Lexington Books
Pages: 256
Trim: 6½ x 9
978-1-7936-0769-0 • Hardback • August 2019 • $117.00 • (£90.00)
978-1-7936-0770-6 • eBook • August 2019 • $111.00 • (£85.00)
Christian Hernandez holds a PhD in political economy from the University of Birmingham.
Chapter 1: Globalization and Argentina: An Introduction
Chapter 2: Globalization and Ideas Still Matter… and so do Material Factors
Chapter 3: The IMF’s early approach: analyzing IMF-Argentine negotiations from 1976-1989
Chapter 4: The Great ‘Globalizer’: IMF-Argentine Negotiations under Carlos Menem (1989-1999)
Chapter 5: A Requiem for Flexibility: IMF-Argentine Negotiations during the Crisis (2001-2006; 2016-2017)
Chapter 6: From Mergers to Early Fissures: The Case of Scotiabank and Citibank (1997-2001)
Chapter 7: Discourses during the Argentine Great Depression: capital controls and Scotia’s Default
Chapter 8: Discourses in Default: Chronicling the Collapse and Exit of Scotiabank and Crédit Agricole
A startlingly original, thoroughly researched, and very important book that really helps us understand the continuing ideational and institutional power that neoliberalism draws from the discourse of globalization.— Colin Hay, Professor of Political Science, Sciences Po, France
In terms of Argentina's future, the new IMF conditionality agreements appear to set [Argentina] on a lock-step, neoliberal path towards another economic failure comparable to the Argentine Great Depression." So writes Hernandez (political economy, Univ. of Birmingham, UK) in the conclusion to this book, in which he applies discourse analysis to 2016–17 IMF recommendations to Argentine President Mauricio Macri. Hernandez's observation is prescient. He argues for “bidirectionality,” i.e., that both ideas and material factors play a role in international political economy events such as the Argentine crises… A useful resource for those interested in international political economics . . .
Summing Up: Recommended. Graduate students, researchers, faculty.
— Choice Reviews
This is a significant contribution to the field of the political economy of financial globalization and its economic impact in development since the 1990s. Based on an extensive and deep analysis about the dynamic relationship between the IMF and Argentina in that time, Christian Hernandez provides a must-read contribution in the field of development finance with fresh insights.
— Ernesto Vivares, Latin American Faculty of Social Sciences, Ecuador