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pampango

(24,692 posts)
7. "By 1980, the Costa Rican economy had grown to the point where it was by far the richest nation in
Tue Nov 12, 2013, 10:43 AM
Nov 2013
Latin America in per-capita terms. It was so much richer than its neighbors that Latin American economic statistics were routinely quoted with and without Costa Rica included. Growth rates were in the double digits for a generation and a half. And the prosperity was broadly shared. Costa Rica’s middle class – nonexistent before 1949 – became the dominant part of the economy during this period. Poverty was all but abolished, favelas [shanty towns] disappeared, and the economy was booming.

This was not because Costa Rica had natural resources or other natural advantages over its neighbors. To the contrary, says Bidstrup:

At the conclusion of the civil war of 1948 (which was brought on by the desperate social conditions of the masses), Costa Rica was desperately poor, the poorest nation in the hemisphere, as it had been since the Spanish Conquest.

The winner of the 1948 civil war, José “Pepe” Figueres, now a national hero, realized that it would happen again if nothing was done to relieve the crushing poverty and deprivation of the rural population. He formulated a plan in which the public sector would be financed by profits from state-owned enterprises, and the private sector would be financed by state banking.

I wonder if CAFTA has impacted Costa Rica's publicly-owned banks at all.

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K&R /nt demwing Nov 2013 #1
Wanted to post this too BelgianMadCow Nov 2013 #2
... xchrom Nov 2013 #3
^ Wilms Nov 2013 #4
K&R.... daleanime Nov 2013 #5
As if I needed another reason to hate the IMF. Grins Nov 2013 #6
"By 1980, the Costa Rican economy had grown to the point where it was by far the richest nation in pampango Nov 2013 #7
Latest Discussions»General Discussion»Want to Have a Happy Plan...»Reply #7