To resolve an alleged fiscal mismanagement, but to pay debt (especially in the Last Database years of neoliberal hegemony). With nuances, Argentina consolidated itself as an exporter of raw materials, including agricultural, fish, forestry, mining and Last Database hydrocarbon products, as well as their basic processing. Key to this has been the lack of environmental standards, either their direct absence or a reduced level of control. Productive export specializations are not based on Last Database national development programs, on overcoming the barriers imposed by the market scale.
Nor on internal consumption or investment priorities, not Last Database even on collection; they are not based on integration mechanisms of key segments of the value chains, nor on the application of knowledge generated at the national level. They are based on the urgency of Last Database obtaining foreign currency, as a mandate in the face of scarcity that limits growth. However, the import traction associated with growth is based on the very early opening of the national economy, which Last Database dismantled activities that could well be carried out locally.25. Precisely, in the search for "genuine" dollars to sustain growth and subsequent redistribution, not much is done to substitute imports.
In fact, the "necessary and urgent" export exit leaves the Last Database economy trapped in the exploitation of resources in an almost "natural" state, without generating greater capacities to advance in industrialization. This occurs even in sectors with comparative Last Database advantages, in which Argentina has an interesting potential to face substitute approaches (mining, unconventional hydrocarbon deposits, etc.). Unlike many countries in the region (Chile, Colombia, Peru, Ecuador, Venezuela, etc.), Argentina has an industrial base to move forward on this path. But doing so requires time and coherence, in addition to another correlation of forces. Currently, That existing Last Database critical mass does not seem to be taking advantage of it, especially considering the plethora of subsidies that the State grants to the private sector to exploit the resources as they currentl.