Reflections on Latin American Development

Reflections on Latin American Development

Reflections on Latin American Development

Reflections on Latin American Development

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Overview

Economic development has been an challenge facing the countries of Latin America. Because the United States, from the very nature of its geographic and economic relationship with its southern neighbors, must inevitably exercise a strong influence on the course which that development takes, it is important that North Americans understand conditions in Latin America and the attitudes of its peoples. Roberto de Oliveira Campos, former Brazilian Minister of Economic Planning, is in a unique position to evaluate both past accomplishments and future problems.

In this group of essays, Campos gives a comprehensive analysis of many aspects of Latin American development in the mid-twentieth century. He examines relations between the United States and Latin America from a variety of angles, and he outlines the basic problems of economic development, of governmental policy, and of public and private administration. He gives particular attention in several essays to the relationship of foreign trade and foreign aid to economic development, and he presents a long discussion of the Alliance for Progress—its history, its purposes, its accomplishments, and its failures.

Campos’s philosophy regarding the role of the state in economic development and other questions emerges clearly from these pithy essays. “The valid distinction I see on the basis of my analysis of men and things is between pragmatic or functional nationalists and romantic or temperamental nationalists,” he writes. “The latter confuse intention with results. They start with enthusiasm and end in fanaticism, this being, according to Santayana, ‘the art of redoubling efforts after losing sight of objectives.’ . . . Many [romantic nationalists], though they do not confess it, favor the dangerous purgery of revolution.

“The pragmatic nationalist seeks to operate within the frame of democratic institutions and prefers reform to revolution. As to myself, I shall continue considering myself a pragmatic nationalist. I renounce the temptation of mobilizing resentment in order to gain the authority to plan development. I would rather strengthen the national entrepreneur than merely antagonize the foreigner. I would want the state not to do what it cannot do in order to do what it should do. I prefer to love my own country rather than to hate the others’.”


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781477305898
Publisher: University of Texas Press
Publication date: 01/01/1967
Series: LLILAS Latin American Monograph Series , #8
Pages: 182
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.70(d)

About the Author

Roberto de Olivera Campos (1917–2001) rose from humble beginnings on the Mato Grosso frontier to become the chief architect of Brazil’s program for economic reform. He served as Brazil’s Minister of Economic Planning under President Castelo Branco.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction, by Benjamin Higgins
  • Basic Problems of Economic Development in Latin America
  • United States—Latin American Relations
  • Problems of Government Policy and Administration in Latin American Development
  • Facts and Fantasy in Brazilian Development
  • Management, Entrepreneurship, and Economic Development
  • Social Engineering and Economic Development
  • Trade Opportunities of the Underdeveloped Countries
  • On the Need for Historical Perspective
  • The Dilemmas of Trade and Aid
  • Economic Development and Inflation, with Special Reference to Latin America
  • Some Notes on the History of the Alliance for Progress
  • Index
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