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The Power and the Money - The Mexican Financial System, 1876-1932 (Hardcover)
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The Power and the Money - The Mexican Financial System, 1876-1932 (Hardcover)
Series: Social Science History
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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After its independence in 1821, Mexico experienced more than fifty
years of political chaos until Porfirio Diaz assumed power in 1876.
Thirty-five years later, Mexico entered another period of turbulent
instability (1910-29), during which the country underwent a
revolution, a counter-revolution, a counter-counter-revolution,
three civil wars, and four violent coups or attempted coups. In
both periods, governments repudiated debts, confiscated cash
reserves, demanded forced loans, and engaged in the unrestrained
printing of currency.
The governments that came to power after these bouts of instability
faced a crucial dilemma. They needed resources in order to impose
order, yet they lacked the ability to raise significant tax
revenue. The answer was to borrow--but how did governments facing
armed resistance and a real chance of being overthrown credibly
promise to repay their debts?
Porfirio Diaz's strategy in the 1880s was to create a bank with a
legal monopoly over lending to the federal government. Diaz's
regime also enforced property rights to give elites tied to
powerful local strongmen a stake in the political system. The
threat of revolt by these strongmen assured politically connected
local elites that the federal government would not attempt to
confiscate their wealth. Diaz's strategy created an inefficient and
concentrated banking system that interacted with the politicized
nature of property rights in such a way as to produce an extremely
concentrated industrial system.
The Mexican Revolution (which began in 1910) violently ended the
Porfirian regime but failed to alter the basic political and
economic calculus. Just as Diaz had done, the leaders who attained
power after 1920 selectively enforced property rights. In addition,
the government created a hostage: a government-owned commercial
bank. If the rules of the game were altered, the capital of the
government's bank and its lucrative profits would disappear. As a
result, despite ongoing violence and political instability the
domestic banking system recovered rapidly during the 1920s. The
result was the same as in the Porfiriato: a continuing high level
of financial and industrial concentration. This is not to say that
the Revolution had no effects--but in the long run, it failed to
sever the ties between banks and politics. If anything, the
Revolution strengthened them.
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