The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
July 2015 - Brazil’s to-do list for growth: Where to start?FGV Brazil
The second quarter of 2015 closed with negative numbers for the Brazilian economy and fading hope that it will soon be possible to discern whether the economy was heading to recovery. The government has reacted to the dim economic prospects with measures directed to two sectors considered vital for growth: infrastructure (the Investment Program in Logistics, PIL) and exports (the National Export Plan, PNE).
January 2011 - Brazil: Moving Up in the world?FGV Brazil
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
October 2011 - Recycling: Who pays for it?FGV Brazil
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
November 2010 - Growing Investment FundsFGV Brazil
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
Expanding the simplified tax system for small businesses may have higher costs and fewer productivity, employment, and income distribution benefits.
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
June 2010 - Financial system: Long-term challengesFGV Brazil
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
July 2015 - Brazil’s to-do list for growth: Where to start?FGV Brazil
The second quarter of 2015 closed with negative numbers for the Brazilian economy and fading hope that it will soon be possible to discern whether the economy was heading to recovery. The government has reacted to the dim economic prospects with measures directed to two sectors considered vital for growth: infrastructure (the Investment Program in Logistics, PIL) and exports (the National Export Plan, PNE).
January 2011 - Brazil: Moving Up in the world?FGV Brazil
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
October 2011 - Recycling: Who pays for it?FGV Brazil
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
November 2010 - Growing Investment FundsFGV Brazil
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
Expanding the simplified tax system for small businesses may have higher costs and fewer productivity, employment, and income distribution benefits.
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
June 2010 - Financial system: Long-term challengesFGV Brazil
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
September 2016 - Recovery still uncertainFGV Brazil
Improvement in some indicators suggests that the recession may be bottoming out, but there are still many uncertainties about the likely speed of an economic recovery.
This is the last edition of The Brazilian Economy, one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
July 2014 - How to improve education qualityFGV Brazil
Education in Brazil has advanced in terms of school access, but its quality is still questionable. That calls not just for more and better investments in education but perhaps also for reformulation of the entire educational system.
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
April 2013 - Brazil: Is government economic activism misdirected?FGV Brazil
In response to lost investment and growth, government policies to stimulate the economy have fallen short of success—perhaps because the policies themselves are part of the problem.
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
August 2012 - Why investment is still tied upFGV Brazil
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
April 2010 - Competition and credit boomFGV Brazil
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
June 2015 - Water: How to turn the tap back onFGV Brazil
The loss of pace in the Brazilian economy, beginning in 2011 and worsening ever since, surprised many analysts and is still heavily debated. There is no consensus on whether the deceleration arose from international or internal factors.
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
Affiliate Marketing is actually a derivative of Internet marketing where the advertisement publisher gets paid for every consumer or sales supplied by him. Affiliate advertising could be the basic for all other Internet marketing methods.
This is our accounting presentation. The presentation topic is Economy-of-countries.
“Economy is a system by which people get their living”.
Hope you enjoy it...
November 2013 - Avoiding the middle-income trapFGV Brazil
A few years ago, when China looked at Brazil with great interest, it was not only to estimate its potential as a supplier of food and basic supplies for expanding its infrastructure.
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
Controlling the financial system to prevent economic debacle in brazilFernando Alcoforado
Anyone who understand economics knows that in the economic stagnation that affect Brazil at the time, economic growth is only achieved since the government raise its spending to offset the fall in consumption and investment. Who formulated this teaching was the great economist John Maynard Keynes in the mid-twentieth century. The argument put forward by the government that first need to reduce government spending and then to promote economic growth is totally irrational from the Keynesian perspective. In addition, the Michel Temer government is blackmailing with the population to say that the alternative is cutting government spending or tax increases. It is an unfortunate fact the Michel Temer government want to solve the economic crisis in Brazil that worsens every day with the adoption of fiscal adjustment that reduces public spending and tends to deepen the process of economic stagnation in the country.
Brazil needs to address the low efficiency of its investment in costly water and sanitation projects that delay development.
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
We
want
to
present
here
the
MacroEconomics
of
a
fascinaFng
Delta
region.
The
only
point
is
that
this
Delta
is
not
the
Delta
of
the
Mississippi
nor
the
Nile
Delta
but
the
Delta
of
the
Nvrin.
The
Nvrin
exists
as
a
trend,
a
mental
breaker.
Its
existence
in
mathemaFcal
terms
must
be
seen
as
an
inducFve
limit
of
all
posiFve
forces
in
the
current
world
economy,
as
the
crystallisaFon
of
a
perfect
economic
system.
The
Americas
of
the
Great
Expansion
defended
the
pursuit
of
Wealth
as
a
value
in
itself.
A
spiritual
value.
The
Originality
of
the
Nvrin
is
to
be
even
more
vocal
and
precise:
Spending
money
is
a
value
in
itself,
the
ulFmate
spiritual
value.
So,
please,
discover
in
the
following
slides
the
breath
of
a
different
civilisaFon.
With
different
values,
different
social
and
societal
norms.
The
Delta
of
the
Nvrin
region.
A
region
that
will
convince
you
the
Ancient
Greece
is
sFll
somewhere
out there.
September 2011 – Can Brazil become a creative economy?FGV Brazil
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
September 2016 - Recovery still uncertainFGV Brazil
Improvement in some indicators suggests that the recession may be bottoming out, but there are still many uncertainties about the likely speed of an economic recovery.
This is the last edition of The Brazilian Economy, one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
July 2014 - How to improve education qualityFGV Brazil
Education in Brazil has advanced in terms of school access, but its quality is still questionable. That calls not just for more and better investments in education but perhaps also for reformulation of the entire educational system.
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
April 2013 - Brazil: Is government economic activism misdirected?FGV Brazil
In response to lost investment and growth, government policies to stimulate the economy have fallen short of success—perhaps because the policies themselves are part of the problem.
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
August 2012 - Why investment is still tied upFGV Brazil
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
April 2010 - Competition and credit boomFGV Brazil
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
June 2015 - Water: How to turn the tap back onFGV Brazil
The loss of pace in the Brazilian economy, beginning in 2011 and worsening ever since, surprised many analysts and is still heavily debated. There is no consensus on whether the deceleration arose from international or internal factors.
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
Affiliate Marketing is actually a derivative of Internet marketing where the advertisement publisher gets paid for every consumer or sales supplied by him. Affiliate advertising could be the basic for all other Internet marketing methods.
This is our accounting presentation. The presentation topic is Economy-of-countries.
“Economy is a system by which people get their living”.
Hope you enjoy it...
November 2013 - Avoiding the middle-income trapFGV Brazil
A few years ago, when China looked at Brazil with great interest, it was not only to estimate its potential as a supplier of food and basic supplies for expanding its infrastructure.
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
Controlling the financial system to prevent economic debacle in brazilFernando Alcoforado
Anyone who understand economics knows that in the economic stagnation that affect Brazil at the time, economic growth is only achieved since the government raise its spending to offset the fall in consumption and investment. Who formulated this teaching was the great economist John Maynard Keynes in the mid-twentieth century. The argument put forward by the government that first need to reduce government spending and then to promote economic growth is totally irrational from the Keynesian perspective. In addition, the Michel Temer government is blackmailing with the population to say that the alternative is cutting government spending or tax increases. It is an unfortunate fact the Michel Temer government want to solve the economic crisis in Brazil that worsens every day with the adoption of fiscal adjustment that reduces public spending and tends to deepen the process of economic stagnation in the country.
Brazil needs to address the low efficiency of its investment in costly water and sanitation projects that delay development.
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
We
want
to
present
here
the
MacroEconomics
of
a
fascinaFng
Delta
region.
The
only
point
is
that
this
Delta
is
not
the
Delta
of
the
Mississippi
nor
the
Nile
Delta
but
the
Delta
of
the
Nvrin.
The
Nvrin
exists
as
a
trend,
a
mental
breaker.
Its
existence
in
mathemaFcal
terms
must
be
seen
as
an
inducFve
limit
of
all
posiFve
forces
in
the
current
world
economy,
as
the
crystallisaFon
of
a
perfect
economic
system.
The
Americas
of
the
Great
Expansion
defended
the
pursuit
of
Wealth
as
a
value
in
itself.
A
spiritual
value.
The
Originality
of
the
Nvrin
is
to
be
even
more
vocal
and
precise:
Spending
money
is
a
value
in
itself,
the
ulFmate
spiritual
value.
So,
please,
discover
in
the
following
slides
the
breath
of
a
different
civilisaFon.
With
different
values,
different
social
and
societal
norms.
The
Delta
of
the
Nvrin
region.
A
region
that
will
convince
you
the
Ancient
Greece
is
sFll
somewhere
out there.
September 2011 – Can Brazil become a creative economy?FGV Brazil
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
October 2010 - Construction takes a great leap forwardFGV Brazil
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
January 2015 - Rebalancing Brazil's economy will not be easyFGV Brazil
Dramatic events in the second half of 2014 transformed the scenario at the turn of the year in Brazil into a big question mark.
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
June 2012 - Electric energy sector needs rewiringFGV Brazil
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
August 2013 - Brazil’s rising trade imbalanceFGV Brazil
The Brazilian trade balance deficit in the first seven months of 2013 was US$5 billion, the highest recorded since 1993. It has deeply disappointed the expectations of analysts, who hoped for a recovery last July.
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
Investors, analysts, and economists who are concerned about the direction of fiscal policy, are becoming ever more skeptical about the direction of Brazil’s economy. Though all is not yet lost, if the country is to grow sustainably, the government must make a difficult choice between social programs and the tax burden.
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
July 2012 - Latin America: Growing in different directionsFGV Brazil
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
March 2015 - Lower commodities prices depress recoveryFGV Brazil
The depressing international outlook, in which the only bright spot is the recovery of the US economy, and Brazil’s misguided policies for making its industry more competitive are likely to prevent a vigorous recovery of the country's exports in 2015, after a fall of 7% in 2014.
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
February 2015 - Can natural gas make power supply reliable?FGV Brazil
Power interruptions make it clear that something is needed to plug the holes in Brazil’s energy matrix. One possible long-term solution for the recurring drains on energy may be natural gas.
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
January 2016 - Labor market at breaking pointFGV Brazil
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
The Brazilian Economy is one of the oldest publications for expert economic analysis of both the Brazilian and international economies. Through this publication, FGV’s Brazilian Institute of Economics and Finance (FGV/IBRE) compares different periods of the economy, assessing both macroeconomic considerations and scenarios related to finance, administration, marketing, management, insurance, statistics, and price indices.
For more information, and Brazilian economic index results, visit: http://bit.ly/1EA1Loz
Similar to December 2010 - Domestic Market: Set to soar (20)
What are the chances of your country winning the 2018 World Cup?
FGV's mathematical model predicts that Brazil has the greatest chances of winning.
http://fgv.br/emap/copa-2018
Interval observer for uncertain time-varying SIR-SI model of vector-borne dis...FGV Brazil
The issue of state estimation is considered for an SIR-SI model describing a vector-borne disease such as dengue fever, with seasonal variations and uncertainties in the transmission rates. Assuming continuous measurement of the number of new infectives in the host population per unit time, a class of interval observers with estimate-dependent gain is constructed, and asymptotic error bounds are provided. The synthesis method is based on the search for a common linear Lyapunov function for monotone systems representing the evolution of the estimation errors.
Date: 2017
Authors:
Soledad Aronna, Maria
Bliman, Pierre-Alexandre
Ensuring successful introduction of Wolbachia in natural populations of Aedes...FGV Brazil
The control of the spread of dengue fever by introduction of the intracellular parasitic bacterium Wolbachia in populations of the vector Aedes aegypti, is presently one of the most promising tools for eliminating dengue, in the absence of an efficient vaccine. The success of this operation requires locally careful planning to determine the adequate number of individuals carrying the wolbachia parasite that need to be introduced into the natural population. The introduced mosquitoes are expected to eventually replace the Wolbachia-free population and guarantee permanent protection against the transmission of dengue to human. In this study, we propose and analyze a model describing the fundamental aspects of the competition between mosquitoes carrying Wolbachia and mosquitoes free of the parasite. We then use feedback control techniques to devise an introduction protocol which is proved to guarantee that the population converges to a stable equilibrium where the totality of mosquitoes carry Wolbachia.
Date: 2015-03-19
Authors:
Bliman, Pierre-Alexandre
Soledad Aronna, Maria
Coelho, Flávio Codeço
Silva, Moacyr da
The resource curse reloaded: revisiting the Dutch disease with economic compl...FGV Brazil
This paper shows that the Dutch disease can be more formally characterised as low economic complexity using ECI-type indicators; there is a solid and robust inverse relationship between exports concentrating on natural resources and economic complexity as measured by complexity indicators for a database of 122 countries from 1963 to 2013. In a large majority of cases, oil answers for shares in excess of 50% of exports. In addition to empirical panel analysis, we address case studies concerned with Indonesia and Nigeria and introduce a brief review of the theoretical literature on the topic. Indonesia is considered in the literature as a good example in avoiding the negative effects of the Dutch disease, whereas Nigeria is taken as a bad example in terms of institutions and policies adopted during the seventies and eighties. The empirical results show that complexity analysis and Big Data may offer significant contributions to the still-current debate surrounding the Dutch disease.
Date: 2017-03
Authors:
Camargo, Jhean Steffan Martines de
Gala, Paulo
The Economic Commission for Latin America (ECLA) was right: scale-free comple...FGV Brazil
The main purpose of this paper is to apply big-data and scale-free complex network techniques to the study of world trade, with a specific focus on the investigation of ECLA and structuralist ideas. A secondary objective is to illustrate the potentialities of the use of the new science of complex networks in economics, in what has been recently referred to as an econophysics research agenda. We work with a trade network of 101 countries and 762 products (SITC-4) which generated 1,756,224 trade links in 2013. The empirical results based on network analysis and computational methods reported here point in the direction of what ECLA economists used to argue; countries with higher income per capita concentrate in producing and exporting manufactured and complex goods at the center of the trade network; countries with lower income per capita specialize in producing and exporting non-complex commodities at the network’s periphery.
Date: 2017-03
Authors:
Gala, Paulo
Camargo, Jhean Steffan Martines de
Freitas, Elton
Cost of equity estimation for the Brazilian market: a test of the Goldman Sac...FGV Brazil
As an approach to determining the degree of integration of the Brazilian economy, this paper seeks to test the explanatory power of the Goldman Sachs Model for the expected returns by a foreign investor in the Brazilian market during the past eleven years (2004-2014). Using data for the stocks of 57 of the most actively traded firms at the BM&FBovespa, it begins by testing directly the degree of integration of the Brazilian economy during this period, in an attempt to better understand the context in which the model has been used. In sequence, in an indirect test of the Goldman Sachs model, the risk factor betas (market risk and country risk) of the sample stocks were estimated and a panel regression of expected stock returns on these betas was performed. It was found that country risk is not a statistically significant explanation of expected returns, indicating that it is being added in an ad hoc fashion by market practitioners to their cost of equity calculations. Thus, although there is evidence of a positive and significant relationship between systematic risk and return, the results for country risk demonstrate that the Goldman Sachs Model was not a satisfactory explanation of expected returns in the Brazilian market in the past eleven years, leading us to question the validity of its application in practice. By adding a size premium factor to the model, there is evidence of a negative and significant relationship between companies’ size and return, although country risk remains not satisfactory to explain stock expected returns.
Date: 2017-03
Authors:
Guanais, Luiz Felipe Poli
Sanvicente, Antonio Zoratto
Sheng, Hsia Hua
A dynamic Nelson-Siegel model with forward-looking indicators for the yield c...FGV Brazil
This paper proposes a Factor-Augmented Dynamic Nelson-Siegel (FADNS) model to predict the yield curve in the US that relies on a large data set of weekly financial and macroeconomic variables. The FADNS model significantly improves interest rate forecasts relative to the extant models in the literature. For longer horizons, it beats autoregressive alternatives, with a reduction in mean absolute error of up to 40%. For shorter horizons, it offers a good challenge to autoregressive forecasting models, outperforming them for the 7- and 10-year yields. The out-of-sample analysis shows that the good performance comes mostly from the forward-looking nature of the variables we employ. Including them reduces the mean absolute error in 5 basis points on average with respect to models that reflect only past macroeconomic events.
Date: 2017-03
Authors:
Vieira, Fausto José Araújo
Chague, Fernando Daniel
Fernandes, Marcelo
Improving on daily measures of price discoveryFGV Brazil
We formulate a continuous-time price discovery model in which the price discovery measure varies (stochastically) at daily frequency. We estimate daily measures of price discovery using a kernel-based OLS estimator instead of running separate daily VECM regressions as standard in the literature. We show that our estimator is not only consistent, but also outperforms the standard daily VECM in finite samples. We illustrate our theoretical findings by studying the price discovery process of 10 actively traded stocks in the U.S. from 2007 to 2013.
Date: 2017-03
Authors:
Dias, Gustavo Fruet
Fernandes, Marcelo
Scherrer, Cristina Mabel
Disentangling the effect of private and public cash flows on firm valueFGV Brazil
This paper presents a simple model for dual-class stock shares, in which common shareholders receive both public and private cash flows (i.e. dividends and any private benefit of holding voting rights) and preferred shareholders only receive public cash flows (i.e. dividends). The dual-class premium is driven not only by the firm's ability to generate cash flows, but also by voting rights. We isolate these two effects in order to identify the role of voting rights on equity-holders' wealth. In particular, we employ a cointegrated VAR model to retrieve the impact of the voting rights value on cash flow rights. We finnd a negative relation between the value of the voting right and the preferred shareholders' wealth for Brazilian cross- listed firms. In addition, we examine the connection between the voting right value and market and firm specific risks.
Date: 2017-03
Authors:
Autor
Scherrer, Cristina Mabel
Fernandes, Marcelo
Mandatory IFRS adoption in Brazil and firm valueFGV Brazil
Using diff-in-diff approaches and the propensity-score matching, this study focuses on firm-level Tobin´s q and Market-to-book outcomes for Brazilian firms who in 2008 were required by Law 11.638/07 to adopt the full International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) by 2010. Brazil’s tier-system of corporate governance standards for publicly-traded firms, its uniquely wholesale adoption of the IFRS, and the previously considerable gap between its national GAAP and IFRS readily lend the scenario to research, which thus far finds small or inconsistent results when focused on IFRS adoption-related outcomes in Europe and China. However, while these features recommend the transitioned Brazilian equity market to analysis, additional unique features, such as its small population size and its limited historical data -- of varied quality – increase the challenge in selecting a suitable empirical methodology. Using quarterly data from 2006-2011, control firms in the Nivel II and Novo Mercado tiers of Bovespa which already complied with higher quality accounting standards are matched to treatment firms in the Regular and Nivel I tiers with similar averaged values of size and sector. Our results suggest that there is a positive impact on Tobin´s q and Market-to-book for firms who are forced to adopt IFRS in Brazil. We can observe the same results when we consider all variables winsorized at 5% level. We also find a positive relation between the firm value (measured by Tobin´s q and Market-to-book) and net income. Firms with higher net income are more likely to have higher Tobin´s q and Market-tobook. In an opposite way, we find a negative relation among firm value, size, Ebit-to-sales, sales growth and PPE-to-sales. All results are statistically significant at 1% level. '
Date: 2017-03
Authors:
Sampaio, Joelson Oliveira
Gallucci Netto, Humberto
Silva, Vinícius Augusto Brunassi
Dotcom bubble and underpricing: conjectures and evidenceFGV Brazil
We provide conjectures for what caused the price spiral and the high underpricing of the dotcom bubble of 1999–2000. We raise two conjectures for the price spiral. First, given the uncertainty about the growth opportunities generated by the new technologies and their spillover effects across technology industries, investors saw the inflow of a large number of high-growth firms as a sign of high growth rates for the market as a whole. Second, investors interpreted the wave of highly underpriced IPOs as an opportunity to obtain gains by investing in newly public companies. The underpricing resulted from the emergence a large cohort of firms racing for market leadership. Fundamentals pricing at the IPO was part of their strategy. We provide evidence for our conjectures. We show that returns on NASDAQ composite index are explained by the flow of high-growth (or highly underpriced) IPOs; the high underpricing can be fully explained by firms’ characteristics and strategic goals. We also show that, contrary to alternatives explanations, underpricing was not associated with top underwriting, there was no deterioration of issuers’ quality, and top underwriters and analysts became more selective.
Date: 2017-03
Authors:
Autor
Carvalho, Antonio Gledson de
Pinheiro, Roberto Benjamin
Sampaio, Joelson Oliveira
Contingent judicial deference: theory and application to usury lawsFGV Brazil
Legislation that seems unreasonable to courts is less likely to be followed. Building on this premise, we propose a model and obtain two main results. First, the enactment of legislation prohibiting something raises the probability that courts will allow related things not expressly forbidden. In particular, the imposition of an interest rate ceiling can make it more likely that courts will validate contracts with interest rates below the legislated cap. Second, legal uncertainty is greater with legislation that commands little deference from courts than with legislation that commands none. We discuss examples of effects of legislated prohibitions (and, in particular, usury laws) that are consistent with the model.
Date: 2017-03
Authors:
Guimarães, Bernardo
Salama, Bruno Meyerhof
Education quality and returns to schooling: evidence from migrants in BrazilFGV Brazil
We provide a new education quality index for states within a developing country using 2010 Brazilian data. This measure is constructed based on the notion that the financial returns obtained from an additional year of schooling can be
seen as being derived from the value that market forces assign to this education. We use migrant data to estimate returns to schooling of individuals who studied in different states but who work in the same labor market. We find very heterogeneous educational qualities across states: the poorest Brazilian region presents education quality levels that are approximately equal to one-third of the average of all other regions, a gap three times larger than the one suggested by standardized test scores. We compare our index with standardized test scores, educational outcome variables, and public expenditure per schooling stage at the state level, producing new evidence related to education in a large developing country. We conduct an education quality-adjusted development accounting exercise for Brazilian states and find that human capital accounts for 26%-31% of output per worker differences. Adjusting for quality increases human capital’s explanatory power by 60%.
Date: 2017-02
Authors:
Brotherhood, Luiz Mário
Ferreira, Pedro Cavalcanti
Santos, Cézar Augusto Ramos
On October 31st and November 1st, 2016, the Center for Regulation and Infrastructure from Fundação Getulio Vargas (FGV CERI) organized a two-day workshop discussion in collaboration with the World Bank and ABRACE. The event gathered regulators, government representatives, academics, operators, financial institutions and investors. The debate focused on the main challenges faced by the current restructuring process of the Brazilian gas industry. This document presents the main points discussed during the debates.
Date: 2017-01
Authors:
Vazquez, Miguel
Amorim, Lívia
Dutra, Joísa Campanher
The impact of government equity investment on internationalization: the case ...FGV Brazil
We examine the impact of government equity ownership on the degree of internationalization of emerging market firms. Our analysis of 173 Brazilian publicly traded firms from 2002 to 2011 shows that the higher the equity held by the state through the state investment bank and the pension funds of SOEs and privatized SOEs, the higher the firm’s degree of internationalization. Firms in which the government shared control with families, and with both families and foreigners, had a higher degree of internationalization. Our findings underline the importance of the institutional context in explaining the internationalization of Brazilian firms.
Date: 2016
Author:
Sheng, Hsia Hua
Techno-government networks: Actor-Network Theory in electronic government res...FGV Brazil
The Actor-Network Theory (ANT) is a theoretical approach for the study of controversies associated with scientific discoveries and technological innovations through the networks of actors involved in such actions. This approach has generated studies in Information Systems (IS) since 1990, however few studies have examined the use of this approach in the e-government area. Thus, this paper aims to broaden the theoretical approaches on e-government, by presenting ANT as a theoretical framework for e-government studies via published empirical work. For this reason, the historical background of ANT is described, duly listing its theoretical and methodological premises. In addition to this, one presented ANT-based e-government works, in order to illustrate how ANT can be applied in empirical studies in this knowledge area.
Date: 2016
Authors:
Fornazin, Marcelo
Joia, Luiz Antonio
Condemning corruption while condoning inefficiency: an experimental investiga...FGV Brazil
This article reports results from an economic experiment that investigates to what extent voters punish corruption and waste in elections. While both are responsible for a loss of welfare for voters, they are not necessarily perceived as equally immoral. The empirical literature in political agency has not yet dealt with these two dimensions that determine voters’ choices. Our results suggest that morality and norms are indeed crucial for a superior voting equilibrium in systems with heterogeneous politicians: while corruption is always punished, self-interest alone – in the absence of norms – leads to the acceptance and perpetuation of waste and social losses.
Date: 2016
Authors:
Arvate, Paulo Roberto
Souza, Sergio Mittlaender Leme de
Condemning corruption while condoning inefficiency: an experimental investiga...
December 2010 - Domestic Market: Set to soar
1. Economy, politics and policy issues • DECEMBER 2010 • vol. 2 • nº 12
Publication of Getulio Vargas FoundationFGV
BRAZILIAN
ECONOMY
ThE
Set
tosoar
DOMESTIC MARKET
The emergence of
a new middle class
makes the Brazilian
domestic market one
of the most attractive
in the world. Building
up that group,
however, will require
the new government to
focus on industry and
investment.
IBRE OUTLOOK
Risks and uncertainties of economic policy
Politics New government: Mixed signs
Interview Alicia Bárcena, Executive secretary of the Economic Commission for
Latin America and the Caribbean
2. GENERAL INDEX AND
ECONOMIC INDICATORS
ACCORDING TO THE PROFILE
OF EACH COMPANY MEANS
THAT YOU HAVE 100%
CHANCES TO IMPROVE YOUR
COMPANY’S PERFORMANCE
PRICE INDEXES AND
ECONOMIC INDICATORS
ACCORDING TO THE PROFILE
OF EACH COMPANY MEANS
THAT YOU HAVE 100%
CHANCES TO IMPROVE YOUR
COMPANY’S PERFORMANCE
For the production of price indices and economic indicators, the Brazilian Institute of Economics (IBRE) has a unique
structure of research in Brazil in size and quality: eight offices located in major capitals of the country, researching
prices for all units of the Federation, both retail and wholesale. IBRE collects monthly prices of around 200,000 products
and services with the help of 15,000 companies and informants. Apart from general indices, IBRE develops indicators
specifically directed to a sector, activity or company.
Explore the world of IBRE indicators in our site:
General Price Index, Sector Price Indices, Household Qualitative Research, Consumer Confidence Surveys, Industry
Surveys, and Database.
www.fgv.br/dgd Phone (55-21) 3788-6799
3. 33
December 2010
IN THIS ISSUE
BRAZILIAN
ECONOMY
The
18126
from the editors
5 New Year’s promises and risks
As this issue makes clear, Brazil and its
economy are well positioned for the future,
and so are its people. But there are clouds
on the horizon that will bear watching.
Previous administrations have constructed
a solid path to future economic success for
Brazil. The new administration must now
decide how to follow that path and avoid
such tempting side roads as populism.
politics
6 New government: Mixed signs
Dilma Rousseff’s early appointments
suggest that her administration will
indeed continue the policies of the Lula
administration. But despite her vow of
fiscal austerity, some have doubts about
the autonomy of the Central Bank and
the government’s fiscal expansionism.
Problems with either could entrench
inflationary expectations and make
it much more difficult to curb rising
inflation. Concerns about the Central
Bank have been exacerbated by reports
that the previous Governor, Henrique
Meirelles, chose to leave because he had
conditioned his stay on keeping Bank
operations autonomous. Our analyst sees
the potential for conflict between those in
the new government who lean toward the
national development view, which implies
more government intervention in the
economy, and those who hold to what has
become a more traditional approach, one
that has served Brazil well through several
administrations.
ibre outlook
8 Brazil and the new government:
Risks and uncertainties of economic
policy
At a roundtable, “Brazil and the New
Government,” last November economists
from the Brazilian Institute of Economics
(IBRE) were markedly more optimistic
about what lies ahead for Brazil than those
representing private companies. The former
tend to be more convinced that the new
government is not likely to cause any major
disruptions in current economic policy,
although they do recognize that there are
risks related to how consistent fiscal and
monetary policies to control inflation will be,
and that the Central Bank will continue to
have the autonomy to raise the benchmark
interest rate, if necessary. The latter believe
it will take more than tightening fiscal policy
to bring inflation down, and the Central
Bank is not concerned enough about
interest rates. They tend to be of the opinion
that a rise in interest rates will be critical
to manage the expectations of economic
agents and avoid losing control of inflation.
Liliana Lavoratti details the arguments made
at the roundtable
Interview
12 The domestic market: Engine of
the economy?
“Brazil has succeeded in showing that as
the poor’s income increases the engine
of the economy could be the domestic
market,” Alicia Bárcena, executive secretary
of the Economic Commission for Latin
America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), tells
Solange Monteiro in an exclusive interview.
She also explains how the region as a
whole is prospering because its member
countries have adopted authentically
prudential economic policies, discusses
how important a coherent industrial
policy is, and analyzes what China
means to the region. She also expresses
concern that over- and undervaluation of
currencies worldwide is producing a global
imbalance, and says that countries in the
region must seek an appropriate mix of
industrial, monetary, and fiscal policies that
will encourage both domestic and external
demand.
cover story
18 The domestic market: Set to
spend more
A new middle class has emerged thanks
to government countercyclical policies
adopted at the peak of the global
financial crisis in late 2008; its continued
consumption has helped the country
maintain a pace of recovery that has
turned Brazil into a global star. Particularly
encouraging is that 70% of the new
consumption is based on an increase in
formal jobs rather than contributions from
government programs. The signs of middle
class activity in the market are everywhere:
more of the middle class now have debit
and credit cards; shopping malls are
springing up even in rural areas. Solange
Monteiro explains what the government
must do now to further build up that
group, which already represents 46% of
purchasing power in Brazil.
4. Economy, politics, and policy issues
A publication of the Brazilian Institute of
Economics. The views expressed in the articles
are those of the authors and do not necessarily
represent those of the IBRE. Reproduction of the
content is permitted with editors’ authorization.
Chief Editor
Vagner Laerte Ardeo
Managing Editor
Claudio Roberto Gomes Conceição
Editors
Anne Grant
Pinheiro Ronci
Bertholdo de Castro
Liliana Lavoratti
Art Editors
Ana Elisa Galvão
Sonia Goulart
Administrative Secretary
Rosamaria Lima da Silva
Contributors to this issue
Solange Monteiro
Liliana Lavoratti
The Getulio Vargas Foundation is a private, nonpartisan, nonpro-
fit institution established in 1944, and is devoted to research and
teachingofsocialsciencesaswellastoenvironmentalprotection
and sustainable development.
Executive Board
President: Carlos Ivan Simonsen Leal
Vice-Presidents: Francisco Oswaldo Neves Dornelles, Marcos
Cintra Cavalcanti de Albuquerque e Sergio Franklin Quintella.
IBRE – Brazilian Institute of Economics
The institute was established in 1951 and works as the “Think
Tank” of the Getulio Vargas Foundation. It is responsible for
calculation of the most used price indices and business and
consumer surveys of the Brazilian economy.
Director: Luiz Guilherme Schymura de Oliveira
Vice-Director: Vagner Laerte Ardeo
APPLIED ECONOMIC RESEARCH
Center for Economic Growth: Regis Bonelli, Samuel de Abreu
Pessoa, Fernando de Holanda Barbosa Filho
Center of Economy and Oil: Azevedo Adriana Hernandez
Perez, Mauricio Pinheiro Canêdo
Center for International Economics: Lia Valls Pereira
Center of Agricultural Economics: Mauro Rezende Lopes,
Ignez Guatimosim Vidigal Lopes, Daniela de Paula Rocha
CONSULTING AND STATISTICS PRODUCTION
Superintendent of Prices: Vagner Laerte Ardeo (Superin-
tendent) and Salomão Lipcovitch Quadros da Silva (Deputy
Superintendent)
Superintendent of Economic Cycles: Vagner Laerte Ardeo
(Superintendent) and Aloisio Campelo Júnior (Deputy Supe-
rintendent)
Superintendent of Institutional Clients: Rodrigo Moura
(Superintendent) and Rebecca Wellington dos Santos Barros
(Deputy Superintendent)
Superintendent of Operations: Rodrigo Moura (Superinten-
dent) and Marcelo Guimarães Conte (Deputy Superintendent)
Superintendent of Economic Studies: Marcio Lago Couto
Address
Rua Barão de Itambi, 60 – 5º andar
Botafogo – CEP 22231-000
Rio de Janeiro – RJ – Brazil
Tel.: 55 (21) 3799-6799
Email: ibre@fgv.br
Web site: http://portalibre.fgv.br/
F O U N D A T I O N
5. 5
December 2010
FROM THE EDITORS
As this issue makes clear, Brazil and its economy
are well positioned for the future, and so are its
people. Between 2003 and 2009, 29 million Brazilians
achieved middle class status. That is surely something
to rejoice in — except that in terms of equality of
income it simply means that we will soon be about
where we were in 1960! And we are still among the
10 most unequal countries in the world.
The situation has changed a lot, of course, in the
50 years since 1960. Even as the Brazilian population
has been growing, a series of stable governments with
a commitment to macroeconomic
prudence have made it possible for
half the population to regularly earn
between US$660 and US$2,855. As
our cover story makes clear, there
is more available for them to buy,
of better quality, and stable jobs
mean that lenders are more willing
to extend credit so that the new
middle class can buy more durable
items — all of which are pushing the
economy ahead. The main engine
of income growth has been formal
jobs, which account for 70% in
the growth of average income, far
more than the 20% from welfare
benefits, and 10% from Family
and other grants. The market is
betting that the new government
will pay attention to the demands of
those in the emerging middle class,
who will be deeply committed to
consolidating their gains.
But there are clouds on the
horizon that will bear watching. In
the near future, the new administration will have to
address up-front the deterioration of public accounts,
which were barely disguised this year by accounting
gimmicks, and worrisome signs of resurging inflation.
Risks to the economy’s outlook should not be ignored.
In particular, the public account surplus target for
2011 is threatened by mounting pressure to increase
public expenditure.
In the long term, there is the more fundamental
question about the sustainability of current economic
policy, which is based on increased taxes to pay for
immensely popular social programs to reduce poverty.
This has resulted in very low domestic savings and
investment rates, and consequently mediocre economic
growth of 4.5%, lowest among the BRICs. Another
aspect of the current policy, seldom pointed out, is that
transferring income to the poor without improving
their education and productivity will eventually burden
public finances permanently because they will not be
able to generate wealth and tax revenues, which will
constrain Brazil potential growth.
The key to sustainable long
term growth is productivity and
innovation. In mid-November
a report from the Ministry of
Development, Industry and Foreign
Trade expressed concerns that
the country may be experiencing
“deindustrialization,” which means
that although industrial output
may not be falling, there may be
a loss of dynamism in generating
income and employment. Reviving
the dynamism is one challenge for
the incoming government. To do
that, it must look at all aspects of
industrial policy, and everything
that affects it, meaning monetary
and fiscal policy as well.
Another challenge has to do with
education, which has been crucial
to creating a new consumer class.
It’s estimated that each year of
additional schooling represents on
average a 15% increase in earnings.
Although average schooling has
increased by almost 3 years, that took an inordinate
amount of time. Brazil still has a considerable deficit in
education. Just to reach the eight years of elementary
education required by the Constitution will take at
least five more years. This has to be a priority if we
are to maintain our competitive edge.
Previous administrations have constructed a solid
path to future economic success for Brazil. The new
administration must now decide how to follow that path
and avoid such tempting side roads as populism.
Previous
administrations
have constructed a
solid path to future
economic success
for Brazil. The new
administration must
now decide how
to follow that path
and avoid such
tempting side roads
as populism.
New Year’s promises
and risks
6. 66
December 2010
POLITICS
New government: Mixed signs
O
nthefaceofit,itseemslikelythatDilma
Rousseff will continue the policies of
the Lula administration. As expected,
she has appointed Antonio Palocci as her Chief
of Staff. His experience as political negotiator
and Finance Minister will certainly contribute
to government moderation. His Finance
Ministry tenure (2003–2006) was marked by
a fiscal austerity that invited international
investors to have confidence in the Lula
administration. Rousseff has also reappointed
the current Finance Minister, Guido Mantega,
and appointed the chief banking oversight
officer, Alexandre Tombini, to be Central Bank
governor.
However, despite President-elect Rousseff’s
vow of fiscal austerity and central bank
autonomy, some have doubts about the new
government commitment to these goals.
Problems with either could make it much more
difficult to curb rising inflation. These concerns
have been heightened by reports that the
Governor, Henrique Meirelles, chose to leave
becausehehadconditionedhisstayonkeeping
Central Bank autonomy — even though his
successor, Tombini, is respected by the market
and has reaffirmed the commitment to inflation
targeting established 11 years ago.
Concerns about the new government’s
fiscal stance seem to arise from the perception
that the new government leans toward the
Antonio Palocci, Chief of StaffAlexandre Tombini, Central Bank governor
To what extent the
more orthodox policies
represented by Palocci and
Tombini may prevail over the
national developmentalists
represented by Mantega and
Coutinho is far from clear.
Photo:BACEN.
Photo:VitorSoares(Radiobras).
7. 77
December 2010
POLITICS
national development view represented
by Finance Minister Mantega and Luciano
Coutinho, president of the National Bank for
Economic and Social Development (BNDES),
which gained acceptance in the final years of
Lula’s administration. According to this view,
economicdevelopmentdependsfundamentally
onindustrialpolicy,sogovernmentintervention
— and expansion of the government role in
the economy — is warranted. To carry forward
an ambitious development policy it would be
necessarytospurpublicspendingonpersonnel,
income transfers, and investments.
To what extent the more orthodox policies
represented by Palocci and Tombini might
prevail over the national developmentalists is
far from clear. National developmentalists are
seen as less inclined to raise interest rates to
curb inflation because they see high rates as
an obstacle to implementing industrial policy
and reducing the fiscal deficit. Finance Minister
Mantega has already announced that he may
create a new inflation target that excludes food
and fuel price variations to make it possible to
reduce interest rates faster. Tinkering with the
inflation target could backfire by undermining
government credibility.
Given the limited room for fiscal adjustment
in 2011, raising interest rates will be critical to
curb inflation. Some market economists argue
that the Central Bank may already be laggard
in raising interest rates. The moment of truth
has yet to come. When the Monetary Policy
Committee meets in January, it may have to
raise interest rates to a point not necessarily
to the liking of the Finance Minister and the
President.
When the Monetary Policy
Committee meets in
January, it may have to raise
interest rates to a point not
necessarily to the liking of
the Finance Minister and
the President.
Guido Mantega, Finance MinisterLuciano Coutinho, President of BNDES
Photo:BNDES.
Photo:MinistryofFinance.
8. 8
IBRE OUTLOOK December 2010
Liliana Lavoratti, Rio de Janeiro
As with the arrival of each New Year, a
change in government is marked not only
by the passage of time but also by expectations
stimulated by the current circumstances. Despite
the apparent continuity in economic policy and
practicethatthecontinuationoftheWorkersParty
in the presidency might suggest, the changes
should go beyond the mere gender difference of
the departing President Lula and Dilma Rousseff
as the imminent head of the country.
At a roundtable, “Brazil and the New
Government,” in November there was a marked
difference of views between economists from
the Brazilian Institute of Economics (IBRE)
and those from the market. The former are
moderately optimistic about the possibility
that the new government will cause no major
disruptions in current economic policy, although
there are risks related to how consistent fiscal
and monetary policies to control inflation will
be. Market economists are more pessimistic;
they do not believe that inflation can be tamped
down simply by tightening fiscal policy. The
Central Bank, they believe, is not concerned
enough about interest rates.
Brazil and the new
government: Risks and
uncertainties of economic policy
-4
-2
0
2
4
6
8
10
GDP (% change)
Inflation (% change)
Public deficit (% of GDP)
2011*2010*2009200820072006200520042003
*Projections
The IBRE outlook is moderately optimistic but
underscores risks of a larger public deficit.
9. 9IBRE OUTLOOKDecember 2010
IBRE optimism
According to the scenario its representatives
presented at the roundtable,1
IBRE is projecting
that in 2011 growth in gross domestic product
(GDP) will fall from 7.5% in 2010 to 4.6%;
inflation (measured by the Consumer Price Index
Expanded) will fall from 5.8% to 4.9 %; and the
externalcurrentaccountdeficitwillrisefrom2.6%
of GDP this year to 3.4%. IBRE expects that the
Central Bank will hold its nominal benchmark rate
at 10.75%, and the average nominal exchange
rate will move from R$1.8 per US dollar to R$1.7.
This outlook — more optimistic than market
projections — is based on two fundamental
assumptions, explains Silvia Matos, one of its
authors: “The new government will be able to
tighten public expenditures, and the Central Bank
will continue to have the autonomy to raise the
benchmark interest rate, if necessary.”
Other assumptions of the IBRE outlook are a
minimum wage of R$550 (US$324) and a primary
surplus (nominal deficit excluding interest
payments) target of 3.3% of GDP — above the
current goal of 3.1%. “If the government does
everything right, including keeping fiscal policy
tight, the Central Bank benchmark rate may stay
atthecurrentlevelandinflationwillslowlydecline
— although it would meet the inflation target
only in 2012,” says IBRE’s Samuel Pessoa. But if a
tighterfiscalpolicydoesnotforceinflationtoyield,
interest rates would have to rise. This is where
the assumption of Central Bank autonomy has an
effect: The Central Bank would have to raise its
benchmark rate even though respected Central
Bank governor Henrique Meirelles has departed.
The IBRE outlook is based on the information
thatwasavailableinmid-November,includingthe
market’s evaluation of potential GDP. While most
analysts believe the global crisis undermined
potential GDP, the IBRE economists believe the
negative impact was limited to the reduction
in investment. Although the IBRE outlook on
growth in output is in the same range as that of
market analysts (between 4.3% and 4.4%), the
IBRE estimate is slightly higher
IBRE predicts that there will be no new cycle
of rising commodity prices because China’s
economy is slowing down. “Smaller Chinese
demand for agricultural products will push down
their prices, benefiting the domestic market. If
not, the conditions for inflation in Brazil will be
more adverse,” says Matos.
Risks
The IBRE outlook does not ignore potential risks.
The first is reduction of the primary surplus.
“When there is a primary surplus — when tax
revenues exceed expenses — the government
affects aggregate demand because it takes
more income from society than it returns in
the form of spending. This is important to the
extent to which actions of the public sector
operate to increase or reduce inflation,” says
Pessoa.
This aspect of government policy becomes
more relevant now that there are worrisome
signs of resurging inflation. Public accounting
gimmicks used by the government — such as
giving revenues from its sale of future oil to the
state-owned oil company (Petrobras) — do not
IBRE is projecting that
in 2011 growth in GDP
will fall from 7.5%
in 2010 to 4.6%, and
inflation will fall from
5.8% to 4.9%.
10. 10
IBRE OUTLOOK December 2010
help to reduce the demand of households and
firms and therefore do not suppress price rises.
The IBRE outlook assumes that the Rousseff
government will fulfill its promise to hold the
primary surplus to 3.3% of GDP without resorting
to accounting gimmicks; 3.3% is well above the
2% seen in 2010. Although there is no reason to
doubt the promise of the President-Elect, the
fact is that fulfilling the promise will require an
impressive fiscal adjustment of 1.3% of GDP.
The target could be particularly difficult to
achieve if fiscal risks increase public expenditure
by R$54 billion, reducing the primary surplus
by 1.4% of GDP. Among the threats are the
increase of 56% in judiciary workers’ salaries;
compensation to states for their losses because
of VAT tax exemptions to exporters (the Kandir
law); the increase in the minimum wage to R$570
with consequent impact on pensions; and salary
adjustments for the military, firefighters, police
officers, and Supreme Court justices.
A lower primary surplus means higher
inflation, especially if interest rates are not raised.
Matos comments that “Realization of these risks
has a direct effect on the need to raise the Central
Bank benchmark rate to at least 12.75%,” adding,
“We believe that the decisions of the Central Bank
continue to be guided by technical criteria, and
therefore the monetary authority will maintain
its credibility and help curb market expectations,
as has happened so far.” Questioning Central
Bank credibility would surely put price stability
at risk.
Although the IBRE outlook assumes that
inflation expectations will not transcend the
inflation target, market analysts believe that
this assumption is no longer valid given the
recent surge in what the market expects for
inflation in 2011, which according to a Central
Bank survey is 5.2%. Pessoa, however, thinks
that “The appointment of the new economic
team and commitment to a high fiscal surplus
without accounting gimmicks may help to anchor
expectations close to the inflation target.”
However, the use of accounting gimmicks
in 2010 after statements from members of the
economic team that the primary surplus target
would be achieved poked holes in the current
administration’s fiscal policy. Pessoa says,
“Rebuilding credibility will be very difficult.
In retrospect, it would have been better if
the government in the middle of 2010 had
Fulfilling the new
government’s promise
to achieve a primary
surplus of 3.3% of
GDP will require an
impressive fiscal
adjustment of 1.3%
of GDP.
Fiscal risks could
increase public
expenditure by R$54
billion, reducing the
primary surplus by
1.4% of GDP.
11. 11IBRE OUTLOOKDecember 2010
recognized the impossibility of achieving that
year’s fiscal target, explained the reasons, and
laid the groundwork for a more ambitious target
in 2011.”
Considering that the Workers Party surprised
Brazilians in the past by continuing the
macroeconomic policies of the Fernando
Henrique Cardoso government — primary
surplus, floating exchange rate, and inflation
targets — it is prudent to wait for the next
meeting of the Monetary Policy Committee
(Copom) January 18–19 to see how the Rousseff
economic team will face the inflationary threat.
“The ideal scenario is that tighter fiscal policy
would be consolidated in the first year of
government, when there is greater political
support for tough measures,” Matos said.
The baseline scenario is constrained by
political factors. Pessoa remembers that a
“social contract of Brazilian social democracy”
has characterized economic policy for the
past 16 years; taxes have increased on average
0.4 percentage point of GDP annually since
1999, the minimum wage has risen faster than
inflation, and social programs have expanded.
This has resulted in very low domestic savings
and investment rates and in growth of 4.5%,
which is mediocre for an economy like Brazil:
“This raises the question of whether the social
contract is durable going forward.”
Market pessimism
Market analysts are more pessimistic about the
new government policy mix of high interest rates
and tightening public spending to curb prices.
At the roundtable Alexandre Schwartsman,
Santander Bank chief economist and former
director of the Central Bank, expressed disbelief
that inflation can stay below the target in 2011
with only a fiscal adjustment. He believes that
the Central Bank is already lagging at raising
interest rates.
Another former director of the Central Bank,
Itau Bank chief economist Ilan Goldfajn, also feels
that tighter monetary policy is necessary to keep
inflation around 5.5% next year. Affonso Celso
Pastore, former Central Bank governor, agrees.
He says a rise in interest rates will be critical to
manage the expectations of economic agents
and avoid losing control of inflation.
IBRE’s Armando Castelar observes that
addressing the overvalued exchange rate,
something the next government can hardly
escape, will mean more pressure on prices.
As the real weakens against the dollar, import
prices, and consequently domestic prices, will
rise. At the same time, domestic prices will no
longer benefit from the external environment
because rich countries will gradually rise away
from deflation .
1
SilviaMatos,SamuelPessoa,andGabrielLealdeBarros,“IBRE
Macroeconomic Outlook” (Brazilian Institute of Economics,
Getulio Vargas Foundation, November 2010).
Market analysts do not
believe that inflation
will stay below the
target in 2011 with only
a fiscal adjustment and
thinks the Central Bank
is already lagging at
raising interest rates.
12. 1212
Foto: crédito das fotos
December 2010
INTERVIEW
The Brazilian Economy — How does
ECLAC evaluate the economic perfor-
mance of Latin American and Caribbean
countries in 2010?
Alicia Bárcena — Our region has learned
the lessons of the past: it has adopted
authentically prudential macroeconomic
policy: greatly reducing foreign debt,
accumulating international reserves, and
keeping inflation low. We estimate that our
region will grow over 5% this year — we
had originally estimated 4.2%, but the
dynamism of our economies has proven to
be greater. Brazil leads, with growth above
7%. Mexico, where GDP fell last year by
6.5%, this year is expected to register
growth of 4.2%, partly because exports
have grown. World trade has recovered,
especially trade within the region, among
the countries of Latin America and the
Caribbean.
The forecast of slower growth in devel-
oped countries has made emerging market
consumers more attractive to both exporters
and foreign investors. How do you think
The domestic market:
Engine of the economy?
Alicia Bárcena
Executive secretary of the Economic Commission for Latin America
and the Caribbean (ECLAC)
Solange Monteiro, Rio de Janeiro
For the Mexican Alicia Bárcena, in 2010 Latin America
is demonstrating that, in the last global financial crisis,
it was part of the solution rather than the problem.
“Our region has learned the lessons of the past,” she
says, with praise for Brazil. A biologist trained at the
Universidad Autónoma de Mexico with a Master’s in
Public Administration from Harvard University, Bárcena
highlightsthefactthat“Brazilhassucceededinshowing
that as the poor’s income increases the engine of the
economy could be the domestic market.” Executive
secretaryofECLACsinceJuly2008andpreviouslyformer
chief of staff to Kofi Annan, former secretary general of
theUnitedNations,BárcenasaysthatLACgovernments
now have the challenge of building a public policy that
promotes regional productivity and social cohesion as
well as increasing intraregional trade.
13. 1313
Dectember 2010
INTERVIEW
countries like Brazil can leverage this
interest by ensuring sustainable growth?
We find ourselves in a world situation where
appreciation of the currencies in emerging
countries is growing, with the exception of
China. This has caused a great imbalance
at the global level. It is important that there
be a rebalancing in which surplus countries
enhance their domestic demand and deficit
countries reduce domestic consumption.
I think the countries in the region must
seek an appropriate mix of industrial,
monetary, and fiscal policies. I always
highlight the example of Brazil because it
was able to balance incentives to domestic
and exporting markets. Brazil and seven
other countries [Peru, Uruguay, Costa
Rica, Paraguay, Venezuela, Panama, and
Colombia] have improved income distribu-
tion, boosting domestic demand. Domestic
demand is the engine that enables some
countries to go further than others.
Have the region’s countries achieved this
policy mix?
In our view at ECLAC, Brazil leads in
industrial policy. There are countries that
have not emphasized it and now suffer
the consequences. Brazil has adopted a
clear, explicit industrial policy that is
associated with promoting innovation and
specific investments in science and
technology. This is the key. Some
countries are making the mistake
of using the exchange rate as indus-
trial policy. I think that’s asking
too much of exchange rate policy.
Countries that have managed their
industrial capabilities and were
able to diversify their activities are those
that are structurally better positioned to
move forward.
Which countries are wrong in their
approach to industrial policy?
Fundamentally, Mexico has not adopted
an explicit industrial policy. It has been
building up reserves, trying to prevent
exchange rate appreciation. This policy
has a limit; you cannot get the best results
by simply accumulating reserves by buying
dollars, because that also may affect
domestic productivity. What is needed is
to separate currency appreciation due to
improved productivity, which may result
in more competitive exports, from that due
to attracting foreign capital inflows. The
latter needs policy adjustments. Brazil took
a quick and correct step by increasing the
tax on short-term capital inflows from 2%
to 6%. I think this is a move that could
greatly help to send signals to the market
on capital inflows.
The significant appreciation of the Brazilian
currency against the dollar and the unrav-
eling of international exchange rates have
provoked intense debate. What is your
opinion? Does this situation carry a risk
that would justify greater intervention?
Our region has learned the lessons of
the past. It has adopted authentically
prudential macroeconomic policy:
greatly reducing foreign debt,
accumulating international reserves,
and keeping inflation low.
14. 1414
Foto: crédito das fotos
December 2010
INTERVIEW
First, I think it requires
global coordination. The
measures that Brazil is taking
are appropriate, timely, and
clear but should be comple-
mented with international
agreements. Minister Guido
Mantega was the first to
make this warning clear in
international forums and
called forcefully on China
and other surplus countries
like Germany to consider the
need to allow their currencies
to appreciate to achieve better
global balance. Undoubt-
edly, the definitive solution is to avoid an
exchange rate war. That is what happened
in the 1930s, causing a trade war, which
could greatly affect the policy of developing
countries. What Brazil has done is correct:
give a clear signal that capital cannot freely
enter the country. But it is necessary to
solve the issue at a global level.
All year China has been criticized for
keeping its currency artificially under-
valued to boost the competitiveness of its
exports. At the same time China is a major
buyer of our commodities and has been
investing in Latin America. On balance,
do you consider China to be good or bad
for the region?
The United States had its time as a
major engine of world growth, because
it had huge demand for goods produced
worldwide. What is important now is
whether China will manage to sustainably
replace U.S. demand. In Latin America,
the role of China has
different meanings: For
South America it has
been good news, because
China is demanding
more and more products,
resulting in greater trade.
For Central America and
Mexico the situation is
different. The impact of
expansionary monetary
policy on commodity
prices (which are rising)
is negative for Central
American countries that
are exporters of raw mate-
rials. Mexico is not benefiting from better
oil prices because of problems in its oil
sector and its terms of exchange, and its
manufactured goods are facing increasing
competition from China. What is neces-
sary is a more balanced trade relationship
than the current one in which China buys
only raw materials and Latin America
buys manufactures from China.
How about Chinese investments in the
region?
In Latin America these investments are still
low and concentrated in natural resources,
targeted to areas where surveillance is
less strict. Therefore, although China is
an important partner, there is a need to
define a regional plan to support a more
strategic relationship between China and
the region.
Do you think there is a risk in the increasing
concentration of Latin American exports
in commodities?
Brazil has adopted
an explicit and clear
industrial policy
that is associated
with promoting
innovation and
specific investments
in science and
technology. This is
the key.
15. 1515
Dectember 2010
INTERVIEW
A recent ECLAC report shows an increase in
commodities exports from Latin America.
This worries the region because it can
generate Dutch disease — sustained appre-
ciation of the exchange rate. It is also true
that one could gain greater investment
in more productive areas. However, our
report, “Outlook for International Inte-
gration of Latin America,” shows that it is
possible to develop more productive sectors,
because while it is true that commodity
prices are rising and trade is increasing, it
is also true that today our countries have
clearer policies for investing profits from
commodities in diversifying production and
improving domestic productivity. Countries
like Brazil with industrial policies may have
a better future because they are taking
advantage of this cresting wave of good
commodities prices.
In a document released earlier in the year,
ECLAC defends countercyclical govern-
ment policies in times of crisis. Do you also
suggest a limit to these policies?
Some areas require private investment and
others require public investment. Govern-
ment action is necessary to deal especially
with income redistribution and greater
regional convergence and social cohesion.
Here the instruments are undoubtedly
we see a trend of reduced inequality, and
that’s good news. Brazil has succeeded in
showing that the engine of the economy
may be the domestic market as incomes of
the poor increase and they demand more
goods and services.
ECLAC is historically known for defending
the policy of import substitution that
influenced the economic policies of many
countries in the 1950s. Today, is it possible
to imagine a new version of that policy?
The import substitution policy occurred in a
different historical context after World War
II when there was a scarcity of inputs world-
wide. At that time, Latin America adopted
it out of trade reality, not for political
reasons. Now things are different. What I
think we should talk about now is how to
strengthen intraregional trade. There have
been times when intraregional trade has
helped countries to be more resilient in the
face of international crises. South-South
trade has also increased significantly world-
wide, and that could give more muscle to
our economies. Today, South-South trade
represents about 18% of world trade in
goods and is growing at very high rates.
Latin America has a chance to set up frame-
works to facilitate this integration process.
In no way should anyone be inclined toward
To solve the problems
of Latin America,
we should emphasize
productivity,
competitiveness, and
innovation.
fiscal policy and income
transfer programs. I want
to highlight the extraor-
dinary role of Brazil in
implementing its income
transfer program, the
Family Grant. It is one of
the few countries where
protectionism. As I pointed
out, an exchange rate war
may encourage a trade
war that is not construc-
tive. Each country has
defined its ability to open
up as a function of its
domestic market and its
16. 1616
Foto: crédito das fotos
December 2010
INTERVIEW
productivity. To solve the problems of Latin
America, we should emphasize productivity,
competitiveness, and innovation.
Is the region moving toward trade integra-
tion?
I think so. Last year we saw a deepening
of preferential and trade links between
Central America, Colombia, Mexico,
Peru, and Chile with the completion of
commercial agreements between them, and
a process has begun in the countries along
the Pacific, which met in Peru seeking trade
convergence. Also, Brazil and Mexico,
the two major economies of the region,
are talking about establishing a strategic
association that would be of enormous
benefit for the whole region, because this
deal could give us a good opportunity to
consolidate integration.
What about Mercosur?
The Mercosur meeting last August in
San Juan city in Argentina shows that its
member countries can move forward, as
demonstrated especially by the agreement
to eliminate double taxation, the agree-
ment on infrastructure, and the theme of
special funds to support small and medium
enterprises. Mercosur has become more
dynamic, and that’s good news.
Some business people view this progress
with caution due to problems such as trucks
carrying Brazilian food being blocked at
Argentina’s border, which could be consid-
ered a nontrade restriction on Brazilian
sales to a neighboring country.
What I am seeing is better under-
standing between Argentina and Brazil.
The Mercosur negotiations have taken
a concrete step since the meeting in San
Juan, particularly on the important issue
of regional infrastructure. In 2009 there
were negotiations between Mercosur and
Chile that have liberalized trade in services,
architecture, engineering, construction,
and advertising, and addressed some
important issues of infrastructure. In
early 2010, 74% of the projects of the
Initiative for the Integration of Regional
Infrastructure in South America made
concrete progress.
In your opinion, what kind of mark are
the democratic governments of the last two
decades leaving in the region?
In the last decade, some governments in the
region have carried out prudent macroeco-
nomic policies yet have been progressive
on social issues. These were the countries
that have advanced more: those with more
equality, better income distribution, and
better perspective in coordinating macro-
economic policies and development.
What everyone is looking for is develop-
ment. President Lula said that economic
development and social justice have become
a priority, that democracy is installed in the
continent, and that the engine of develop-
ment can be the marginalized and excluded
classes. But it certainly requires strong
governments who must also work with the
private sector to establish alliances and it
also requires an attentive citizenship.
In the last decade, governments in
the region have carried out prudent
macroeconomic policies yet have
been progressive on social issues.
16
December 2010
INTERVIEW
18. December 2010
18 DOMESTIC MARKET
Solange Monteiro, Rio de Janeiro
Maria Lucia Moreira
is a self-employed
saleswoman who has left
the Paraisópolis slum in São
Paulo city for an apartment
purchased with a federal
government “My House, My
Life” subsidy. “Here I have
a legalized property, I have
security and comfort for
my children, and I can have
my friends over,” she says.
Thanks to a US$765 income,
Moreira has already bought
a new stove and DVD and is
anxiouslyawaitinginstallation
of her fixed telephone line to
ensure that her children can
access the Internet on their
computer. Her next goal is to
buy a car. “It will speed up
my life,” she says, describing
her busy schedule that
includes a technical course
on sales management, which
Set to soar
Photo: AF Rodrigues / Imagens do Povo
The emergence of
a new middle class
makes the Brazilian
domestic market one
of the most attractive
in the world. Building
up that group,
however, will require
the new government
to focus on industry
and investment.
DOMESTIC MARKET
19. December 2010
19DOMESTIC MARKET
encouraged her to think about
finishing high school and even
considering college in the
future. “I think until I’m 50
there is still time to improve
professionally,” she says.
This year Moreira is
encountering consultants
and corporate executives
interested in surveying her
tastes and preferences. Why?
They want to learn how to
sell to people like Moreira
who have just moved into the
emerging Brazilian middle
class. “Until 2007, this
population was considered
a niche; today it is the true
Brazilian market,” says
Renato Meirelles, managing
partner of Data Popular
consulting. The numbers
confirm his opinion: at the
end of 2009 the emerging
middle class numbered 94
million, according to the
study “The New Middle
Class in Brazil” (Center for
Social Policies of the Getulio
Vargas Foundation). “From
2003 to 2009, 29 million
people were added to the
emerging middle class. Soon
we will reach the lowest
level of income inequality
since 1960,” says Marcelo
Neri, coordinator of the
study. The methodology used
defines the portion of the
population in this emerging
middle class as those whose
monthly income ranges from
US$660 to US$2,855. “They
already represent 50% of
Brazilians,” Neri says, “and
in 2009 they had more than
46% of Brazil’s purchasing
power.”
This emerging middle
class emerged thanks to
government countercyclical
policies adopted at the peak
of the global financial crisis
in late 2008; its continued
consumption has helped the
country maintain a pace of
recovery that has turned
Brazil into a global star.
“Brazil has succeeded in
showing that the engine
of the economy may be
the domestic market as
the poor increase their
income and demand more
goods and services,” says
Alicia Bárcena, executive
secretary of the Economic
Com mission for Latin
America and the Caribbean
(ECLAC; see interview, page
12). According to Neri, the
National Household Survey
“We are still
among the ten
most unequal
countries in
the world, but
the image of
Brazil today is
considerably
better.” Marcelo Neri
2003 2008 2009
A and B
above R$4,854
C
R$1,126 to R$4,854
D and E
R$0 to R$1,126
Household
income in R$
Source: Center for Social Policies of the Getulio Vargas Foundation.
BrAzil hAs BECoME
lEss poor.
20. December 2010
20 DOMESTIC MARKET
(PNAD) recorded per capita
income growth of 2%.
“Today, Brazilian society
expresses a desire for a
development pattern based
on a social contract that is in
turn based on better income
distribution,” says Samuel
Pessoa, head of the Economic
Growth Department of
the Brazilian Institute of
Economics. He reminds us
that the income transfer
model — most prominently
the Family Grant program
and an aggressive policy of
raising the minimum wage
— was possible thanks to
continuous improvement
in stable macroeconomic
policies over the last 15 years,
including the consolidation
of fiscal responsibility and
primary surpluses, inflation
targeting, and a floating
exchange rate. “However,”
he adds, “a model centered
on income distribution and
consumption implies slower
economic growth and a fiscal
cost, which increases the tax
burden and slows reduction
in interest rates. This stifles
the productive sector and
raises the question of whether
the model is sustainable in
the future.”
A great
consumer
family
Voices in the market sound
a note of optimism. “This
is justified mainly by the
growth of formal jobs, the
main engine of income
growth,” says Neri. “Formal
employment accounts for
70% of the income increase,
compared with 20% from
welfare benefits and 10%
from the Family Grant and
other benefits.” Meirelles
expects that those who
have achieved some upward
mobility in recent years will
make every effort not to
backtrack. “Moreover, there
is the demographic factor:
Today, the largest share
of Brazil’s population is
concentratedintheproductive
age group, which means
less in benefit payments
and more opportunity for
growth,” he says.
350
400
450
500
550
600
650
09080706050403020199989796959392
385
630
506
THE GROWING INCOME OF THE POOR. (R$)
Source: Center for Social Policies of the Getulio Vargas Foundation
Photo:TimBrakemeier/dpa/Corbis
21. December 2010
21DOMESTIC MARKET
T h e i n c r e a s e i n
formal employment has
been responsible for the
proliferation of credit and
debit cards. “This market has
grown by 430% since 2000.
There are now 628 million
credit, debit, and store
cards,” says Milton Kruger,
president of the Brazilian
Association of Credit Cards.
“And the emerging middle
class participation jumped
from 42% in 2003 to 53% in
2010 without any changes in
the default rate.”
Another factor is more
access to credit. Supported
by a high level of consumer
confidence, credit terms
with long maturities enable
consumers to think about
purchasing more durable
goods, says Aloisio Campelo,
coordinator of the IBRE
confidence surveys: “Income
ensures direct consumption
of nondurable goods, but it is
confidence in the future that
leads consumers to borrow to
purchase high-value durable
goods.”
The increase in credit,
especially tied to retailers,
and the overvalued exchange
rate have benefited such
sectors as information
technology, where the price
of components is dollarized
and much is imported.
“Today, the middle class
is experiencing a period
of euphoria and ties the
purchase of a computer
to incredible achievement
related to professional
improvement,” says Adria
na Flores, director of new
products of Positivo. The
company’s computer sales
rose from 22,000 in 2003 to
a million in 2010, mostly to
individual consumers.
Another novelty is the
expansion of shopping malls
in the countryside, tracking
the growth in purchasing
power of those living outside
major cities. “We currently
have 100 shopping mall
projects under construction
and will finish the year with
39 mall openings,” says
Nabil Sahyoun, president of
the Brazilian Association of
Shopping Mall Storeowners.
The same optimism can be
seen in the tourism sector. For
the airline TAM, which this
year opened ticket counters
in Casas Bahia stores, class
C accounted for 6% of
passengers through October.
“Our goal is to reach 17%
over the next five years,” a
company spokesman says.
Education
In creating a new consumer
class, the major breakthrough
comes from education.
According to Neri, increasing
the number of years at school
between 2003 and 2009
was responsible for 65%
growth in average income
per capita for the poorest
20% of the country. “The
creation of programs like the
Evaluation System of Basic
Education in 1988 and the
Index of Basic Education
Development in 2007 was
fundamental,” he says.
According to Meirelles, new
members of class C believe
that education is part of their
path to social ascension.
“Today, consumption by the
class C population focuses
on improving the quality
of life,” he says, citing as
major consumer purchases
electronics, educational
services, and hygiene and
beauty products, adding,
“Each year of additional
schooling represents on
average a 15% increase in
earnings.”
“Today, Brazilian
society reflects
a desire for a
development
pattern based on
better income
distribution.”
Samuel Pessoa
22. December 2010
22 DOMESTIC MARKET
Nevertheless, considering
Brazil’s deficit in education
progress is still slow. Analysis
by the Institute of Applied
Economic Research (IPEA) of
PNAD 2009 data points out
that it took 17 years to expand
by 2.3 years the average
number of school years. At
that rate, it would still take
five more years to reach the
eight years of elementary
education required by the
Constitution.
“The issue of lack of
qualified workers can already
be seen in specific sectors,
but it is possible that at some
point the economy as a whole
will experience a shortage
of qualified people,” says
João Sabóia, director of
the Institute of Economics,
University of Rio de Janeiro.
For Márcio Pochmann, IPEA
president: “It’s not a question
of lack of resources. Today
if we compare the education
expenditure-to-GDP ratio,
Brazil spends about 50%
more than the United States
on training programs. But the
fact is that many actions of
the ministries and the private
sector are not complementary
but competitive.”
Salaries
Even if Brazil can ensure
a good education to open
the doors to social mobility
for most of the population,
we will still not have
eliminated all the negative
factors. ”The social contract
we have today privileging
income distribution implies
2
4
6
8
10
SOUTHEAST
SOUTH
MID-WEST
NORTH
NORTHEAST
09080706050403020199989796959392
POPULATION’S NUMBER OF SCHOOL YEARS
HAS GROWN SLOWLY..
(number of school years of population older than 15)
Source: National Household Survey (PNAD).
Photo:ABr
23. December 2010
23DOMESTIC MARKET
slower economic growth
and less dynamic markets.
Consequently the private
sector pays little and does
not generate prospects of
advancement,” Pessoa says.
Data from the General
Register of Employed and
Unemployed of the Ministry
of Labor show that, although
September 2009 to August
2010 saw the creation of
2.5 million formal jobs with
salaries of up to twice the
minimum wage, there was
a loss of 284,600 higher-
income jobs. “On the one
hand, this reflects the value of
the minimum wage in recent
years,” says Sabóia. “On
the other it indicates that
the bulk of the jobs created
paid workers poorly. This is
alarming.” He suggested a
risk of frustrating Brazilians
who have just climbed to the
base of Class C and invest
in a college degree seeking a
better quality of life.
Waldir Quadros, professor
of economics at the University
of Campinas, argues that
this problem is due to Brazil’s
lack of an industrial policy,
which deters growth. “I
believe the problem is not
social spending but the lack
of industrial progress that
energizes the entire chain
of suppliers and services,”
he says. “At the moment,
this sector is constrained by
high interest rates and the
appreciation of the exchange
rate.” IPEA’s Pochmann
says that “One should not
bemoan the fact that in
recent years precarious
informal jobs declined: for
every ten jobs created, nine
were in occupations that are
protected by the labor laws.
However, we must complete
the cycle of industrialization,
making it more technology-
intensive and ensuring the
“The problem is not
social spending but
the lack of industrial
progress that
energizes the entire
chain of suppliers
and services.”
Waldir Quadros
Formal employment is on the rise.
500
1000
1500
2000
2500
10 (Jan.-Oct.)09080706050403020100
(net increase in thousands)
Source: Caged.
Photo:AFRodrigues/ImagensdoPovo
24. December 2010
24 DOMESTIC MARKET
lower interest rates needed to
make this possible,” he says.
“The focus on production
and export of primary
commodities like iron ore
and soybeans does not create
industrial jobs.”
In mid-November a Min-
istry of Development, In-
dustry and Foreign Trade
report expressed concerns
that the country was experi-
encing “deindustrialization,”
highlighting the role of the
external trade balance. Dein-
dustrialization, the report
said, is characterized not by
a fall in industrial output,
which may even increase,
but by a loss of dynamism in
generating income and em-
ployment. “The electronics
and pharmaceutical sectors
cannot compete internation-
ally, they end up importing
raw materials, and so the
best jobs we need are created
outside the country,” says
Pochmann.
Data from the Brazilian
Association of Electrical and
Electronics Industry show a
record sector trade deficit
of US$20 billion in the first
nine months of 2010 — 69%
higher than in the same
period in 2009. In the phar-
maceutical sector, in the first
six months of the year drug
imports totaled US$3 billion.
“There is no way to deny that
this year cheaper imports
of certain products were a
great ally in keeping infla-
tion under control, especially
given pent-up demand for
some durable goods,” says
Denise de Pasqual, a partner
at Tendências Consultoria.
“But it is clear that we need
a correction, more focused
on external competitiveness,
since devaluing the exchange
rate is one of the most inef-
ficient measures there is.”
The result of all these
factors was a reduction in
industrial confidence. IBRE
surveys indicate that confi-
dence in the manufacturing
industry fell 18% from Au-
gust 2009 to August 2010 in
the consumer durable goods
segment. “Our diagnosis is
clear: We have been saying
for years that we need to re-
duce interest rates to prevent
exchange rate appreciation
and discourage foreign inves-
tors from pouring dollars so
eagerly into the economy,”
says Eduardo Eugênio Gou-
vea Vieira, president of the
Federation of Industries of
Rio de Janeiro. He thinks “It
is necessary to reduce inter-
est rates, cut payroll taxes,
and ensure adequate infra-
structure for production.”
“There is room to
reduce poverty
and strengthen the
domestic market,
provided there is
improvement in
public accounts
and growth of 5%
a year.” João Sabóia
external deficits
With growing external deficits, Brazil needs to attract more foreign
direct investment. (US$ billion)
2008 2009 2010* 2011*
Trade balance 25 25 16 (-)8
Exports 198 153 200 225
Imports 173 128 185 233
External current account (- deficit) (-) 28 (-) 24 (-) 49 (-) 80
Foreign direct investment 45 26 27 29
Average exchange rate (R$ per US$) 1.8 2.0 1.8 1.8
* Estimates. Source: IBRE/FGV.
25. December 2010
25DOMESTIC MARKET
the new
government’s
policies
Even before President-Elect
Roussef announced her
economic team, the market
showed reservations about
the possibility of a consistent
reduction in the Central
Bank benchmark interest rate
in 2011. IBRE projects that
in 2011 the benchmark rate
will remain at the 10.75% it
reached in late 2010. This is
understandable because until
now, high interest (though
trending downward) has been
the main policy for curbing
inflation threats — the first
victims of which would be
the emerging middle class.
In their first declarations,
the future president’s new
team showed some sensitivity
to this important issue,
signaling concern about
reducing the public deficit
and an intention to accelerate
the reduction in interest
rates.
The market is betting that
the Rouseff government will
pay attention to the demands
of the emerging middle class.
Sabóia thinks, “There is
room to reduce poverty and
strengthen the domestic
market,” provided there is
an improvement in public
accounts and no slowing in
the pace of growth, which,
he says, must be at least 5%
a year. Pessoa notes that
the country needs to attract
foreignsavingstocomplement
domestic saving and finance
investment: “If we want
this, we must persevere in
building the institutional
framework, guaranteeing
contracts, improving the
regulatory agencies, and
recovering the primary
surplus.” For Neri, Brazil
has the potential to react
strongly and positively to the
new government changes in
policy. The general outlook,
then, seems to be hopeful
despite the challenges.
da economia e sublinham a
necessidade de apoio contínuo
para a demanda agregada.
Eles observam que o pico do
impacto do estímulo fiscal
ocorreu no primeiro trimestre
e se inquietam com as implica-
ções de permitir que os cortes
de impostos de Bush expirem
no final de 2010.
Por outro lado, muitas vozes
argumentando que os Estados
Unidos precisam poupar mais
para evitar o mesmo caos da
última década. Embora as
famílias estejam economizan-
do mais, a poupança delas
foi totalmente compensada
pela redução da poupança do
governo. Os Estados Unidos,
como resultado, tornam-se
mais endividados com o resto
do mundo. O déficit da balan-
ça comercial externa, tendo
diminuído temporariamente
durante a crise, está crescendo
novamente, de volta para os
níveis pré-crise. Se os estran-
geiros se recusarem, em algum
momento, a financiar esse défi-
cit, as consequências poderiam
vir a ser desastrosas.
Enquanto isso, os esforços
para reequilibrar a economia
com a finalidade de exportar
mais, tal como a meta estabele-
cida pelo presidente Obama de
dobrar as exportações em cin-
co anos, têm sido frustrados.
Somente com um esforço bem
definido para reduzir o déficit
orçamentário, argumenta-se,
os Estados Unidos poderiam
finalmente começar a seguir
esse caminho.
Os economistas envolvidos
nos dois debates paralelos so-
bre a política fiscal e monetária
estão levantando exatamente
os mesmos argumentos, embo-
ra não consigam chegar a uma
conclusão.
Uma vez que se percebe que
exatamente os mesmos argu-
mentos que estão sendo usados
no contexto monetário e fiscal,
algumas conclusões importantes
podem ser feitas. Primeiro, a po-
lítica orçamentária é mais ade-
quada que a política monetária
para promover o reequilíbrio
da economia norte-americana.
Se os Estados Unidos precisam
de trabalhadores mais quali-
ficados, a fim de aumentar as
exportações, então o orçamento
é o instrumento adequado para
financiar a expansão da forma-
ção profissional. Se os Estados
A política
orçamentária é
mais adequada
que a política
monetária para
promover o
reequilíbrio da
economia norte-
americana
Subscriptions
conjunturaeconomica@fgv.br
Call (55-21) 3799-6844
Subscriptions
conjunturaeconomica@fgv.br
Call (55-21) 3799-6844