DESCRIPTION OF THE COURSE: A wide overview of current issues and situations in the field of Latin American economics.
COURSE OBJECTIVES:
o To define the field of world economics and emphasize the differences between regions and among national economies.
o To define and discuss briefly basic terms relevant to world economics.
o To discuss the specific aspects of the Latin American economy globally and by individual countries.
o To emphasize the importance of history in understanding current Latin American economic phenomena.
o To emphasize the importance of the social, cultural, political and legal environments in understanding the current Latin American economic situation.
o To discuss Latin American economic data, historically, globally, by individual countries, etc.
o To analyze the impact of economic integration in Latin America.
EDUCATIONAL RESOURCES:
Reference books, texts, support material, and audio-visual equipment.
METHODOLOGY:
The research process and methodology of this course is based on the following procedures and assignments:
o Reading of texts of social and historical type.
o Discussion of the texts in class.
o Short researches about Latin American current issues.
o Final presentation about a specific theme or topic.
CONTENTS:
I. FRAMEWORK,CONCEPTS,PERSPECTIVES:CONTEXT AND GLOBALIZATION
o Economy
o Economic theory
o Economic policy and practice
o Abundance and scarcity in Latin America
o The economic problem in Latin America
o Economic potential versus economic development
o Brief economic history of Latin America
o How to insert Central America into the global economy
II. ECONOMIC THEORIES ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE, DEVELOPMENT AND INVESTMENT
o The advantage of knowing economic theory
o International trade theory. Mercantilism. Absolute advantage. Comparative advantage. Factor endowment. Introducing money. The product life cycle. Toward a theory of international business: Newer theories.
o Trade restrictions. Governmental influence on trade. The rationale for government intervention. Forms of trade control. New ways of dealing with international relations.
o International investment theories; competitivity and new criteria.
III. THE DYNAMICS OF INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS: RELEVANCE FOR THE LATIN AMERICAN ECONOMY
o The United Nations Organization
o The World Bank. Multilateral Development Banks: The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development. The Inter-American Development Bank. Other regional development banks. The Central American Integration Bank (BCIE) with relation to Costa Rica.
o The World Trade Organization
o OPEC and other product organizations
o The European Union
o Latin American integration groups
o Othe regional groupings of nations
o The IMF
IV. ECONOMIC AND SOCIOECONOMIC FORCES
· Economic Analysis
· GNP/capita, income distribution, private consumption, discretionary income: macro-indicators of the Central American economy, Consejo Monetario Centroamericano
· International economic analysis: Dimensions of the economy
· FTA (TLC) with Canada, Mexico, Chile, USA and Dominican Republic
V. SOCIOCULTURAL FORCES
· What is culture?
· Socio-cultural components: aethetics, attitudes and beliefs, language, religion, material culture, societal organization. (ONG´s)
· Undestanding the Latin American cultures. "Agriculture Life" (IICA)
VII POLITICAL FORCES
· Ideological forces
· Privatization
· Nationalism : Banks and institutions such as Municipalidades, CNFL, ICE, RECOPE, AyA, ministries.
· Government protection
· Government stability
· International organizations as political forces.
· Labor as a political force. Labor unions (sindicatos)
VIII LEGAL FORCES
· National legal forces
· International forces
· International standardizing forces
· Export/Import and other contracts (Industrial Parks, Zonas Francas, CINDE, Procomer)
IX THE LATIN AMERICAN ECONOMY AS A WHOLE
· Dimension of the economy: area, population, resources, GNP, etc.
· Mexico
· Central America (convergence measures in this area)
· The Caribbean countries
· South America
X TRADE POLICY: MECHANICS, PROBLEMS AND ISSUES
· Tariffs and import quotas in Latin America
· The case for import restrictions in Latin America
· Export Policies
· Trade Policy Problems
XI ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AND POVERTY
· The roots of world poverty
· Poverty in Latin America
XII LATIN AMERICA´S BIG ECONOMIES
· ECLA reports (informes de CEPAL) covering: Brazil, Mexico, Argentina, Venezuela and Chile.
XIII ECONOMIC INTEGRATION IN LATIN AMERICA
· The Central American Common Market
· NAFTA
· LAFTA
· CARICOM
· The South American Common Market (MERCOSUR)
· FTAA (ALCA)
XIV COSTA RICA : A CASE STUDY
EVALUATION:
Class participation 15%
First partial exam 20%
Second partial exam 20%
Research paper and presentation 20%
Final exam 25%