A History of Latin America

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1
FOCUS QUESTIONS


  • What was neocolonialism, and what were its characteristic economic and politi-
    cal features? What role did the liberal state play in promoting national economic
    growth between 1870 and 1900?

  • What were the policies of Mexico’s Porfi rio Diaz regarding indigenous communi-
    ties, land, labor, trade, and foreign investment?

  • What were the policies of Argentina’s Julio Roca regarding indigenous communi-
    ties, land, labor, and foreign investment?

  • What were the major elements of Justo Rufi no Barrios’s liberal reform program in
    Guatemala?

  • How did Antonio Guzmán Blanco’s program in Venezuela compare to Rafael
    Núñez’s plan in Colombia, and how did each affect national economic
    development?

  • How did these liberal programs contrast with the developmental policies of José
    Manuel Balmaceda in Chile?

  • How did liberal development programs affect subaltern social classes, especially
    peasants and workers?


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11


The Triumph of


Neocolonialism and the


Liberal State, 1870–1900





B


EGINNING ABOUT 1870, the quickening
tempo of the Industrial Revolution
in Europe stimulated a more rapid
pace of change in the Latin American economy and
politics. Responding to a mounting demand for raw
materials and foodstuffs, Latin American producers
increased their output of those commodities. In-
creasing political stability, itself the result of the con-
solidation of the liberal state, facilitated the region’s
growing trade with Europe and the United States.
Encouraged by the increased stability and lib-
eral economic policies, European capital fl owed


into Latin America, creating railroads, docks,
processing plants, and other facilities needed to
expand production and trade. Latin America be-
came integrated into an international economic
system in which it exchanged raw materials and
foodstuffs for the factory-made goods of Europe
and North America. Gradual adoption of free-
trade policies by many Latin American coun-
tries, which marked the abandonment of efforts
to create a native factory capitalism, hastened the
area’s integration into this international division
of labor.
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