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05-29-2007, 12:51 PM
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Silver
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Join Date: May 2004
Posts: 180
(30)
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Squatters vs Land Owners
Normally I stay out of capitalism/socialism/dictatorial type disputes. I tend to have some ideas and thoughts on how things could be done better depending on how governments behave. Though really for the most part in Latin America it can pretty well be summed up as to who is paying who. To put it in simpler terms, "Money talks, Bull**** walks."
Sometime I do find little gems to read and ponder. Even though this article is from the Argentine point of view, I can see the DR in the same light. What do you think? Could this happen in the DR?
How Property Ownership Changes Your World View — HBS Working Knowledge
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05-29-2007, 01:18 PM
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Gold
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Join Date: Feb 2007
Posts: 1,441
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Interesting article. Have only read the summary, not the research paper, though, but I agree that ownership puts people into the "haves" group from "have nots". Even if the "have" is of small value, it IS a "have". That means the life of the individual is not the one of dispair and being desperate about the future (e.g. people who have "nothing to loose"). But this goes more into sociological and socio-economical area so I stop here.
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05-29-2007, 01:29 PM
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Gold
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Join Date: Jan 2002
Posts: 10,860
(156)
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I think a key point is this:
Corruption is another issue. "If you perceive the system to be illegitimate, the tendency is to demand justice through increased government intervention and policies,"
And that, folks, is the story of the Dominican Republic!!
"Let the government fix it!!
HB
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05-29-2007, 02:16 PM
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Gold
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Join Date: Aug 2003
Posts: 1,685
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Quote:
Originally Posted by leromero
Normally I stay out of capitalism/socialism/dictatorial type disputes. I tend to have some ideas and thoughts on how things could be done better depending on how governments behave. Though really for the most part in Latin America it can pretty well be summed up as to who is paying who. To put it in simpler terms, "Money talks, Bull**** walks."
Sometime I do find little gems to read and ponder. Even though this article is from the Argentine point of view, I can see the DR in the same light. What do you think? Could this happen in the DR?
How Property Ownership Changes Your World View — HBS Working Knowledge
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There are squatters rights here in the DR from what I have been informed.
Then your question is could the whole mess of deciding who has the real rights to the property be held up in court because of corruption, etc - I think everybody already knows the answer to that one. 
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05-29-2007, 05:42 PM
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Silver
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Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 238
(10)
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Rights
I have a friend who has owned the same property for some 10 years. At one time he had a business there. But, through urban development he could no longer use the property for lack of customers. False titles were sold. He has been trying for 3 years to resolve the problem and with the help of the U.S. embassy. The property is worth around 3 million dollars. In court Danillo said well we are poor and you are rich. So basically go to hell gringo. That is Dominican justice.
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05-29-2007, 08:29 PM
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Silver
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Join Date: Jun 2006
Posts: 197
(10)
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by leromero
Sometime I do find little gems to read and ponder. Even though this article is from the Argentine point of view, I can see the DR in the same light. What do you think? Could this happen in the DR?
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You should read up on the renowned economist Hernando de Soto, who focuses mainly on his thesis that property rights and a formal property system are the most important characteristics in Capitalism. Clinton even called him “the world’s greatest living economist” for his work. The interesting thing is:
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Originally Posted by Leonel’s Breakfast with Bill Clinton
Entonces me preguntó que si conocía a Hernando de Soto, el peruano que se dio a conocer mundialmente con la publicación de su libro, El Otro Sendero, en el cual hacía un estudio sobre la economía informal.
No de manera personal, le respondí, aunque sí a través de sus publicaciones, muy especialmente de su último libro, El Misterio del Capital, en el que analiza el fenómeno de la formación de capital en los países pobres.
[...]
Me prometió que me pondría en contacto con Hernando de Soto y la organización que dirige, a los fines de que éste pueda visitar la República Dominicana y cooperar con el diseño de políticas que contribuyan a mejorar la situación de inequidad social en el país.
-( Source: Leonel’s website)
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Since then Hernando de Soto has visited to the DR. IMO when this whole “Buy a piece of paradise in the DR” thingy starts rolling for the American baby boomers, the property system will definitely improve.
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05-29-2007, 09:01 PM
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Gold
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Join Date: Mar 2005
Posts: 2,279
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O, how I miss basic econ, ..
A better, more comphehensive, natural example is Europe under absolute monarchies, when the King was absolute owner of the land and could have arbitrarily taken it from his subjects at any time, and/or arbitrarily taxed it any way he wanted it to fund his adventures. A second better example would be Europe under Feudalism. Both of those had to die before Capitalism could come of age -the subjects/peasants/people revolted and killed them both..
Capitalism didn't really take off in Europe till property rights and relative rule of law were put in place.
Last edited by aegap; 05-29-2007 at 09:08 PM.
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06-04-2007, 07:17 AM
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Silver
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Join Date: Nov 2006
Posts: 114
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There are a lot of critiques of de soto, but much of this applies more to continental Latin America, so I won't go there. Needless to say, it is not a simple issue, and there is a huge amount of evidence and common sense that counters De Soto.
The point of absolute monarchies is a bit off - in european Monarchies that lack a constitution, such as the Netherlands and the UK, the monarchy still has property rights even over "private" land. In fact, the crown could not, and did not, take land from the subjects as it wished, this was something that only existed (and still does sort of exist) on paper - there are legal, political and social barriers stopping this from happening.
The relationship between the rise of capitalism and the rise of property rights is way off - they happened at different times, with no link between them. I recommend a reading of E.P Thompson.
Anyway, there are some squatters rights, particularly regarding state land, but they are almost never enforced. Perversely, and with everything else in the DR, they are only enforced for the rich and not the poor. Likewise, when the state appropriates land in the DR, as it did around Miches and also COnstanza in the early 90's, it paid compensation to the rich and not the poor.
References on request.
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06-27-2007, 10:44 AM
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On Permanent Vacation!
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Join Date: Apr 2004
Posts: 3,495
(10)
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QUOTE=williamo1;532867]...I We both pay lawyers. What a mess. [/quote]
There's your answer, you said it yourself, amongst your almost twenty lines of text. Obviously, both lawyers are in cahoots, and the longer the feud exists, more money to them... Try a different approach. Nasty guys only understand nastiness.... 
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07-02-2007, 01:24 PM
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Bronze
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Join Date: Jan 2007
Posts: 31
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Quote:
Originally Posted by George Holmes
There are a lot of critiques of de soto, but much of this applies more to continental Latin America, so I won't go there...
The relationship between the rise of capitalism and the rise of property rights is way off - they happened at different times, with no link between them. I recommend a reading of E.P Thompson.
References on request.
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E.P. Thompson was apparently an English communist/socialist writer who died in 1993. DeSoto's main thesis on land and capital, popularized in "The Mystery of Capital" was not only published after his death but addresses an issue which only arose after his death. When the Soviet Union and it's client states collapsed in the early 90's a side effect was to carry a wave of liberalization (in the classical sense) all over the world. States divested ownership of industries, deregulated, tried to unleash the market. The results were mixed but in much of the developing world ran into problems.
DeSoto is asking: Why isn't capitalism working in the developing world? A question that didn't even arise until E.P. Thompson had been buried.
As to the rise of Capitalism and the rise of property rights - one of DeSoto's big projects is to study the rise of property rights from the 18th through the 20th century. The legal system's conversion of Land into a source of Capital occurred throughout that period and is ongoing. Capitalism coevolved through the same period and is still evolving. Perhaps you have a quite different sense that assumes these things happened at some specific time in the past rather than continuously over centuries.
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