This paper assesses whether the disruption of world trade, protectionist policies and industrial growth that dominated South American economic history from 1912 to 1950 permitted an increase in intraregional trade. The paper demonstrates that during this period intraregional trade reached some of the highest levels of the entire 20th century. These levels have since receded. With the exception of some Brazilian exports, most of intraregional trade had the same features as global trade during this period: a high concentration on few products of very low value-added
MERCOSUR is one of the youngest regional integration agreements, gathering two of the largest and mo...
Argentina’s early twentieth century is commonly portrayed as a ‘golden age’ in which it became ‘one ...
Does trade lead to increased cross-country regional business cycle synchronization and reduced natio...
This paper assesses whether the disruption of world trade, protectionist policies and industrial gro...
Dejando de lado NAFTA, la integración comercial en América Latina sigue siendo muy moderada hoy en d...
Regional trade in South America since independence has long been much smaller than would be expected...
The oft-mentioned failure of the economic integration of South America contrasts with the North Amer...
The objective of this article is to offer empirical evidence regarding the behaviour of the exports...
This paper discusses the economic performance of three Latin American countries (Argentina, Brazil a...
In the second half of the twentieth century, Latin American countries lost a substantial part of the...
This thesis includes three studies to assess historical evidence of the failure of Colombia and Sou...
An increasingly important component of total world trade is intra-industry trade (IIT). The large vo...
The objective of this paper is to explain, from a cliometric perspective, the determinants of the gr...
At the turn of the last century, the Argentine economy was on a path to prosperity that never fully ...
Most of the regional inequality in Argentina, Chile, and Uruguay stems from differences within the c...
MERCOSUR is one of the youngest regional integration agreements, gathering two of the largest and mo...
Argentina’s early twentieth century is commonly portrayed as a ‘golden age’ in which it became ‘one ...
Does trade lead to increased cross-country regional business cycle synchronization and reduced natio...
This paper assesses whether the disruption of world trade, protectionist policies and industrial gro...
Dejando de lado NAFTA, la integración comercial en América Latina sigue siendo muy moderada hoy en d...
Regional trade in South America since independence has long been much smaller than would be expected...
The oft-mentioned failure of the economic integration of South America contrasts with the North Amer...
The objective of this article is to offer empirical evidence regarding the behaviour of the exports...
This paper discusses the economic performance of three Latin American countries (Argentina, Brazil a...
In the second half of the twentieth century, Latin American countries lost a substantial part of the...
This thesis includes three studies to assess historical evidence of the failure of Colombia and Sou...
An increasingly important component of total world trade is intra-industry trade (IIT). The large vo...
The objective of this paper is to explain, from a cliometric perspective, the determinants of the gr...
At the turn of the last century, the Argentine economy was on a path to prosperity that never fully ...
Most of the regional inequality in Argentina, Chile, and Uruguay stems from differences within the c...
MERCOSUR is one of the youngest regional integration agreements, gathering two of the largest and mo...
Argentina’s early twentieth century is commonly portrayed as a ‘golden age’ in which it became ‘one ...
Does trade lead to increased cross-country regional business cycle synchronization and reduced natio...