Article ID: CBB731611622

Global Banks and Latin American Dictators, 1974–1982 (Summer 2021)

unapi

This article examines the relationship between international commercial banks and military regimes in South America. The focus is on how military regimes in the Southern Cone of Latin America and Brazil in the 1970s became heavily dependent on foreign capital provided by international banks based in Britain and France. It makes use of previously unavailable archival evidence to examine the interactions between international banks and South American governments, showing how these interactions intensified once military rule was established. It shows that international capital was used for a wide variety of purposes, including arms imports. When global banks cut loans once the debt crisis erupted in 1982, they aggravated the economic crisis but also fostered democratic change.

...More
Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB731611622/

Similar Citations

Article Ghassan Moazzin; (Autumn 2020)
Investing in the New Republic: Multinational Banks, Political Risk, and the Chinese Revolution of 1911 (/isis/citation/CBB397252744/)

Book Mark H. Rose; (2018)
Market Rules: Bankers, Presidents, and the Origins of the Great Recession (/isis/citation/CBB931094552/)

Article Javier Vidal Olivares; (2019)
Latin America in the internationalisation strategy of Iberia, 1946–2000 (/isis/citation/CBB471665692/)

Article Susanna Fellman; Martin Shanahan; (Winter 2018)
Sectoral Influence on Competition Legislation: Evidence from the Cartel Registers, 1920–2000 (/isis/citation/CBB019313761/)

Article Seven Ağır; Cihan Artunç; (Winter 2021)
Set and Forget? The Evolution of Business Law in the Ottoman Empire and Turkey (/isis/citation/CBB480166104/)

Article Thomas R. Buckley; (Winter 2020)
Multinational Companies and the Cultural Industries: W.H. Smith in Canada, 1950–1989 (/isis/citation/CBB711456057/)

Book Thomas J. Dorich; (2021)
Big Business in America: the corporate century, 1900-2000 (/isis/citation/CBB050996284/)

Book Katherine Rye Jewell; (2017)
Dollars for Dixie: Business and the Transformation of Conservatism in the Twentieth Century (/isis/citation/CBB499980570/)

Book Jason E. Taylor; (2019)
Deconstructing the Monolith: The Microeconomics of the National Industrial Recovery Act (/isis/citation/CBB623332017/)

Article Anna Spadavecchia; (Summer 2020)
Building Industrial Districts: Do Subsidies Help? Evidence from Postwar Italy (/isis/citation/CBB315473688/)

Book Joshua Clark Davis; (2017)
From Head Shops to Whole Foods: The Rise and Fall of Activist Entrepreneurs (/isis/citation/CBB041180457/)

Book Christopher W. Shaw; (2019)
Money, power, and the people: the American struggle to make banking democratic (/isis/citation/CBB553777340/)

Book Christopher Kobrak; Joe Martin; (2018)
From Wall Street to Bay Street: The Origins and Evolution of American and Canadian Finance (/isis/citation/CBB898988875/)

Article Bernardo Batiz-Lazo; Gustavo A. Del Angel; (Autumn 2018)
The Ascent of Plastic Money: International Adoption of the Bank Credit Card, 1950–1975 (/isis/citation/CBB478513379/)

Book Howard E., Jr. Covington; (2017)
Lending Power: How Self-Help Credit Union Turned Small-Time Loans into Big-Time Change (/isis/citation/CBB745607251/)

Article Anne Fleming; (Winter 2019)
Anti-Competition Regulation (/isis/citation/CBB447297303/)

Authors & Contributors
Spadavecchia, Anna
Covington, Howard E., Jr.
Thomas J. Dorich
Shanahan, Martin
Davis, Joshua Clark
Bátiz-Lazo, Bernardo
Concepts
Business history
Business and Politics
Banks and banking
Public policy
Regulation
International Business corporations
Time Periods
20th century
19th century
21st century
Qing dynasty (China, 1644-1912)
20th century, late
Places
United States
Canada
Great Britain
Latin America
Italy
Southern states (U.S.)
Institutions
Caproni Group
Bank of America
Bancomer
Banamex
Banco de Bilbao
W.H. Smith and Son
Comments

Be the first to comment!

{{ comment.created_by.username }} on {{ comment.created_on | date:'medium' }}

Log in or register to comment