“…The 2008 crash resulted from the surplus of wealth unable to be recycled as investment into the capital circuit as a result of slumping consumption and declining relative profitability in conventional investment, prompting pressures to offload these surpluses lest the circuit of capital and profit-making grind to a halt (Robinson, 2018;Kotz, 2015Kotz, , 2010. In Central America, this resulted in the beginning of a steady decline in conventional transnational investment (Bárcena et al, 2018;Beteta & Moreno-Brid, 2014), even as various "spatial and other fixes" (Arrighi, 2004) driven by the financialization of agriculture and mining became more prominent vehicles for investment (Robinson, 2018;Taques et al, 2017;Kotz, 2010) resulting in proletarianization or declassing of peasant and semi-proletarian populations, and land-grabbing (Robinson, 2018; coffee blight, affecting one of the region's still major exports (Avelino et al, 2015). El Salvador was more directly affected by the combination of the financial crisis and the coffee blight than Guatemala.…”