found a range of subsidies between 23 percent and 37 percent
(Edwards and Edwards, 1987:97). The cheap sell-off was driven by haste,
the recession and high interest rates (Foxley, 1985:33). While the stated
purpose, according to free market doctrine, was to break up state monop-
olies and stimulate competition, wealthy investors were the only ones
able to take part in the purchase. Similar effects were produced in the
agricultural sphere when the government sought to correct what they
considered the state monopoly effects of agrarian reform. Some 30
percent of the expropriated land was returned to previous owners. Some
35 percent of the land went to small owners in small lots (Foxley,
1985:33). The small owner beneficiaries very frequently found themselves
compelled to sell their plots for want of capital, technical assistance, etc.
(Jarvis, 1985:151-152, 170-177). One estimate had it that by 1982, 40
percent of the beneficiaries had sold the’r parcels, mostly to medium and
large owners (Jarvis, 1985:167-168). Reconcentration and recentraliza-
tion of economic power, not free competition, was the real outcome of
the free market policy.
Subsidized privatization flourished again in the mid-1980s under the
supervision of Hernan Buchi, the Finance Minister under Pinochet.
Enterprises valued at $2.8 billion were privatized between 1985 and 1988.
As in the earlier bout of privatizations, subsidies were massive. One
researcher concluded that the subsidies amounted to $600 million
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Poverty Management ,
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insisting that the rate could only rise temporarily to 15 percent for the
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Ministry of Housing, that the root of the housing problem was budgetary
and that nothing less than a meeting with Foxley himself was called for
(Fortin Mapocho, 1990:9). A great many such embarrassing meetings will
no doubt have to be cancelled, evaded or delegated to subordinates as the
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