Abstract
This article analyzes the initiatives of Chilean President Gabriel Gonzalez Videla (1946-1952) in favor of the price of bolivian tin in the 1950s as a consequence of a vision that, in the economic sphere, contained critical elements of Washington’s relationship with the South American countries. The novelty of this position is that it contradicts the historiographic consensus on the conflicting nature of relations between Chile and Bolivia and also nuances the idea that Gonzalez Videla’s political alignment should be extended to the field economic.
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