Thursday, May 17, 2018

The end of Allende | The Economist

The end of Allende | The Economist

The armed forces had tolerated Dr Allende for nearly three years. In that time, he managed to plunge the country into the worst social and economic crisis in its modern history. The confiscation of private farms and factories caused an alarming slump in production, and the losses in state-run industries were officially admitted to have exceeded $1 billion last year. Inflation rose to 350 percent over the past twelve months. Small businessmen were bankrupted; civil servants and skilled workers saw their salaries whittled away by inflation; housewives had to queue endlessly for basic foods when they were available at all. The mounting desperation caused the major strike movement that the truck-drivers started six weeks ago.

But the Allende government did more than wreck the economy. It violated both the letter and the spirit of the constitution. The way it rode roughshod over congress and the courts eroded faith in the country's democratic institutions. A resolution passed by the opposition majority in Congress last month declared that “the government is not merely responsible for isolated violations of the law and the constitution; it has made them into a permanent system of conduct”. The feeling that parliament had been made irrelevant was increased by violence in the streets (almost on a Belfast scale) and by the way, the government tolerated the growth of armed groups on the far left that were openly preparing for civil war.

"The End Of Allende." The Economist. N. p., 2008. Web. 18 May 2018.

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The end of Allende | The Economist

The end of Allende | The Economist The armed forces had tolerated Dr Allende for nearly three years. In that time, he managed to plunge th...