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Mervyn's avatar

Agreed that having its fate tied to the UK meant that the deck was stacked against Argentina. I saw a graph of Argentina/UK GDP per capita (likely from Maddison) and the ratio was stable until 1975.

Canada had a terrible 1930s but then converged significantly vs. the U.S. from 1940-1980. I haven’t read enough on postwar Canadian history but they did share the same insecurity as Argentina about FDI’s negative impact on the capital account.

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Mervyn's avatar

What about Argentina/Canada? Based on uncorrected Maddison data, I believe the big break between the two countries was WWII rather than WWI. My personal theory is that Argentina’s WWII “neutrality” is an overlooked structural factor since Canada industrialized on a grand scale during that war and never looked back.

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