4.3 Article

The reregulation of capital flows in Latin America: assessing the impact of post-neoliberal governments

Journal

REVIEW OF INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
Volume 29, Issue 5, Pages 1497-1524

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/09692290.2021.1927140

Keywords

Capital controls; post-neoliberalism; Latin America; political parties; political economy; panel-corrected standard errors

Funding

  1. Central European University Foundation, Budapest (CEUBPF)

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This article assesses the impact of post-neoliberal governments on the level of capital controls in 17 Latin American countries between 1995 and 2017, finding an increase in capital controls associated with post-neoliberalism. Additionally, larger financial sectors contribute to counteracting the re-regulation of capital flows by post-neoliberal governments.
This article assesses the impact of post-neoliberal governments on the level of capital controls in 17 Latin American countries for the period between 1995 and 2017. Contrary to administrations led by other left-of-center parties, especially the ones affiliated to the Socialist International, I contend that post-neoliberal parties, affiliated to the Sao Paulo Forum, opted to reregulate capital flows for three main reasons: increasing macroeconomic policy autonomy, favoring their constituencies, and/or giving concreteness to the rhetoric against financial and foreign interests. After proposing a new capital controls index and estimating a time-series cross-section model, I find that post-neoliberalism has been associated with an increase in the level of controls. Besides this main conclusion, I also find that larger financial sectors contribute to counteracting the reregulation of capital flows by post-neoliberal governments.

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