Modernization and Dependency revisited: U.S. direct investment, development, and polity in Latin America, 1950-1998

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Abstract

Since World War II, the modernization model has been the mainstream paradigm for economic development. Modernization assumes that foreign capital is a necessary catalyst for transforming societies from traditional to modem. Challenges to the modernization paradigm culminated in dependency theory. Dependency theorists point to detrimental effects of foreign capital and domination (e.g., income inequality, authoritarianism, and inappropriate consumption). Despite the charge by many scholars that this debate has subsided, basic but important questions remain to be answered. This paper assesses the role of U.S. direct investment (USDI) on the major economies of Latin America over time (1950-1998). Using Vector Auto regression, we look at the long-term political relationships between USDI, economic development, and the degree of authoritarianism in the host country's government. We treat these variables as endogenous as both dependency and modernization hypothesize relationships among them. We find that there are only weak long-term relationships between polity, development, and USDI. These results fully support neither the modernization nor the dependency model.

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Heo, U., & de Roucn, K. (2002). Modernization and Dependency revisited: U.S. direct investment, development, and polity in Latin America, 1950-1998. Global Economic Review, 31(3), 67–93. https://doi.org/10.1080/12265080208422900

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