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The Mexican crisis : the neoliberal model of structural adjustment on trial, 1982-1985Heredia-Zubieta, Carlos Antonio January 1986 (has links)
No description available.
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The Mexican crisis : the neoliberal model of structural adjustment on trial, 1982-1985Heredia-Zubieta, Carlos Antonio January 1986 (has links)
No description available.
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Effects that neoliberalism and globalization have brought to Mexico's sustainable developmentUribe, Maria Eugenia. January 2001 (has links)
After the Great Depression of 1929--1933, the relative isolation of Mexico's economy led to the adoption of Import Substitution Industrialization. The use of this model as a development strategy meant specializing in manufactured goods under a regime of state interventionism and a closed economy. However, after many years of inward-looking policies, ISI collapsed. Moreover, with excessive public expenditures and fiscal mismanagements, Mexico's economic stability started to erode. The result was Mexico's first economic crisis, the effects of which could only be alleviated through loans from International Financial Institutions that were contingent on the implementation of defined policies. Thus, Mexico adopted the neoliberal development model as its strategy for economic growth and recovery. Under this model, trade liberalization, outward-looking policies, and state non-interventionism promised economic growth as a necessary precondition for social justice and development. Mexico's implementation of neoliberal policies, on one hand, has aided its integration into a market-oriented economy in which competitiveness, foreign investment, and technology transfers are considered as paths to economic growth and, on the other hand, has widened the gap between the rich and the poor, and has impeded sustainable development.
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A history of neglect : the use of federal recovery funds to combat vacancy and blight in Muncie, INWilliams, Heather L. 04 May 2013 (has links)
This study provides an overview of vacancy and blight within communities across the United States and the significance that these factors play in the overall health and prosperity of the neighborhoods and cities in which they exist. The recent housing boom and eventual bust destabilized neighborhoods and led the federal government to provide funds for communities to combat vacancy and blight through the American Recovery Act and the Dodd Frank Act. The City of Muncie utilized these funds to demolish vacant, blighted properties and to aid developers in the rehabilitation of several historic properties for rental and sale to low-income residents. Although these efforts are an excellent starting point for redevelopment of Muncie’s neighborhoods, there is room for improvement in utilizing private-public relationships and funding sources to amplify current successes. / Department of Urban Planning
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Effects that neoliberalism and globalization have brought to Mexico's sustainable developmentUribe, Maria Eugenia. January 2001 (has links)
No description available.
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Problèmes de conception et d'exécution de la politique de développement économique au MexiqueElizarraras Ruiz, Raul Ernesto January 1976 (has links)
Doctorat en sciences sociales, politiques et économiques / info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
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