Political Capital: Mexican Financial Policy under Salinas
- 1 October 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Project MUSE in World Politics
- Vol. 51 (1) , 36-66
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0043887100007784
Abstract
Market reform is advocated in developing countries to improve economic efficiency and prevent privileged groups from obtaining rents from the policy-making process. Yet this prescription fails to address the complex political process that governments are likely to confront when moving toward the market. This study shows how political considerations during President Salinas's administration distorted economic reform in Mexico.During the 1990s Mexican finance policy contradicted the government's declared neoliberal principles. While the banks were reprivatized and deregulated, they were also given a high degree of protection from competition, enabling the new owners to charge excessive interest rates. In addition, the government artificially inflated the value of the currency through exchange-rate intervention. These contradictory policies are best understood as a coherent political response to the electoral vulnerability of the ruling party (PRl) at the end of the 1980s. When viable political opposition threatened the PRl's ability to maintain power, it responded by using financial policies to distribute economic benefits to social groups, particularly business, the middle class, and the poor, whose support was critical for electoral victory.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Social Spending and Political Support: The "Lessons" of the National Solidarity Program in MexicoComparative Politics, 1996
- Foreign exchange and monetary policy in MexicoThe Columbia Journal of World Business, 1994
- Privatization and performance in the Mexican financial services industryThe Quarterly Review of Economics and Finance, 1994
- The Difficult Transition from Clientelism to Citizenship: Lessons from MexicoWorld Politics, 1994
- Mexico: Stabilization, Reform, and No GrowthBrookings Papers on Economic Activity, 1994
- The Politics of NAFTA in MexicoJournal of Interamerican Studies and World Affairs, 1994
- The Obsolescence of Capital Controls?: Economic Management in an Age of Global MarketsWorld Politics, 1993
- The Mexican State and the Political Implications of Economic RestructuringLatin American Perspectives, 1992
- The Marriage of Finance and Order: Changes in the Mexican Political EliteJournal of Latin American Studies, 1992
- Invested interests: the politics of national economic policies in a world of global financeInternational Organization, 1991