Latin America has long played a key role in the global provision of natural resources. Most of the continent's economies are net exporters of low-value, primary products and importers of manufactured goods at a high price. This pattern of specialised trade has highly negative consequences for economic development, the environment, and the local population's wellbeing. Yet to date, little empirical evidence has been collected on Latin America's total contribution to the rest of the world's regions in historical perspective. Applying the Material Flow Accounting methodology, this paper estimates the physical and monetary trade of 16 Latin American economies between 1900 and 2016. Our results show that: (i) yearly net exports of materials went...
This paper assesses world-wide patterns of material extraction, trade, consumption and productivity...
The economic future of Latin America and the Caribbean is intrinsically linked to climate change. In...
Regional trade in South America since independence has long been much smaller than would be expected...
Latin America has long played a key role in the global provision of natural resources. Most of the c...
Latin America has traditionally been a raw material supplier since colonial times. In this paper, we...
In this paper we compare the resource flows of Chile, Ecuador, Mexico and Peru between 1980 and 2000...
With the economic and trade liberalisation policies of the late 20th century, the extraction of natu...
Has the increase in Gini's coefficient and therefore inequality led to a parallel increase in the do...
Latin America has traditionally been a raw material supplier since colonial times. In this paper, we...
Current changes in Latin America include the abandonment of the economic pattern of import substitut...
Trade, unit values, globalization, technology differences, geography, wage inequality
This paper investigates how trade of "dirty " goods with the USA can affect the environmen...
This article compares the economic and metabolic profiles of the Andean region and Central America b...
In this paper we analyse natural resource use dynamics in the Mexican economy during the last three ...
There has been a long and intensive debate within the scientific community about the role of interna...
This paper assesses world-wide patterns of material extraction, trade, consumption and productivity...
The economic future of Latin America and the Caribbean is intrinsically linked to climate change. In...
Regional trade in South America since independence has long been much smaller than would be expected...
Latin America has long played a key role in the global provision of natural resources. Most of the c...
Latin America has traditionally been a raw material supplier since colonial times. In this paper, we...
In this paper we compare the resource flows of Chile, Ecuador, Mexico and Peru between 1980 and 2000...
With the economic and trade liberalisation policies of the late 20th century, the extraction of natu...
Has the increase in Gini's coefficient and therefore inequality led to a parallel increase in the do...
Latin America has traditionally been a raw material supplier since colonial times. In this paper, we...
Current changes in Latin America include the abandonment of the economic pattern of import substitut...
Trade, unit values, globalization, technology differences, geography, wage inequality
This paper investigates how trade of "dirty " goods with the USA can affect the environmen...
This article compares the economic and metabolic profiles of the Andean region and Central America b...
In this paper we analyse natural resource use dynamics in the Mexican economy during the last three ...
There has been a long and intensive debate within the scientific community about the role of interna...
This paper assesses world-wide patterns of material extraction, trade, consumption and productivity...
The economic future of Latin America and the Caribbean is intrinsically linked to climate change. In...
Regional trade in South America since independence has long been much smaller than would be expected...