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La Década Perdida

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36: 268: 260: 252: 153: 380:, which navigated the subprime crisis of 2008 with little difficulty. Benefitting from the weakening of the currencies from industrialized countries, they could obtain greater quantities of foreign currency. This period was known as the "gained decade," particularly by the center-left governments as a part of the "red tide" movement which had its best moment in that period. 388:
changes tended to strengthen exterior commerce and equilibrate fiscal accounts. However, the commercial war between the United States and China and a new increase in the value of the dollar worsened the regional economic situation in Latin America even more. In the last part of the 2010s, in various countries, there were diverse episodes of social disturbances.
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However, the slowing down of China from 2012, and the consequent fall in the price of raw materials led to a new scenario. In 2011 the region had its last year of strong growth (greater than 4% annual), while 2012 was slightly better than 3% and between the years 2013 and 2015 it was below 2%. During
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had indicated that the decade from 2012 marked a "second lost decade" for Latin America, due to the significant fall of the regional economic indices. During the second half of the decade, almost all the countries of the subcontinent traversed periods of no growth or an economic recession, which led
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In 1980, the decreased price of raw materials and the rise of interest rates in the industrialized countries generated a lack of resources, which provoked a massive depreciation of exchange rates, appreciating the real interest rate on the debt, a situation made worse by the presence of excessively
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The effect of this situation was that Latin America lived through a "conservative wave" that included the general election of right leaning leaders in a region that during the previous century had for the most part elected left leaning governments. It was suggested that these aggressive political
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Brazil, a country who had one of the largest increases on the global level during the 2000s, stayed immersed in a period of decrease starting in 2012. A situation influenced by the hosting of the World Cup in 2014 and the Olympics in 2016. The events organized in their nation generated a wave of
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Venezuela was the country most affected by the economic crisis due to a mix between an extreme dependence on petroleum (whose value plummeted between 2012 and 2015), inflation, a corrupt central bank, and a lack of economic support from foreign countries. This created a situation of catastrophic
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suffered in Latin America during the 1980s, which continued for some countries into the 1990s. In general, the crisis was composed of unpayable external debts, taxes, and volatile inflation and exchange rates, which in the majority of the countries in the region were fixed.
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During the 1970s, the rise in prices of raw materials (primarily oil) and the decrease in the value of the dollar caused US dollars to flow into Latin America, a region that then debated between an industrial model directed from the state or a market based model.
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In response to the crisis, the majority of the nations had to abandon their economic models of industrialization by substituting with imports, and they adopted a growth strategy oriented toward exports. This strategy was encouraged by the
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the years 2016 and 2017 the economic activity in Latin America decreased for the first time since 2002, whereas in 2018 it barely passed 1%. The poverty in the subcontinent also grew starting in 2014, for the first time since the 1980s.
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Between 2003 and 2012, Latin America lived through years of stability (which included a boom in some cases) due to the high demand for raw materials partly due to the Asian Market. This demand came primarily from
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In the beginning of the 1990s, Latin America was recuperating from the crisis, which nevertheless reconfigured the economic landscape of the region. The countries who previously were regional leaders like
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Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low-quality. If possible, verify the text with references provided in the foreign-language article.
509: 170: 528: 325:(GDP) for the region was only 2.3% between 1980 and 1985. Between 1982 and 1985, Latin America paid 108 billion dollars in past debts. 548: 104: 217: 558: 553: 236: 189: 48: 538: 196: 174: 341:
were left with diverse effects that hadn’t been overcome. Meanwhile countries that had fallen behind previously like Chile,
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Content in this edit is translated from the existing Spanish Knowledge article at ]; see its history for attribution.
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stood out in the late 20th century with high economic growth and a better social wellbeing in relative terms.
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proportions, including industrial paralysis, shortages, and problems with public services.
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protests, while between 2014 and 2016 the economy entered into a recession.
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to the source of your translation. A model attribution edit summary is
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Serrano Mancilla, Alfredo; Errejón, Iñigo; Honorato, Auxiliadora.
377: 314: 258: 346: 73: 146: 29: 484:. Centro Estratégico Latinoamericano Geopolítico (CELAG). 478:
América latina, de la década ganada a la década disputada
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to this template: there are already 957 articles in the
69: 177:. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. 123:{{Translated|es|Década perdida de América Latina}} 455:"AMÉRICA LATINA Y EL CARIBE QUINCE AÑOS DESPUÉS" 111:accompanying your translation by providing an 60:Click for important translation instructions. 47:expand this article with text translated from 8: 372:to a turbulent political and social scene. 237:Learn how and when to remove this message 266: 250: 442: 27:1980s financial crisis in Latin America 90: 7: 448: 446: 175:adding citations to reliable sources 25: 501:Devaluación y Estatismo en México 361:Various publications, including 151: 34: 263:Mexico inflation rate 1970–2022 162:needs additional citations for 453:Veselovsky, Miroslava (1996). 313:. There were exceptions, like 121:You may also add the template 1: 255:Argentina inflation 1980–1993 357:The second "Década Perdida" 311:International Monetary Fund 93:will aid in categorization. 575: 529:Economic history of Mexico 462:Fondo de Cultura Económica 416:Latin American debt crisis 287:term used to describe the 271:Brazil Inflation 1981–1995 68:Machine translation, like 549:1980s in economic history 279:" ("The Lost Decade") of 49:the corresponding article 559:1990s in Central America 554:1980s in Central America 432:Hyperinflation in Brazil 132:For more guidance, see 539:Inflation in Argentina 411:Chilean crisis of 1982 323:gross domestic product 272: 264: 256: 305:large bureaucracies. 270: 262: 254: 134:Knowledge:Translation 105:copyright attribution 498:Pazos, Luis (1983). 171:improve this article 544:Inflation in Brazil 186:"La Década Perdida" 534:Economic collapses 421:L-shaped recession 406:Lost Decade (Peru) 273: 265: 257: 113:interlanguage link 511:978-968-13-0811-7 277:La Década Perdida 247: 246: 239: 221: 145: 144: 61: 57: 18:La Decada Perdida 16:(Redirected from 566: 515: 486: 485: 483: 472: 466: 465: 459: 450: 242: 235: 231: 228: 222: 220: 179: 155: 147: 124: 118: 92: 91:|topic= 89:, and specifying 74:Google Translate 59: 56:(September 2020) 55: 38: 37: 30: 21: 574: 573: 569: 568: 567: 565: 564: 563: 519: 518: 512: 497: 494: 489: 481: 474: 473: 469: 457: 452: 451: 444: 440: 402: 359: 298: 289:economic crisis 243: 232: 226: 223: 180: 178: 168: 156: 141: 140: 139: 122: 116: 62: 39: 35: 28: 23: 22: 15: 12: 11: 5: 572: 570: 562: 561: 556: 551: 546: 541: 536: 531: 521: 520: 517: 516: 510: 493: 492:External links 490: 488: 487: 467: 441: 439: 436: 435: 434: 429: 423: 418: 413: 408: 401: 398: 369:CNN en Español 358: 355: 297: 294: 245: 244: 159: 157: 150: 143: 142: 138: 137: 130: 119: 97: 94: 82:adding a topic 77: 66: 63: 44: 43: 42: 40: 33: 26: 24: 14: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 571: 560: 557: 555: 552: 550: 547: 545: 542: 540: 537: 535: 532: 530: 527: 526: 524: 513: 507: 503: 502: 496: 495: 491: 480: 479: 471: 468: 463: 456: 449: 447: 443: 437: 433: 430: 428: 424: 422: 419: 417: 414: 412: 409: 407: 404: 403: 399: 397: 393: 389: 385: 381: 379: 373: 370: 366: 365: 356: 354: 352: 348: 344: 340: 336: 332: 326: 324: 320: 316: 312: 306: 302: 295: 293: 290: 286: 282: 281:Latin America 278: 269: 261: 253: 249: 241: 238: 230: 219: 216: 212: 209: 205: 202: 198: 195: 191: 188: –  187: 183: 182:Find sources: 176: 172: 166: 165: 160:This article 158: 154: 149: 148: 135: 131: 128: 120: 114: 110: 106: 102: 98: 95: 88: 87:main category 84: 83: 78: 75: 71: 67: 65: 64: 58: 52: 50: 45:You can help 41: 32: 31: 19: 500: 477: 470: 461: 394: 390: 386: 382: 374: 368: 362: 360: 327: 307: 303: 299: 276: 274: 248: 233: 224: 214: 207: 200: 193: 181: 169:Please help 164:verification 161: 109:edit summary 100: 80: 54: 46: 523:Categories 438:References 319:Costa Rica 227:March 2008 197:newspapers 51:in Spanish 504:. Diana. 339:Venezuela 331:Argentina 127:talk page 79:Consider 427:Caracazo 400:See also 351:Colombia 296:Overview 103:provide 364:El País 285:Spanish 211:scholar 125:to the 107:in the 53:. 508:  349:, and 343:Brazil 337:, and 335:Mexico 213:  206:  199:  192:  184:  482:(PDF) 458:(PDF) 378:China 315:Chile 283:is a 218:JSTOR 204:books 70:DeepL 506:ISBN 367:and 347:Peru 190:news 101:must 99:You 425:El 317:or 173:by 72:or 525:: 460:. 445:^ 345:, 333:, 514:. 464:. 275:" 240:) 234:( 229:) 225:( 215:· 208:· 201:· 194:· 167:. 136:. 129:. 20:)

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La Decada Perdida
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Latin America
Spanish
economic crisis
International Monetary Fund
Chile

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