Hygro
soundcloud.com/hygro/
Ok, so I spent 2.5 hours preparing this data, 3 hours including the post. In my 15 years on CFC a popular talking point among the right is how Pinochet was so good for the Chilean economy. I got my data from the world bank, stretching from 1960-2015. Spoiler alert: Chileans gonna Chile regardless of who is Head of State. That said, it's time to put the Allende-Pinochet competition to rest.
Chile's average gdp/capita growth rate since 1960 has been phenomenal, at 7.5% You can see a huge uptake when Allende takes power, a huge downturn when Pinochet takes power (copper exporter in a collapse of copper prices....) a rebound, and then a return to more normal. Note even the small jumps above positive are actually huge, Chinese level growth rates.
Because GDP is calculated annually, and the big events of politics and world commodity prices don't care where the earth is relative to the sun, I show a few different ways of calculating who is in power when and what their average growth rates. I think the meta-average of this, in bold, is the safest bet.
There is one example in which I compare apples to oranges to give Pinochet the most favorable look: Pinochet is CIC (Commander in Chief of the armed forces after retiring the presidency) so all economics/politics is under his threat, but officially out of his hands, against Allende-in-power's worst performance, where Pinochet gets some of Allende's credit. By any reasonable measure Allende's short stint's growth rates utterly stomp Pinochet's. The difference is ~8%. In otherwords, if Pinochet's economy has Chile doubling every 12 years, Allende has the economy doubling every 5.
Here's a graph of the averaged form
And again, all of this is a bit tongue in cheek. Heads of state hardly matter in the big picture. How Chileans Chile (verb), is a feature of the people, geography, infrastructure, modes of production, industries etc, regardless of left or right, is going to define their economic growth rates. Still, Allende wins the correlation game handedly.
PDF of my data at the bottom. Where my notes cut off, you can copy the cells and they will copy the words hidden behind the next cell. I (barely) clarify some things.
Chile's average gdp/capita growth rate since 1960 has been phenomenal, at 7.5% You can see a huge uptake when Allende takes power, a huge downturn when Pinochet takes power (copper exporter in a collapse of copper prices....) a rebound, and then a return to more normal. Note even the small jumps above positive are actually huge, Chinese level growth rates.

Because GDP is calculated annually, and the big events of politics and world commodity prices don't care where the earth is relative to the sun, I show a few different ways of calculating who is in power when and what their average growth rates. I think the meta-average of this, in bold, is the safest bet.
There is one example in which I compare apples to oranges to give Pinochet the most favorable look: Pinochet is CIC (Commander in Chief of the armed forces after retiring the presidency) so all economics/politics is under his threat, but officially out of his hands, against Allende-in-power's worst performance, where Pinochet gets some of Allende's credit. By any reasonable measure Allende's short stint's growth rates utterly stomp Pinochet's. The difference is ~8%. In otherwords, if Pinochet's economy has Chile doubling every 12 years, Allende has the economy doubling every 5.

Here's a graph of the averaged form

And again, all of this is a bit tongue in cheek. Heads of state hardly matter in the big picture. How Chileans Chile (verb), is a feature of the people, geography, infrastructure, modes of production, industries etc, regardless of left or right, is going to define their economic growth rates. Still, Allende wins the correlation game handedly.
PDF of my data at the bottom. Where my notes cut off, you can copy the cells and they will copy the words hidden behind the next cell. I (barely) clarify some things.