Honduras Historical Setting
Altar with representation of Mayan death god, in Copán
THROUGHOUT ITS HISTORY, Honduras has been an
underdeveloped area.
Its rugged topography and lack of good ports on the
Pacific coast
have combined to keep it relatively isolated from the
mainstream of
social and economic development. The capital, Tegucigalpa,
is
located high in the central mountains, removed from the
isthmus's
main north-south transportation routes.
The rugged topography and semi-isolation have provided
Honduras
some advantages as well as disadvantages. Unlike the
neighboring
republics of El Salvador and Guatemala, Honduras did not
produce a
totally dominant landholding oligarchy. It also escaped
the turmoil
over transisthmian transit routes that plagued Nicaragua
and
Panama. Finally, Honduras, alone among Central America's
republics,
is not dominated by a single city. The isolation of the
capital led
to the rise of San Pedro Sula in the twentieth century as
the
nation's commercial and industrial center.
However, lack of development produced, for much of
Honduras's
history, relatively weak social and political
institutions. Much of
the nation's history has been marked by long periods of
political
instability, frequent military coups, and considerable
government
corruption and inefficiency. External powers have
consistently
exploited and aggravated these problems. Neighboring
Central
American nations have repeatedly intervened in Honduran
internal
affairs, giving Hondurans a strong fear of foreign attack.
Countries outside the region also have manipulated
Honduran
politics from time to time to suit their own national
interests.
During the first half of the twentieth century, the
Honduran
economy was so dominated by the United Fruit Company and
the
Standard Fruit Company that company managers were
frequently
perceived as exercising as much power as the Honduran
president.
Increased nationalism and economic diversification have
changed
this situation in recent decades, but in the early 1990s,
Honduras
remained a nation highly sensitive to and dependent on
external
forces. Despite both national and international efforts,
Honduras
remained poor and vulnerable. In the 1980s, security
concerns
centered on the Nicaraguan border; in the early 1990s,
concern
centered on El Salvador because of its insurgency problems
and its
boundary dispute with Honduras.
Both a product and a victim of its past, in the
mid-1990s,
Honduras was striving to find some means of gaining the
benefits of
modernization while avoiding the violent conflicts that
wracked its
neighbors in the 1980s.
Data as of December 1993
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