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Brittany Schwikert
Isabela Padilha
Brittany Schwikert
Isabela Padilha
The root of inequality is very much related to the economic system.💸 Many Latin American countries suffer from long-term inequality, which is also a result of history and socio-economic processes of the past. In this guide, we will explore the overarching economic issues of Latin America through a case study.
To get to the heart of economic issues, we need to understand how political and social issues impact the allocation of resources. For efficiency, we will focus on El Salvador: the smallest country in Central America. El Salvador 🇸🇻 has long been known for its socioeconomic inequality, but in addition to longstanding inequality, it has also recently been plagued by rampant violence, unemployment, and corruption.
In this section, we will explore the large structural issues that led to the country’s current predicament. Specifically, we will review how the nation’s civil war destroyed the country’s infrastructure, leading to increased crime, unemployment, and mass migration.
The current political unrest in El Salvador has its roots in the nation’s violent civil war that took place from 1979-1992 (13 years long!). The civil war was between the military-led government and the Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front (FMLN), an umbrella organization of 5 leftist guerilla groups.
During the civil war, over 75,000 people died and an unknown number of people “disappeared” (e.g., kidnapped and likely murdered). During this war, El Salvador’s government gained notoriety as one of the “greatest violator human rights,” because the government was more concerned with protecting the rights of the rich, whereas the guerillas advocated for the poor through land reform and other policies.
As the guerillas attacked government strongholds, the military adopted a “drain the sea” approach, which meant that the military destroyed poor villages suspected of supporting the guerillas (with food, shelter, weapons, etc.) through bombings and massacres. The bloodiest years of the civil war were 1982 and 1983, which saw more than 8,000 civilians murdered by the government.
According to a UN Truth Commission report, more than 85 percent of the civil war atrocities (including the death of more than 75,000 people, torture campaigns, and unknown number of “disappeared” individuals) were committed by the government. Although violence between the government and the guerillas has largely subsided since the Peace Accords of 1992, political tensions and distrust between citizens and the government remains high and the public’s trust in the country’s leaders was forever altered as a result of the government’s sustained terror campaign.
In addition to the lack of infrastructure, El Salvador adopted the U.S. dollar as its official currency in January 2011. Adopting the U.S. dollar made life for citizens even more expensive, and basic needs like food and water became impossible to buy.
Lastly, the economic turmoil left an entire generation of young people—who had grown up in a militarized society surrounded by everyday violence—with limited opportunities. Young Salvadorans increasingly became involved with gangs, as these groups provided them with the financial opportunities and social resources that the government never chose to supply them with.
The violent civil war created a ground zero that was ripe for recruitment of young people to drug cartels and outlying organized-crime groups. The population had no means to earn a living, and were allured by the protection and promised prosperity cartels could offer. Other outlying factors in youth violence included normalizing high school drop-outs, dysfunctional family structures, easy access to arms, alcohol, and illegal drugs, and high rates of poverty.
Yet another serious cause of increased crime was caused by accelerated deportations of Salvadorians from the U.S. in the 1980s and 1990s. Deportees included young Salvadorans who had already formed gangs in the states, and then brought their criminal activity back to their home country. In the graphic below, you can see how two gangs, MS-13 and Barrio 18, have taken over and invaded neighborhoods of the capital, San Salvador.
On a whole, the population of Salvadoran immigrants nearly tripled between 1990 (on the cusp of the end of the civil war) and 2016, as noted below.
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Brittany Schwikert
Isabela Padilha
Brittany Schwikert
Isabela Padilha
The root of inequality is very much related to the economic system.💸 Many Latin American countries suffer from long-term inequality, which is also a result of history and socio-economic processes of the past. In this guide, we will explore the overarching economic issues of Latin America through a case study.
To get to the heart of economic issues, we need to understand how political and social issues impact the allocation of resources. For efficiency, we will focus on El Salvador: the smallest country in Central America. El Salvador 🇸🇻 has long been known for its socioeconomic inequality, but in addition to longstanding inequality, it has also recently been plagued by rampant violence, unemployment, and corruption.
In this section, we will explore the large structural issues that led to the country’s current predicament. Specifically, we will review how the nation’s civil war destroyed the country’s infrastructure, leading to increased crime, unemployment, and mass migration.
The current political unrest in El Salvador has its roots in the nation’s violent civil war that took place from 1979-1992 (13 years long!). The civil war was between the military-led government and the Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front (FMLN), an umbrella organization of 5 leftist guerilla groups.
During the civil war, over 75,000 people died and an unknown number of people “disappeared” (e.g., kidnapped and likely murdered). During this war, El Salvador’s government gained notoriety as one of the “greatest violator human rights,” because the government was more concerned with protecting the rights of the rich, whereas the guerillas advocated for the poor through land reform and other policies.
As the guerillas attacked government strongholds, the military adopted a “drain the sea” approach, which meant that the military destroyed poor villages suspected of supporting the guerillas (with food, shelter, weapons, etc.) through bombings and massacres. The bloodiest years of the civil war were 1982 and 1983, which saw more than 8,000 civilians murdered by the government.
According to a UN Truth Commission report, more than 85 percent of the civil war atrocities (including the death of more than 75,000 people, torture campaigns, and unknown number of “disappeared” individuals) were committed by the government. Although violence between the government and the guerillas has largely subsided since the Peace Accords of 1992, political tensions and distrust between citizens and the government remains high and the public’s trust in the country’s leaders was forever altered as a result of the government’s sustained terror campaign.
In addition to the lack of infrastructure, El Salvador adopted the U.S. dollar as its official currency in January 2011. Adopting the U.S. dollar made life for citizens even more expensive, and basic needs like food and water became impossible to buy.
Lastly, the economic turmoil left an entire generation of young people—who had grown up in a militarized society surrounded by everyday violence—with limited opportunities. Young Salvadorans increasingly became involved with gangs, as these groups provided them with the financial opportunities and social resources that the government never chose to supply them with.
The violent civil war created a ground zero that was ripe for recruitment of young people to drug cartels and outlying organized-crime groups. The population had no means to earn a living, and were allured by the protection and promised prosperity cartels could offer. Other outlying factors in youth violence included normalizing high school drop-outs, dysfunctional family structures, easy access to arms, alcohol, and illegal drugs, and high rates of poverty.
Yet another serious cause of increased crime was caused by accelerated deportations of Salvadorians from the U.S. in the 1980s and 1990s. Deportees included young Salvadorans who had already formed gangs in the states, and then brought their criminal activity back to their home country. In the graphic below, you can see how two gangs, MS-13 and Barrio 18, have taken over and invaded neighborhoods of the capital, San Salvador.
On a whole, the population of Salvadoran immigrants nearly tripled between 1990 (on the cusp of the end of the civil war) and 2016, as noted below.
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