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High Inflation and Bolivian Agriculture1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 February 2009

Ricardo Godoy
Affiliation:
Research Associate, Harvard Institute for International Development, and Lecturer, Department of Anthropology, Harvard University.
Mario De Franco
Affiliation:
Director, Gestión Pública, Instituto Centroamericano de Administración de Empresas (INCAE), Managua, Nicaragua.

Abstract

A nation that demands from its government nothing but the maintenance of order is already a slave in the bottom of its heart; it is the slave of its wellbeing, and the man who is to chain it can arrive on the scene.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1992

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References

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8 We deflated nominal prices by the Consumer Price Index (CP1) (1985 = 100).

9 The terms of trade are defined as the ratio of Wholesale Agricultural Prices to Industrial Prices (1985 = 100).

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29 As one anonymous referee noted, better wholesale prices do not imply, either factually or logically, better farmgate prices. Owing to the many imperfections in Bolivia's agricultural marketing system, improved wholesale agricultural prices may not have necessarily translated into higher farmgate prices.

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