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Destabilizing Nicaragua: The Growth of Second Economy Crime Is Not an Internal Flaw of Sandinista Social Justice

NCJ Number
115898
Journal
Social Justice Volume: 15 Issue: 3-4 Dated: (Fall-Winter 1988) Pages: 114-134
Author(s)
W G West
Date Published
1988
Length
21 pages
Annotation
Crime in the underground economy in Nicaragua must be considered within a global framework that recognizes the nation's past and present dependency as well as the roles of this dependency in the Sandinistas' development of a mixed economy and in the rise of economic crime.
Abstract
Nicaragua had a free-market economy before 1979 only in the strictest legal sense, because the dictatorship used major central planning. Since the Revolution, Nicaragua has had a mixed economy, with more than half of production being privately owned. The marginal and underground economies are also highly interrelated with the regular economy. Furthermore, the illegal activities with the most serious economic consequences are those committed by people in the wealthy private sector. Moreover, major structural economic problems have prevented the government from making farreaching economic improvements, and the military and economic aggression of the Reagan administration must be viewed as criminal activity in itself. The contra war sponsored by the United States aims not only to restore an unjust economy but also to prove that revolution can never produce justice. Even if the Arias Plan for Central American peace is adopted, structural injustice and active economic aggression will continue in the effort to prove that revolution does not work. Tables, notes, and 63 references.

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