INVESTIGADORES
SVAMPA Maristella Noemi
capítulos de libros
Título:
Resource extractivism and alternatives: Latin American perspectives on development. Beyond Development: Alternative Visions from Latin America,.
Autor/es:
MARISTELLA SVAMPA
Libro:
Beyond Development Alternative visions from Latin America
Editorial:
Transnational Institute
Referencias:
Lugar: Amsterdam; Año: 2013; p. 117 - 143
Resumen:
Este articulo forma parte de un libro publicado en diferentes lenguas: español, inglés, portugués, chino y coreano. Over the last decade Latin America has switched from the Washington Consensus with its focus on finance to the Commodities Consensus based on the large-scale export of primary products. Although the exploitation and export of natural assets is by no means a new activity in the region, increasing growth was evident in this area towards the end of the 20th Century. Against the backdrop of a changing system of accumulation, the expansion of projects geared towards monitoring, extracting and exporting natural assets without (greater) added value intensified. What we are therefore referring to here as the ?Commodities Consensus? is the beginning of a new economic and political order sustained by the boom in international prices for raw materials and consumer goods, which are increasingly demanded by industrialised and emerging countries. This new economic cycle is characterised by extraordinary profitability and the high growth rates of Latin American economies. According to CEPAL (2011a: 65), ?in spite of recent trends to stabilise prices, increases during the first half of the year were so great that a significant improvement in exchangeterms in Latin America is expected.? The majority of the region?s exported commodities grew exponentially during the last few months of 2010 and the beginning of 2011. Food prices reached an all time high in April 2011 (maize, Resource Extractivism and Alternatives: Latin American Perspectives on Development 1 Even when these nations try to break free from their colonial heritage, that is, their dependence on the export of primary products, through the implementation of development plans directed at diversifying their economies, they generally need foreign currency to achieve this. But they can only access foreign currency by exporting primary products, which again increases their dependence on exports. Paradoxically, by trying to exploit their comparative advantages, these countries that are exporters of natural assets, are frequently reassuming their colonial role as exporters of primary products- a role now redefined in terms of the neoliberal rationality of globalising capitalism. For them, neocolonialism is the next step on from post-colonialism. (Coronil 2002) 118 soya and wheat). Prices for metals and minerals too were above the maximums registered before the crisis of 2008. CEPAL data projected a 4.7% growth in GDP for 2011 compared to the 6% achieved in 2010 (see CEPAL 2011a; Bárcena 2011). Thus, even within the context of an international economic and financial crisis that heralds great uncertainty