Who is to put the bell on the cat? Democracy, dictatorship, and James M. Buchanan's early 1980s involvement with Pinochet's Chile
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Published:2024-06-26
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ISSN:0038-4038
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Container-title:Southern Economic Journal
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Southern Economic Journal
Author:
Farrant Andrew1,
Tarko Vlad2
Affiliation:
1. Department of Economics Dickinson College Carlisle Pennsylvania USA
2. Department of Political Economy and Moral Science University of Arizona Tucson Arizona USA
Abstract
AbstractAlthough Milton Friedman's mid‐1970s involvement with Pinochet's Chile has generated much controversy, the claim that James M. Buchanan was similarly eager to provide Pinochet's military dictatorship with early 1980s policy advice is increasingly reported as an established fact in the vast scholarly literature on neoliberalism. This article invokes a wealth of previously ignored primary source material that sheds significant new light on Buchanan's early 1980s involvement with Chile. In particular, we evaluate whether Buchanan's May 1980 visit to Chile was an integral part of the Pinochet junta's late 1970s and early 1980s efforts to draft a new constitution. Similarly, we evaluate whether Buchanan's ideas had any significant influence on the views of Pedro Ibáñez and Carlos Cáceres (the most anti‐democratic members of Pinochet's Council of State and the primary hosts of Buchanan's May 1980 visit to Chile). Finally, we shed important new light on Buchanan's participation in the highly controversial late 1981 Mont Pèlerin Society meeting in Chile.
Reference59 articles.
1. Towards a theory of neoliberal constitutionalism: addressing Chile's first constitution‐making laboratory;Alemparte B.;Global Constitutionalism.,2021
2. American Hegemony Comes Home