Journal of Historical Political Economy > Vol 4 > Issue 4

The Original Sin of Latin American States: Formation, Building, and Capacity

Raúl Aldaz Peña, Colegio de Economía and USFQ Data Hub: Laboratorio de Ciencias Sociales Computacionales, Universidad San Francisco de Quito, Ecuador, raldazpena@usfq.edu.ec , Daniel Baquero-Mendez, Wilf Family Department of Politics, New York University, USA, daniel.baquero@nyu.edu
 
Suggested Citation
Raúl Aldaz Peña and Daniel Baquero-Mendez (2025), "The Original Sin of Latin American States: Formation, Building, and Capacity", Journal of Historical Political Economy: Vol. 4: No. 4, pp 557-581. http://dx.doi.org/10.1561/115.00000085

Publication Date: 19 Feb 2025
© 2025 R. Aldaz Peña and D. Baquero-Mendez
 
Subjects
Comparative political economy,  Democracy,  Political economy,  Political history,  State politics
 
Keywords
State capacityLatin Americastate formationstate building
 

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In this article:
Introduction 
Actors and Institutions 
Geography and State Capacity 
Institutional Dynamics 
Mid-range Theories 
Time, Sequences, and Methods 
Book Reviews 
Conclusions 
References 

Abstract

The capacity of the state in Latin America is limited, preventing the implementation of policies to address problems that have been historically necessary (e.g., under-nutrition, poverty, or security). While existing explanations propose that Latin American states emerged weak as a by-product of independence — its original sin — there is no consensus on why low state capacity has persisted in spite of political and economic shocks in the last two centuries that could have been expected to influence state capacity. A research agenda on the long-term determinants of state capacity should be informed by emerging, historically rooted, scholarship on state formation and state building. We review recent publications on these topics with two objectives. First, we provide an analytical synthesis of recent contributions. Second, this synthesis suggests future research on state capacity in the region. In particular, we emphasize the role of elites, geography, institutional dynamics, mid-range theories and methods sensitive to processes and time. We believe that a consideration of these elements can contribute to the development of theory and the integration of state capacity in Latin America, as well as facilitate a more fluid dialogue with literature focused on other parts of the world.

DOI:10.1561/115.00000085