The Role of Railways in Export-Led Growth: The Case of Uruguay, 1870-1913

Publication date

2013-09-17T10:07:47Z

2013-09-17T10:07:47Z

2011-12-21

2013-09-17T10:07:47Z

Abstract

The social saving literature has highlighted the indispensable role that railways played before 1914 in several Latin American export-oriented economies, such as Mexico, Brazil and Argentina. The article analyses the case of Uruguay, a country that, by 1914, had built one of the densest railway networks in Latin America. The article shows that, in contrast to what happened in other economies of the region, the resource saving effects of the Uruguayan railways during the first globalisation were tiny due to the small share that railway output accounted for within the country's gross domestic product (GDP). Three complementary reasons are suggested to explain that result, namely: the geographical structure of the country; its sectoral specialisation; and the small scale of the Uruguayan economy. Due to these three characteristics, Uruguay was unable to benefit from railways in the way that other export-oriented Latin American economies did during the first period of globalisation. This conclusion draws attention to the geographic-specific character of railway technology.

Document Type

Article


Accepted version

Language

English

Publisher

Routledge

Related items

Versió postprint del document publicat a: 10.1080/20780389.2011.625238

Economic History of Developing Regions, 2011, vol. 26, num. 2, p. 1-32

http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/20780389.2011.625238

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Rights

(c) Economic History Society of Southern Africa, 2011