Posted on 04/13/2002 4:01:06 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
Really, can anyone believe that the US could get 200,000 people in any Latin American country to turn out to protest for something that Uncle Sam wants? LOL!!
Well that is different, Instead of the usual Joo plot this one is an American Plot. We have made the big time in the little town.
Darn right, muthas and your regime is on our list. Start packin'!
And the problem is......?
These people who write on third world development are so friggin' stupid, they haven't learned anything in 50 years. They've been coming up with magical thoughts for 50 years on "development". State planning was the solution. Exports were the solution. Democracy was the solution. World Banks loans to governments were the solution. Aid is still the solution according to Bush and his latest scheme. Now, they pretend that "globalization" was the solution.
But they are blind. They write about ending poverty, without ever talking about property.
Poverty = lack of wealth
Wealth = property
Ending poverty = getting property in the hands of the poor.
D'oh!
Here's the way to go about it. I recommend to everyone to read this book, it'll open your eyes and immunize you against the type of nonsense in this article.
Click Here for page at Amazon.com.
The Mystery of Capital: Why Capitalism Triumphs in the West and Fails Everywhere Else
by Hernando De Soto, Hernando De Soto
Our Price: $16.00
This item will be published in August 2002. You may order it now and we will ship it to you when it arrives.
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Paperback - 288 pages 1st edition (August 2002)
Basic Books; ISBN: 0465016154
In-Print Editions: Hardcover (1st)
Amazon.com Sales Rank: 23,363
Popular in: Latin America (#13) , Peru (#8) . See more
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
It's become clear by now the fall of the Berlin Wall and the collapse of communism in most places around the globe hasn't ushered in an unequivocal flowering of capitalism in the developing and postcommunist world. Western thinkers have blamed this on everything from these countries' lack of sellable assets to their inherently non-entrepreneurial "mindset." In this book, the renowned Peruvian economist and adviser to presidents and prime ministers Hernando de Soto proposes and argues another reason: it's not that poor, postcommunist countries don't have the assets to make capitalism flourish. As de Soto points out by way of example, in Egypt, the wealth the poor have accumulated is worth 55 times as much as the sum of all direct foreign investment ever recorded there, including that spent on building the Suez Canal and the Aswan Dam.
No, the real problem is that such countries have yet to establish and normalize the invisible network of laws that turns assets from "dead" into "liquid" capital. In the West, standardized laws allow us to mortgage a house to raise money for a new venture, permit the worth of a company to be broken up into so many publicly tradable stocks, and make it possible to govern and appraise property with agreed-upon rules that hold across neighborhoods, towns, or regions. This invisible infrastructure of "asset management"--so taken for granted in the West, even though it has only fully existed in the United States for the past 100 years--is the missing ingredient to success with capitalism, insists de Soto. But even though that link is primarily a legal one, he argues that the process of making it a normalized component of a society is more a political--or attitude-changing--challenge than anything else.
With a fleet of researchers, de Soto has sought out detailed evidence from struggling economies around the world to back up his claims. The result is a fascinating and solidly supported look at the one component that's holding much of the world back from developing healthy free markets. --Timothy Murphy --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.
From The Industry Standard
"An increasingly important economist provides a fascinating lesson in why capitalism works by looking at the places where it doesn't." --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.
Maybe that explains why the Democrats & Labor Unions are bed partners here in the U.S..
and whos next?????????????
Yes indeed-de he certainly was. Check it out. Colombia 'Worried' FARC Crossing Into Venezuela
Great point.
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