Publication: Industrial development under institutional frailty: the development of the Mexican textile industry in the nineteenth century
Loading...
Identifiers
Publication date
1999
Defense date
Authors
Advisors
Tutors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Marcial Pons : Centro de Estudios Constitucionales
Abstract
La industria textil moderna apareció en México tempranamente y creció
de forma continua a lo largo del siglo XIX. Sin embargo, esto no se tradujo
en un proceso de industrialización exitoso como resultado de altos costos
de transporte y fragilidad institucional: concepto que incluye la incertidumbre,
la debilidad y la fragmentación institucionales. La fragilidad institucional generó
una política arancelaría capturada que otorgaba bajos niveles de protección
efectiva a la industria, un mercado financiero atrasado que limitó los recursos
disponibles al crecimiento industrial, y un crecimiento en los costos de transporte
debido a las alcabalas. Los altos costos de transporte fragmentaron el
mercado nacional y como resultado generaron una industria geográficamente
dispersa.
Modern texture manufacture appeared early in México and grew continuously through the 19th century. Yet, it did not transíate into a successful industrialization process as a result of naturally endowed high transportation costs and institutional frailty: a concept that encompasses institutional uncertainty, weakness and fragmentation. Institutional frailty generated a captured tariff policy that gave low effective protection to the industry, a backward financial market that limited resources available for industrial growth, and increased transportation costs through inter-state tariff barriers. High transportation costs fragmented the national market and as a result, the textile industry grew geographically dispersed.
Modern texture manufacture appeared early in México and grew continuously through the 19th century. Yet, it did not transíate into a successful industrialization process as a result of naturally endowed high transportation costs and institutional frailty: a concept that encompasses institutional uncertainty, weakness and fragmentation. Institutional frailty generated a captured tariff policy that gave low effective protection to the industry, a backward financial market that limited resources available for industrial growth, and increased transportation costs through inter-state tariff barriers. High transportation costs fragmented the national market and as a result, the textile industry grew geographically dispersed.
Description
La Historia Económica en Latinoamérica. Edición a cargo de Pablo Martín Aceña, Adolfo Meisel, Carlos Newland.
Editada en la Fundación Empresa Pública
Editada en la Fundación Empresa Pública
Keywords
Bibliographic citation
Revista de Historia Económica Año XVII 1999 Especial pp. 191--224