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Black Marketeers Unite!
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16140 |
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Section : |
BOOK WORLD
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6 / 1989 |
2,263 Words |
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Philip Nicolaides Philip Nicolaides is director of the Foundation for Africa's
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Now, not quite a century after Marx's magnum opus, Das Kapital, along comes The Other Path, a high-impact bombshell of a book by a young, soft-spoken, Swiss-educated banker-economist, Hernando de Soto. De Soto, unlike Marx, is scientific in his approach. Through a largely empirical study of the actual dynamics of the economy of one country, he vindicates the insights of Adam Smith's The Wealth of Nations in a strikingly original way. His starting point is a healthy skepticism toward the standard explanations, supplied by the political Left and Right, of why so many Latin American nations are poor economic performers.
Taking his native Peru as a test case, he used it as a kind of laboratory, basing his thesis not on armchair speculation or a turgid reworking of Hegelian categories, but on painstaking fact-gathering. In this effort, de Soto received a great deal of help--which he graciously acknowledges--from a remarkable organization he helped to found, Instituto Libertad y Democracia (ILD).
ILD's field work even included some ingeniously devised "economic experiments" that proved how formidable were the legal and regulatory obstacles the establishment had put in the way of setting up a new small business. To register a small-scale sewing shop, for example, the ILD learned it took ten months of calling on eleven different municipal and ministerial agencies and paying two bribes. The carefully documented accounts of efforts to start and maintain value-producing activities in the teeth of a system hostile to such activities is one of the more fascinating features of de Soto's book.
It was, of course, the hostility of Peru's government to
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