Distributive conflict, economic policy, and macroeconomic volatility in Argentina (1890-2020)

Autores
Catelén, Ana Laura
Año de publicación
2026
Idioma
inglés
Tipo de recurso
documento de conferencia
Estado
versión aceptada
Descripción
For decades, Argentina's long-run divergence has intrigued economic historians. While by the late nineteenth century the country ranked among the world's richest economies, it now occupies a middle position in the global income distribution (Bolt and van Zanden, 2020). A distinctive feature of Argentina's experience, relevant for explaining this outcome, is the marked rise in macroeconomic volatility since the mid-1970s. Unlike other South American economies, this instability has intensified over time (Catelén, 2025), and elevated volatility undermines long-run growth (Badinger, 2010; Loayza & Hnatkovska, 2004; Pastor, 2017; Ramey & Ramey, 1994). Latin American structuralist theory provides a useful framework to understand why volatility itself becomes persistent through the emergence of vicious cyclical dynamics. These dynamics involve recurrent interaction processes that amplify and prolong fluctuations. A central mechanism in this approach is structural distributive conflict, defined as the gap between workers' wage aspirations and the economy's productive capacity (Rapetti & Gerchunoff, 2016). This paper revisits this theoretical tradition and combines it with a modern empirical approach based on a structural VAR framework that allows for causal interpretation to assess whether the interaction between distributive conflict and economic policy can account for Argentina's recurrent cycles of instability that undermine long-run growth. The analysis examines the historical evolution of distributive conflict across three development regimes (the agro-export model, state- led industrialization, and the second globalization) within a structuralist framework linking external constraints, distributive conflict, and macroeconomic instability.
Fil: Catelén, Ana Laura. Universidad Nacional de Mar del Plata. Facultad de Ciencias Económicas y Sociales; Argentina. Universidad Carlos III de Madrid. Departamento de Ciencias Sociales; España.
Fuente
Economic History Society Centenary Conference 2026, London [GBR], April 10-12, 2026.
Materia
Crecimiento Económico
Volatilidad
Ciclos Económicos
Nivel de accesibilidad
acceso abierto
Condiciones de uso
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/deed.es
Repositorio
Nülan (UNMDP-FCEyS)
Institución
Universidad Nacional de Mar del Plata. Facultad de Ciencias Económicas y Sociales
OAI Identificador
oai:nulan.mdp.edu.ar:4470

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spelling Distributive conflict, economic policy, and macroeconomic volatility in Argentina (1890-2020)Catelén, Ana LauraCrecimiento EconómicoVolatilidadCiclos EconómicosFor decades, Argentina's long-run divergence has intrigued economic historians. While by the late nineteenth century the country ranked among the world's richest economies, it now occupies a middle position in the global income distribution (Bolt and van Zanden, 2020). A distinctive feature of Argentina's experience, relevant for explaining this outcome, is the marked rise in macroeconomic volatility since the mid-1970s. Unlike other South American economies, this instability has intensified over time (Catelén, 2025), and elevated volatility undermines long-run growth (Badinger, 2010; Loayza & Hnatkovska, 2004; Pastor, 2017; Ramey & Ramey, 1994). Latin American structuralist theory provides a useful framework to understand why volatility itself becomes persistent through the emergence of vicious cyclical dynamics. These dynamics involve recurrent interaction processes that amplify and prolong fluctuations. A central mechanism in this approach is structural distributive conflict, defined as the gap between workers' wage aspirations and the economy's productive capacity (Rapetti & Gerchunoff, 2016). This paper revisits this theoretical tradition and combines it with a modern empirical approach based on a structural VAR framework that allows for causal interpretation to assess whether the interaction between distributive conflict and economic policy can account for Argentina's recurrent cycles of instability that undermine long-run growth. The analysis examines the historical evolution of distributive conflict across three development regimes (the agro-export model, state- led industrialization, and the second globalization) within a structuralist framework linking external constraints, distributive conflict, and macroeconomic instability.Fil: Catelén, Ana Laura. Universidad Nacional de Mar del Plata. Facultad de Ciencias Económicas y Sociales; Argentina. Universidad Carlos III de Madrid. Departamento de Ciencias Sociales; España.2026info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObjectinfo:eu-repo/semantics/acceptedVersionhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_5794info:ar-repo/semantics/documentoDeConferenciaapplication/pdfhttps://nulan.mdp.edu.ar/id/eprint/4470/https://nulan.mdp.edu.ar/id/eprint/4470/1/catelen-2026.pdf Economic History Society Centenary Conference 2026, London [GBR], April 10-12, 2026. reponame:Nülan (UNMDP-FCEyS)instname:Universidad Nacional de Mar del Plata. Facultad de Ciencias Económicas y SocialesengArgentina1890-2020info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccesshttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/deed.es2026-03-26T11:19:31Zoai:nulan.mdp.edu.ar:4470instacron:UNMDP-FCEySInstitucionalhttp://nulan.mdp.edu.ar/Universidad públicaNo correspondehttp://nulan.mdp.edu.ar/cgi/oai2cendocu@mdp.edu.arArgentinaNo correspondeNo correspondeNo correspondeopendoar:18452026-03-26 11:19:31.66Nülan (UNMDP-FCEyS) - Universidad Nacional de Mar del Plata. Facultad de Ciencias Económicas y Socialesfalse
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv Distributive conflict, economic policy, and macroeconomic volatility in Argentina (1890-2020)
title Distributive conflict, economic policy, and macroeconomic volatility in Argentina (1890-2020)
spellingShingle Distributive conflict, economic policy, and macroeconomic volatility in Argentina (1890-2020)
Catelén, Ana Laura
Crecimiento Económico
Volatilidad
Ciclos Económicos
title_short Distributive conflict, economic policy, and macroeconomic volatility in Argentina (1890-2020)
title_full Distributive conflict, economic policy, and macroeconomic volatility in Argentina (1890-2020)
title_fullStr Distributive conflict, economic policy, and macroeconomic volatility in Argentina (1890-2020)
title_full_unstemmed Distributive conflict, economic policy, and macroeconomic volatility in Argentina (1890-2020)
title_sort Distributive conflict, economic policy, and macroeconomic volatility in Argentina (1890-2020)
dc.creator.none.fl_str_mv Catelén, Ana Laura
author Catelén, Ana Laura
author_facet Catelén, Ana Laura
author_role author
dc.subject.none.fl_str_mv Crecimiento Económico
Volatilidad
Ciclos Económicos
topic Crecimiento Económico
Volatilidad
Ciclos Económicos
dc.description.none.fl_txt_mv For decades, Argentina's long-run divergence has intrigued economic historians. While by the late nineteenth century the country ranked among the world's richest economies, it now occupies a middle position in the global income distribution (Bolt and van Zanden, 2020). A distinctive feature of Argentina's experience, relevant for explaining this outcome, is the marked rise in macroeconomic volatility since the mid-1970s. Unlike other South American economies, this instability has intensified over time (Catelén, 2025), and elevated volatility undermines long-run growth (Badinger, 2010; Loayza & Hnatkovska, 2004; Pastor, 2017; Ramey & Ramey, 1994). Latin American structuralist theory provides a useful framework to understand why volatility itself becomes persistent through the emergence of vicious cyclical dynamics. These dynamics involve recurrent interaction processes that amplify and prolong fluctuations. A central mechanism in this approach is structural distributive conflict, defined as the gap between workers' wage aspirations and the economy's productive capacity (Rapetti & Gerchunoff, 2016). This paper revisits this theoretical tradition and combines it with a modern empirical approach based on a structural VAR framework that allows for causal interpretation to assess whether the interaction between distributive conflict and economic policy can account for Argentina's recurrent cycles of instability that undermine long-run growth. The analysis examines the historical evolution of distributive conflict across three development regimes (the agro-export model, state- led industrialization, and the second globalization) within a structuralist framework linking external constraints, distributive conflict, and macroeconomic instability.
Fil: Catelén, Ana Laura. Universidad Nacional de Mar del Plata. Facultad de Ciencias Económicas y Sociales; Argentina. Universidad Carlos III de Madrid. Departamento de Ciencias Sociales; España.
description For decades, Argentina's long-run divergence has intrigued economic historians. While by the late nineteenth century the country ranked among the world's richest economies, it now occupies a middle position in the global income distribution (Bolt and van Zanden, 2020). A distinctive feature of Argentina's experience, relevant for explaining this outcome, is the marked rise in macroeconomic volatility since the mid-1970s. Unlike other South American economies, this instability has intensified over time (Catelén, 2025), and elevated volatility undermines long-run growth (Badinger, 2010; Loayza & Hnatkovska, 2004; Pastor, 2017; Ramey & Ramey, 1994). Latin American structuralist theory provides a useful framework to understand why volatility itself becomes persistent through the emergence of vicious cyclical dynamics. These dynamics involve recurrent interaction processes that amplify and prolong fluctuations. A central mechanism in this approach is structural distributive conflict, defined as the gap between workers' wage aspirations and the economy's productive capacity (Rapetti & Gerchunoff, 2016). This paper revisits this theoretical tradition and combines it with a modern empirical approach based on a structural VAR framework that allows for causal interpretation to assess whether the interaction between distributive conflict and economic policy can account for Argentina's recurrent cycles of instability that undermine long-run growth. The analysis examines the historical evolution of distributive conflict across three development regimes (the agro-export model, state- led industrialization, and the second globalization) within a structuralist framework linking external constraints, distributive conflict, and macroeconomic instability.
publishDate 2026
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https://nulan.mdp.edu.ar/id/eprint/4470/1/catelen-2026.pdf
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dc.coverage.none.fl_str_mv Argentina
1890-2020
dc.source.none.fl_str_mv Economic History Society Centenary Conference 2026, London [GBR], April 10-12, 2026.
reponame:Nülan (UNMDP-FCEyS)
instname:Universidad Nacional de Mar del Plata. Facultad de Ciencias Económicas y Sociales
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