4.3 Article

Renationalizing finance for development: policy space and public economic control in Bolivia

Journal

REVIEW OF INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
Volume 28, Issue 3, Pages 447-478

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/09692290.2019.1696870

Keywords

Globalization; policy space; business power; finance; development; industrial policy

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In the context of economic globalization, previously liberalized developing countries still have policy space to implement developmentalist financial reforms such as renationalizing their financial sectors and exerting direct control over credit allocation. Factors such as increased availability of external financing sources and domestic popular mobilization play a crucial role in creating favorable conditions for these reforms to take place.
After years of placing faith in the markets, we are seeing a revival of interest in statist economic policy across the world, particularly with regards to finance. How much policy space do previously liberalized developing countries still have to renationalize their financial sectors by exerting direct control over the process of credit allocation, despite the constraints posed by economic globalization? Under what conditions do they actually use this policy space? Bolivia is an especially important case because it is one of the few peripheral countries that implemented strongly interventionist financial reform in the 2010s. Using Bolivia as a least likely case, I argue that two factors, increased availability of external financing sources, and domestic popular mobilization, create favorable conditions for developmentalist financial reform because these make it possible to reduce external conditionalities and overcome opposition by the domestic financial sector. Popular mobilizations paved the way for reform by bringing developmentalist policymakers to power and exerting pressure on them to 1. Maximize policy space by diversifying into newly available alternative sources of foreign borrowing to reduce external conditionalities, and 2. Mitigate the importance of disinvestment threats by domestic economic elites by incrementally increasing public ownership and control of the economy.

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