>>91421>Since you are still able to publically defend Pinochet in ChileYou get publically shamed to do so by an important part of the population by doing so though. Not at a level to be a Nazi symphatizer in Europe, but at a level akin to be a Trump supporter in California, to make yourself an idea. It's not outlawed to display such opinions… yet. They have tried to approve Hate Speech laws, including Internet surveillance and having your ISP to store your Internet metadata by 2 years by law, granting the Government privileged access to it; with little to no visible opposition, even from the Neocons (UDI) who used to support Pinochet.
The thing is many of the machinery of the left (elections, propaganda, it's movements and actions) are centered around 'reivindications', and 'Ni perdon ni olvido' (Not forgiveness nor forgetfulness); so they fuel their rhetoric in bringing periodically the Pinochet regime onto the table, in a similar way as they do in Spain with Franco.
>The export price of copper dropping caused everything else to collapse with it?The copper price is projected to rise in the close future. But awful future deals and corruption in Codelco (state-run copper extraction and processing industry) make it unprofitable to pay for the increasing welfare state. So much that one of Codelco's chairmen had said last year "No tenemos ni un puto peso" (we haven't got a single fucking dime) in regards to Codelco's profit for that year.
https://archive.fo/pAnUBLithium is another issue. There are lots of shady businesses made by government and people close to it for lithium extraction rights, in exchange for political party financement (read SQM case)
>Additionally you have agriculture falling into neglect.I have not read too much in that matter. As far as I know fruit and cattle production have no reason to fall. Wood industry however, might have had their business affected by big fires every summer in the wood producing zone, besides of lack of sustainability plans to avoid drying and acidify the soil, and systematic burns of trucks in the Araucanía region.
However, our Central Bank is independent from the State and this has keeping us from printing money like crazy to pay for the increasing welfare state.
>You're already producing some copper products, but for some reason you seem content with just selling the raw stuff.I blame our lack of long-term investors. Most people with money to make big investments here don't like to invest in something that won't profit in a very short term. Extracting industry gives you money more quickly.
I also blame our geographic location. By manufacturing copper products we would compete with China, which, by being in the North Hemisphere, has closer access to a much greater market than us, limited to Latin America, the Antarctica and with some luck, Australia and New Zealand.
>It's just that I can't find translations of your parties' economic policies.Concertación (from Aylwin to Lagos period) has kept in line by having Chile being an economically open country. They increased the welfare state in some degree though and were corrupt as fuck. Piñera was the poster guy of Keynesianism, somewhat justified because we had a huge earthquake that affected most populated cities in Chile at the beginning of 2010. And Bachelet that just roleplayed as Angela Merkel.