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Economies of Latin America
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Command vs. Market *Read over the book (P. 103) and define the following: Market economy- Command economy- Mixed economy- Communism-
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Socialism If you look at 10 different sources for a definition of socialism you’ll likely get 10 different definitions. In general, it is the idea of more government involvement in the economy than a mixed economy, but less control than communism.
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Socialism (continued)
Socialisms goal is the more equitable distribution of wealth and opportunity. To get there socialist governments often: Use more aggressive redistribution of wealth through taxation or confiscation of property than a mixed economy. More likely to use price controls Often have public ownership (gov. control) of key industries, such as oil
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Latin America has always had a tendency to flirt with socialism, sometimes going from very free market economy to socialism or vice-versa.
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Three Case Studies Cuba: One of the few remaining communist countries (close to being a full command economy). Very little private enterprise. Guaranteed employment, health care, education, and food ration cards. *The downside, very little opportunity for upward mobility.
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2. Chile- Once a failing socialist state under Allende, the country went very free market after a military coup replaced the socialist government. Today it has one of the highest standards of living in Latin America and ranks above the U.S. on the economic freedom index
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3. Venezuela- Strongly socialist country relying mostly on one commodity, oil. Venezuela employs strong price controls. The government also controls the oil industry and redistributes wealth from oil revenues.
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Many South American countries rely on the export of a limited number of commodities like metals or oil. This means their fate will rise and fall with the market value of those commodities.
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