Jumping Between Extremes: Economic Policy and Popular Response in Venezuela

Venezuela experienced one of the most dramatic political transformations of the twentieth century. After initially developing a system of representative democracy hailed among the most resilient in the Western Hemisphere in the 1950s, the country endured wave after wave of economic turmoil until, in...

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Main Author: Pena, Ricardo
Format: Others
Published: Scholarship @ Claremont 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://scholarship.claremont.edu/cmc_theses/1453
http://scholarship.claremont.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2587&context=cmc_theses
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spelling ndltd-CLAREMONT-oai-scholarship.claremont.edu-cmc_theses-25872017-01-06T03:30:17Z Jumping Between Extremes: Economic Policy and Popular Response in Venezuela Pena, Ricardo Venezuela experienced one of the most dramatic political transformations of the twentieth century. After initially developing a system of representative democracy hailed among the most resilient in the Western Hemisphere in the 1950s, the country endured wave after wave of economic turmoil until, in 1998, Hugo Chávez was elected to the office of the Venezuelan presidency, fundamentally altering the governmental structure of the country and contributing to the desperate economic conditions Venezuela finds itself in today. This thesis attempts to explain the societal factors that led to Chávez’s election through an examination of Venezuelan economic policy in the final decades of the twentieth century. By charting the attempts made by specific Venezuelan political actors to address the unique conditions and dilemmas generated by the country’s largely oil-based economy during this period, it is argued that the economic policies enacted by Venezuela’s representative democracy systematically failed to address the needs and concerns of the country’s poor and working classes. As a result, political disillusionment among these social groups became increasingly more pervasive, finally reaching its full expression in the election of Chávez as an outsider candidate pledging to overhaul the Venezuelan political system in favor of poor and working class social sectors. Moreover, this text attempts to situate Chávez’s election as the result of a broader trend of inadequate economic policy beyond the commonly examined neoliberal reforms of the 1990s and ultimately serves to caution against an economic worldview that overlooks potential repercussions for society’s most vulnerable sectors. 2017-01-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf http://scholarship.claremont.edu/cmc_theses/1453 http://scholarship.claremont.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2587&context=cmc_theses © 2016 Ricardo Pena default CMC Senior Theses Scholarship @ Claremont Neoliberal Social Classes Representative Democracy Latin America Macroeconomics Political Economy
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Neoliberal
Social Classes
Representative Democracy
Latin America
Macroeconomics
Political Economy
spellingShingle Neoliberal
Social Classes
Representative Democracy
Latin America
Macroeconomics
Political Economy
Pena, Ricardo
Jumping Between Extremes: Economic Policy and Popular Response in Venezuela
description Venezuela experienced one of the most dramatic political transformations of the twentieth century. After initially developing a system of representative democracy hailed among the most resilient in the Western Hemisphere in the 1950s, the country endured wave after wave of economic turmoil until, in 1998, Hugo Chávez was elected to the office of the Venezuelan presidency, fundamentally altering the governmental structure of the country and contributing to the desperate economic conditions Venezuela finds itself in today. This thesis attempts to explain the societal factors that led to Chávez’s election through an examination of Venezuelan economic policy in the final decades of the twentieth century. By charting the attempts made by specific Venezuelan political actors to address the unique conditions and dilemmas generated by the country’s largely oil-based economy during this period, it is argued that the economic policies enacted by Venezuela’s representative democracy systematically failed to address the needs and concerns of the country’s poor and working classes. As a result, political disillusionment among these social groups became increasingly more pervasive, finally reaching its full expression in the election of Chávez as an outsider candidate pledging to overhaul the Venezuelan political system in favor of poor and working class social sectors. Moreover, this text attempts to situate Chávez’s election as the result of a broader trend of inadequate economic policy beyond the commonly examined neoliberal reforms of the 1990s and ultimately serves to caution against an economic worldview that overlooks potential repercussions for society’s most vulnerable sectors.
author Pena, Ricardo
author_facet Pena, Ricardo
author_sort Pena, Ricardo
title Jumping Between Extremes: Economic Policy and Popular Response in Venezuela
title_short Jumping Between Extremes: Economic Policy and Popular Response in Venezuela
title_full Jumping Between Extremes: Economic Policy and Popular Response in Venezuela
title_fullStr Jumping Between Extremes: Economic Policy and Popular Response in Venezuela
title_full_unstemmed Jumping Between Extremes: Economic Policy and Popular Response in Venezuela
title_sort jumping between extremes: economic policy and popular response in venezuela
publisher Scholarship @ Claremont
publishDate 2017
url http://scholarship.claremont.edu/cmc_theses/1453
http://scholarship.claremont.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2587&context=cmc_theses
work_keys_str_mv AT penaricardo jumpingbetweenextremeseconomicpolicyandpopularresponseinvenezuela
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