Beating Sisyphus: How Emerging Markets Overcome the Impossible
How does extortionate corruption fundamentally restructure an economy? Why do voters frequently tolerate "rational hypocrisy" from their political leaders?In this episode of Beating Sisyphus, co-hosts Thomas Riveros and Lourdes Casanova sit down with Nicolás Cachanosky (UTEP) and J.P. Bastos (University of Austin) to dissect the institutional and economic challenges facing Latin America.Bridging the gap between micro-level incentives and macro-level governance, the conversation explores why certain emerging markets break the cycle of populism while others remain trapped. The guests analyze the misallocation of resources caused by political enrichment, the erosion of republican checks and balances, and the high-stakes gamble of the Milei administration in Argentina.Key Topics Discussed:- The Micro-Impact of Corruption: How institutional quality in Brazil dictates the private gains of political office, and why corruption pushes formal employment into agriculture and informality.- Defining Populism: Moving beyond left vs. right economic policies to understand populism as a political strategy reliant on social fracture and the erosion of institutions.- Rational Hypocrisy: The incentive structures that lead voters to apply double standards and turn a blind eye to corruption to protect broader ideological goals.- The Dollarization Debate: An analysis of Argentina's "institutional anomy" and whether tying the hands of the central bank is the only credible bridge to long-term stability.- Time Horizons and Inflation: Examining the "stationary bandit" framework, including how longer populist regimes (like those seen in Bolivia and Nicaragua) impact monetary policy and inflation tracking over time.Timestamps:00:00 Intro: How innovation emerges under pressure01:18 Backgrounds: Why Nicolás and J.P. chose to study economics07:04 The Brazilian Mayoral Data: Private gains from political office10:43 Deadweight Loss vs. Misallocation: How corruption shifts business activity15:11 The Populist Playbook: Defining populism and institutional erosion27:03 Rational Hypocrisy: Why democratic accountability fails36:15 Currency Pegs and Dollarization: Argentina's 80-year struggle with inflation44:47 Roving vs. Stationary Bandits: The expected length of a populist regime50:25 Looking Forward: Institutional success stories in Costa Rica, Uruguay, and Peru
20 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Beating Sisyphus: How Emerging Markets Overcome the Impossible!