Abstract
Although the Latin American countries are all different, our presupposition is that some of them have similar characteristics that allow us to define a typology of the different types of capitalism that have been dominant in this continent. In order to construct our typology, we discuss the cases of eight countries regarding six analytical dimensions: (1) the accumulation regime: what a country produces, how it produces it, and the manner in which it redistributes wealth between profits and wages; (2) the international insertion; (3) the role of the State; (4) the dominant social coalition, especially the place that civil society occupies in it; (5) the State structure (federalism and centralization) and the political system; and (6) finally, the social contract/the wage regime that results of the interaction of the former five dimensions.
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