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by Hernando de Soto
From the most important economist in the Third World, a revolutionary and practical
plan for transforming underperforming economies-based on the forgotten history of how
wealth was created in the West.
Outside the West, in countries as different as Russia and Peru, it is not religion,
culture, or race issues that are blocking the spread of capitalism but the lack of a legal
process for making property systems work. Implementing major legal change so as to
establish a capitalist order involves changing peoples' beliefs, and de Soto contends this
is a political rather than a legal responsibility. He believes such a change can be
achieved if governments seriously focus upon the needs of their poor citizens for a
legally integrated property system that can convert their work and savings into capital.
Political action is necessary to ensure that government officials seriously accept the
real disparity of living conditions among their people, adopt a social contract, and then
overhaul their legal system.
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