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The Anglo-Argentine Connection and the War of 1914—19181
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2009
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The hypothesis of Andre Gunder Frank that Latin America's underdevelopment is partly attributable to unequal exchange in economic relations with the advanced world includes the obverse proposition that Latin America's growth has been most substantial in periods such as wartime when links with the metropolitan countries were weakened. The most explicit statement of this view occurs in the book, Latin America: Underdevelopment or Revolution: … the satellites experience their greatest economic development and especially their most classically capitalist industrial development if and when their ties to their metropolis are weakest. This hypothesis is almost diametrically opposed to the generally accepted thesis that development in the underdeveloped countries follows from the greatest degree of contact with and diffusion from the metropolitan developed countries.
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References
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64 First Report of the Royal Commission on Wheat Supplies. British Parliamentary Papers (BPP), xviii (1921), pp. 64–5 gives a printed version of the formal terms of the Loan Convention. Another prominent Anglo.Argentine, Sir Hilary Leng, got his knighthood as adviser to the British on Argentine wheat.Google Scholar
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82 Compiled from the Annual Statements of Trade in B.P.O. The second figure is retained imports.Google Scholar
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85 Originally proposed by the socialists in Feb. 1915 for grain as well as meat. FO 371/2601, Argentine Republic, Annual Report 1915, p. 38; proposed again in Jan. 1917. FO 368/1689, BOT to FO, 9 Jan. 1917; FO 902/9 WTID Weekly Bulletin, 12–18 Jan 1917, p. 50; Congress was prorogued in March without approving the duty. FO 368/1689, Tower to FO, 6 Mar. 1917.Google Scholar
86 FO 368/1877, Tower to FO, Commercial No. 137, 27 Feb. 1918; FO 902/21, WTID Weekly Bulletin, 1–3 Mar. 1918, p. 39.Google Scholar
87 FO 368/1877, Tower to FO, Commercial No. 57, 7 Feb. 1918.Google Scholar
88 FO 368/1877, MOF to FO, 16 Apr. 1918.Google Scholar
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90 Extracted from Economic Commission for Latin America (CEPAL), El desarrollo económico de la Argentina (México, 1959), parte 1, 18.Google Scholar
91 Extracted from the Argentine Annual (Buenos Aires, 1921), p. 303.Google Scholar
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99 FO 902/27, WTID Weekly Bulletin, 27 Sept.-3 Oct. 1918, p. 34.Google Scholar
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102 Extracted from CEPAL, El desarrollo económico de la Argentina (México, 1959).Google Scholar
103 Extracted from CEPAL, El desarrollo econdmico de la Argentina, Pt. 2, p. 258.Google Scholar
104 The recent study by Jorge, E. F., Industria y conccntración económica (Buenos Aires, 1971) is influenced by Gunder Frank's ideas, but much more concerned with the Second World War than the First.Google Scholardi Tella y, G.Zymelman, M., Las etapas del desarrollo económico argcntino (Buenos Aires, 1967) adds a sixth stage to Rostow's scheme for Argentina called ‘la demora’ and dated 1914 to 1933. The republic's main industrial historian, A. Dorfman, was unimpressed with the wartime performance of the industrial sector.Google Scholar See Historia de la industria argentina (Buenos Aires, 1942). The 1970 edition still takes the same view. Also Evolución industrial argentina (Buenos Aires, 1942).Google Scholar Thus, the main points under challenge are; that during the War of 1914–18 the Argentine economy experienced more metropolitan pressure than in peacetime, not less; that in the same period Argentine industry declined overall and resumed growth in the peaceful 1920s. Further research which is to appear in the monograph by Gravil, Roger, The Anglo-Argentine Connection 1900–1939, seeks to show that, in important senses, the republic did not experience economic isolation or much industrial growth in the 1930s either. In fact, Gunder Frank's thesis can be turned on its head for Argentina.Google Scholar
105 Extracted from CEPAL, El desarrollo económico de la Argentina, Pt. 2, p. 15.Google Scholar
106 The percentages are taken from CEPAL, El desarrollo económico de la Argentina, This issue of the Journal was in the press when the attention of the Editors was drawn to the fact that the article by Gravil, Dr, with but monor differences, had already been published as ‘Argentina and the First World War’, in the Revista de História (São Paulo), vol. liv, No. 108 (otubro-dezembro, 1976), pp. 385–417.Google Scholar
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