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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 4 page discussion of the impacts of neoliberalization and globalization on the economy and, in turn, Mexican society. The author contends that for many Latin American countries the impacts of neoliberalism on their society have been quite negative. This is certainly the case for Mexico. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AM2_PPmexNeo.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
Mexican economy has fluctuated over history in accordance with numerous factors. These fluctuations have, in turn, affected Mexican society. In the latter decades of the twentieth
century the impacts of globalization had a particularly apparent impact on Mexican economics and society. It is here, in fact, where globalization is said to have spun off the
concept of neoliberalism, one of the most dominant economic models of the 1980s. During the past two decades the concept of globalization became popular in various third world
countries around the world, particularly in Latin America. Even globalization, as formed by neoliberalism, however, now has its critics. Neoliberalism has complex connotations. Wood (1998) clarifies:
"Neoliberalism is not just a withdrawal of the state from social provision. It is a set
of active policies, a new form of state intervention designed to enhance capitalist profitability in an integrated global market".
Globalization entails not only the involvement of a particular state in its social provisions but the influence of the world in general, particularly the influence of
powerful countries such as the United States. Unfortunately for many Latin American countries the impacts of neoliberalism on their society have
been quite negative. This is certainly the case for Mexico. Interestingly Mexico was viewed for years as being one of the successes of neoliberal policies. Her interest
in such policies stretch back to post World War II and the implementation of such agreements as the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) in 1947 (Human Rights Watch,
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