不断变化的国际霸权与周边国家的依赖性:拉丁美洲案例研究

Barbara Stallings
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摘要

关于需求驱动增长模式的文献虽然是对比较政治经济学的重要贡献,但过于强调发达国家,而对国际政治经济背景的重视不够。为了将这些模型扩展到国际影响尤为重要的边缘地区,建议将霸权和依附理论纳入分析。主要论点是,国际关系会限制边缘国家生产更先进产品和获得高收入地位的能力。限制的性质因霸权(或崛起中的霸权)的需求而异,这些需求通过三种依附机制得到满足:市场、杠杆和联系。对拉丁美洲 1990 至 2020 年的研究说明了所提出的方法。从二战结束到 20 世纪 80 年代的债务危机,拉美一直遵循消费主导型模式,但在 20 世纪 90 年代,拉美引入了新的出口主导型模式,该半球的北部和南部出现了不同的变体,"赢家 "和 "输家 "也各不相同。20 世纪 90 年代,美国的主导地位有利于墨西哥融入美国的产业价值链,而中国在 2000 年后进入该地区则有利于南美洲的商品生产者。依附关系的负面影响抵消了各自大国为这两个次区域带来的贸易和金融优势。由美国外国直接投资资助的墨西哥尖端产业只惠及该国的某些飞地,而南美洲则因与中国的新联系而遭受了非难和非工业化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Changing international hegemony and dependency in peripheral countries: A case study of Latin America
The literature on demand-driven growth models, while an important contribution to comparative political economy, places too much emphasis on developed countries and too little on the international political economic context. To extend these models to the periphery, where international influence is especially important, it is suggested that theories of hegemony and dependency be incorporated into the analysis. The main argument is that international relationships can limit the ability of peripheral countries to produce more sophisticated goods and attain high-income status. The nature of the limits varies with the needs of the hegemon (or rising hegemon), which are met via three dependency mechanisms: markets, leverage, and linkage. The proposed approach is illustrated by a study of Latin America from 1990 to 2020. After following a consumption-led model from the end of WWII until the debt crisis of the 1980s, a new export-led model was introduced in the 1990s, with different variants in the northern and southern parts of the hemisphere and different “winners” and “losers.” In the 1990s, US dominance favored Mexico through its incorporation into US industrial value chains, while China’s entrance into the region after 2000 privileged South America’s commodity producers. The trade and financial advantages afforded the two subregions by the respective powers were offset by negative aspects of the dependent relationships. Mexico’s sophisticated industries financed by US FDI benefited only certain enclaves in the country, while South America suffered reprimarization and deindustrialization through its new links with China.
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