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Steel and Economic Growth in Mexico (Paperback)
Loot Price: R473
Discovery Miles 4 730
You Save: R58
(11%)
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Steel and Economic Growth in Mexico (Paperback)
Series: LLILAS Latin American Monograph Series
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List price R531
Loot Price R473
Discovery Miles 4 730
You Save R58 (11%)
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Iron ore is widely distributed over the world and has been mined
from ancient times, but Mexico, with a good supply of ore, was a
relative newcomer to the ranks of iron- and steel-producing
nations. This distinctive book offers a history of the Mexican iron
and steel industry through the 1960s. Archaeological evidence, the
author states, shows that the indigenous peoples of Mexico had
developed a technology of metallurgy-relying on gold, silver,
copper, tin and bronze-before the arrival of the Spaniards, but
those same peoples had no knowledge of iron. That knowledge and
accompanying technology arrived with the conquistadores. Extremely
slow development characterized the progress of iron mining in
Mexico and until the twentieth century ore mining and metal forging
continued to be handled on a small scale. By the turn of the
century two occurrences had combined to give Mexico an embryonic
steel market: the railroad grid had come to link Mexico's diverse
regions and Porfirio Diaz had used his personal power to eliminate
interstate tariff barriers to trade. In 1900 the first integrated
steel mill in Latin America was established in Monterrey-the city
that was to become the capital of Mexico's manufacturing sector.
Forty years later, shortages of steel imports provided the
motivation for the second stage of growth of the steel industry.
Much of the book is devoted to the study of this period of growth.
William E. Cole tells the whole story in this scholarly study,
which has as its twofold purpose a complete examination of the iron
and steel industry of Mexico and an assessment of the impact of
that industry on other sectors of the economy. Much space is
devoted to an analysis of the role of the Mexican government in
promoting and regulating the steel industry and to discussion of
the efficiency of the promotional tools employed by the government.
Further, he studies the status of the industry in the 1960s, its
production and its consumption, and presents a projection for the
future.
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