Graduation Year

2025

Date of Submission

12-2024

Document Type

Campus Only Senior Thesis

Degree Name

Bachelor of Arts

Department

Government

Second Department

International Relations

Reader 1

Professor Lisa Koch

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2024 Gustavo E Molina

Abstract

This paper investigates the economic and social consequences of Nayib Bukele’s presidency in El Salvador, specifically evaluating the impact of his policies on crime, foreign direct investment, and fiscal reduction. The study assesses whether the economic benefits gained from Bukele’s crime reduction and neoliberal economic reforms outweigh the costs associated with these changes for the low-income. The paper compares the positive and negative impacts of Bukele's policies through an analysis of financial indicators such as FDI inflows, GINI coefficients, poverty rates, and government spending. These indicators help demonstrate how Bukele’s policies have shaped the country's fiscal health and social disparity. The analysis compares data from before and after Bukele’s presidency, paying particular attention to the country’s 50% increase in sovereign debt and a 3.1% rise in extreme poverty under his administration.

The study employs both qualitative and quantitative methods, including the examination of policy changes, statistical economic growth, and an analysis of social welfare impacts. The results indicate that while Bukele’s policies have led to a reduction in homicide rates from 105 per 100,000 inhabitants in 2017 to under 8 per 100,000 by 2024, they have also contributed to increasing inequality. Despite increased FDI, decreased crime rates, and a rise in innovative economic policies—the benefits of these changes have been uneven, with low-income communities experiencing a rise in extreme poverty. Rising poverty rates are exacerbated by Bukele's decision not to invest adequate levels of capital into services like healthcare and education. The absence of funding into these two critical sectors has only served to strengthen El Salavador’s cycle of marginalization, poverty, and crime.

The findings of this paper suggest that Bukele’s focus on security, neoliberal reforms, and fiscal reductions has achieved short-term economic growth but at the cost of exacerbating the country's socio-economic disparities. This paper concludes that while Bukele has successfully positioned El Salvador as a more secure and investment-attractive nation, the long-term sustainability of these gains remains uncertain. The significant implication of this research is that economic success, driven by FDI and artificial crime reduction, may not necessarily lead to broader social well-being unless coupled with significant investment in public services and structural reforms targeting inequality.

This thesis is restricted to the Claremont Colleges current faculty, students, and staff.

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