Juan Carlos TorreLiliana de Riz
G. Di Telia and M. Zymelman, Las etapas del desarrollo economico argentino (Buenos Aires, 1967), is a general work inspired by W. W. Rostow’s stages of growth theory. Aldo Ferrer, The Argentine Economy (Berkeley, 1967), first published in Spanish in 1964, is a less factual, much more interpretive account that reflects views on development and dependency typical of the late 1950s and early 1960s. Ferrer’s Crisis y alternativas de la política económica (Buenos Aires, 1977) brings the analysis up to the late 1970s. Carlos Díaz Alejandro, Essays on the Economic History of the Argentine Republic (New Haven, Conn., 1970), is a collection of excellent economic analyses of different aspects of Argentine history that has been very influential. Laura Randall, An Economic History of Argentina in the Twentieth Century (New York, 1978), tries to interpret Argentina’s development as a succession of rather clear-cut economic models; some historians have found it unconvincing. R. Mallon and J. V. Sourruoille, Economic Policy in a Conflictive Society: The Argentine Case (Cambridge, Mass., 1975), explores economic problems, particularly in the mid-1960s, without excluding political variables.
Juan Carlos TorreLiliana de Riz