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In: http://hdl.handle.net/2027/uc1.d0000197343
Published by the Office of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, Washington, D.C. under its earlier name: Office of the Government of Puerto Rico. ; Bibliography: p. 45-47. ; Mode of access: Internet.
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In: Tricontinental / Boletín / Spanische Ausgabe, Band 14, Heft 121, S. 1-64
World Affairs Online
In: The Russell Sage Foundation Census Series
Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Illustration: Puerto Rico's Place in the Caribbean -- Chapter 1. Island Paradox: Puerto Rico in the 1990s -- Chapter 2. Population Growth and Demographic Changes -- Chapter 3. Migration between Puerto Rico and the United States -- Chapter 4. The Socioeconomic Transformation: Income, Poverty, and Education -- Chapter 5. The Labor Market and the Unemployment Crisis -- Chapter 6. Immigration and the Population Born outside Puerto Rico -- Chapter 7. The Puerto Rican Population in the United States
In: Latino studies, Band 16, Heft 2, S. 158-160
ISSN: 1476-3443
In: Latin American research review, Band 15, Heft 3, S. 256-260
ISSN: 1542-4278
In: Monthly review: an independent socialist magazine, Band 30, Heft 4, S. 18-28
ISSN: 0027-0520
Industrialization in Puerto Rico, begun in the 1940s, has been dominated by United States monopoly capitalism-in a word, imperialism. Most industries promoted by the national program of industrialization are owned & controlled by United States corporations. These mainland firm operations, exempt from Puerto Rican taxes & nearly exempt from federal income taxes, have caused Puerto Rico to be known as 'Profit Island, USA.' The impact of US-financed capitalist industrialization on four elements of the Puerto Rican political economy is examined: (1) development is predicated on the continued growth of exports, lacking any internal dynamic; (2) agricultural technology & production have declined sharply due to unrestricted United States imports, & the island economy contributes an increasingly diminshed share of its own food needs; (3) unemployment has increased as the number of rural migrants has exceeded the capacity of urban industrialization, & the standard of living of the masses has decreased; (4) the state fails to raise sufficient revenue because more than 50% of the Puerto Rican tax base is tax exempt. Independence together with transition to a socialist economy is seen as the only permanent solution to these problems. C. Moe.
In: The American foreign service journal, S. 10-11
ISSN: 0360-8425
In: The Freeman: ideas on liberty, Band 32, S. 592-604
ISSN: 0016-0652, 0445-2259