Many
Latin American thinkers argued that the United States used Latin American countries as "peripheral economies" at the expense of Latin American social and economic development, which many saw as an extension of
neo-colonialism and
neo-imperialism. This shift in thinking led to a surge of dialogue related to how Latin America could assert its social and economic independence from the United States. Many scholars argued that a shift to socialism could help liberate Latin America from this conflict. The
New Left emerged in Latin America, a group which sought to go beyond existing
Marxist–Leninist efforts at achieving economic equality and democracy to include social reform and address issues unique to Latin America such as racial and ethnic equality, indigenous rights and environmental issues. Notable New Left movements in Latin America include the
Cuban Revolution of 1959, the victory of the
Sandinista revolution in Nicaragua of 1979, the
Workers' Party government in Porto Alegre of 1990, among others. Because of its close proximity and strong
historical connection to the
United States,
Cuba served an integral role in
spreading socialism to the rest of
Latin America.
Che Guevara described Cuba as "a guiding light" to Latin American countries caught in conflict between
imperialism and socialism. In Guevara's speech "On Revolutionary Medicine", he recounts his travels through Latin America and the misery, hunger and disease he witnessed and explained how a shift to socialism could help alleviate these struggles. As part of the
New Left,
Fidel Castro and Che Guevara implemented leftist politics in Cuba while incorporating policies aimed at addressing social issues. Cuban officials intended for Cuba to spur similar leftist revolutions in the rest of Latin America, what he saw as a common "liberation struggle", in countries like
Venezuela,
Bolivia and
Nicaragua. In the case of
Juan Perón, elected president of Argentina on three times, his Third World socialist stance was fused with radical
populism, which aligned itself with the Third World and the
Non-Aligned Movement (what Perón called "the third position"), with a significant
state intervention for development such as
five-year plans, the
nationalization of railways, ports and banks, the creation of an agency to regulate
grain exports (the
IAPI) and the establishment of a modern
welfare state. Despite his
progressive policies, Perón did not define himself or his doctrine as "socialist" during his first presidencies (1946–1955), but he did later during his exile and during his third presidency (1973–1974) when he coined the term "Christian national socialism" (
socialismo nacional cristiano), sort of an Argentine way to socialism. Perón defined it as "a ‘national’ road to socialism, understood as a system of economic socialization and popular power respectful of specific national conditions and traditions." Amongst his influences, Perón listed the "
Nordic model",
corporatism and non-aligned, Third World socialist models such as
Christian socialism and
Nasserism. Scholars described Perón's ideology as a variant of non-Marxist Christian socialism, Third World socialism, or a fusion of "indigenous socialism with Argentine nationalism". == See also ==