A heavily subsidized symbol of national pride, the Volta Redonda mill embodied the import substitution industrial policies that prevailed in Latin American economies from World War II until the Latin American debt crisis in the 1980s.
American | American Civil War | American Broadcasting Company | American football | Latin | African American | American Idol | American Revolutionary War | American Revolution | Latin America | American Association for the Advancement of Science | American Red Cross | American Library Association | American Museum of Natural History | American Express | American Academy of Arts and Sciences | American League | American Association | American Heart Association | American comic book | American Institute of Architects | American Airlines | American Hockey League | Spanish-American War | Pan American Games | American Cancer Society | Whitney Museum of American Art | American Ballet Theatre | American Legion | American University |
She authored a number of papers on the local effects of globalization, on the 1992 Brady Plan for foreign debt reduction, on the Convertibility Plan for exchange rate stabilization, and on the labor market, among other topics.