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In 2003, President Lula inherited a poor, resigned nation on the verge of an economic implosion. Eight years later,
Social mobility was impressive during Lula’s two mandates,” said
Only a month or so before, the favelas of
Rousseff intends to continue the economic policies of her predecessor and mentor, Luis Inácio Lula da Silva. But it will be neither easy nor smooth. Can she sustain the country’s recent economic gains?
Rousseff’s circle
Pure free market doctrines do not work in a large developing economy, especially one that is still emerging from extreme poverty. The market economy’s invisible hand needs to be balanced with the visible hand of the central government. Like Lula, Rousseff wants to influence economic policy herself, which is why she appointed her confidante, Miriam Belchior, as planning minister.
With a strong grip on the legislature, Rousseff kept Guido Mantega, Lula’s finance minister. During the credit crunch, he boosted public spending.
More recently, however, the increases have contributed to the overheating of the economy and inflation. In fact, the real had more than doubled in value against the dollar
during Lula’s reign.
It was Mantega who was among the first to coin the term “currency war” in September 2010. As
“It’s no use throwing dollars out of a helicopter,” as he put it. In order to suppress the real’s rise, he tripled a tax on foreign purchases of Brazilian bonds.
Rousseff must cope not only with indigenous inflation but “imported” inflation as well.
The new head of the Central Bank, Alexandre Tombini, is increasing the benchmark rate to curb inflation. Rousseff would like the benchmark interest rate to fall to 2% in real terms, and that requires a tight fiscal policy — a message that was highlighted by the appointment of Antônio Palocci, a former finance minister, as her chief of staff.
Rousseff’s ultimate success will certainly have a lot to do with the course taken in
In 2002, Lula inherited a large nation on the verge of economic implosion. Withanemic growth, international reserves were evaporating, hyperinflation was atthe door and international investors were fleeing. Unsurprisingly, markets for
Regional prospects looked no better. Only a year before,
As soon as Lula arrived in the capital, he called for a slate of emergency cabinet meetings and solicited his ministers for tax-reform proposals and fiscal investments to boost capital
investments in order to achieve growth rates of 5%.
In a matter of weeks, Lula had calmed the markets with a slate of appointments. A former international banker, Henrique Meirelles, took over the Central Bank, while Palocci, the new finance minister, announced a stringent fiscal policy.
Along with macroeconomic stabilization, Lula fought for substantial change. Old faces were not enough — new people were needed to initiate a truly new era in
But there is more to the story. Lula’s economic policies were also born under favorable stars. In 2001,
The main Brazilian exports were commodities whose prices depended significantly on the demand of
When Lula won the presidency in 2002,
Over the eight years, the
The writing was on the wall. As long as demand in these two nations continued for commodities,
In 2010,
A day after the release of the annual figures, the Central Bank raised interest rates by 0.5% for the second time this year.
However,
In the early 2000s,
When Lula won the presidency heading the left-wing Workers’ Party (PT) in the early 2000s, his primary objective was first to stabilize the economy and then to lay a foundation for the struggle against poverty, and it was the poor who he spoke to.
In the 2010s, Lula’s success has shifted the emphasis of the government to the booming economy and expanding middle class. Now the goal is to provide new opportunities for the upwardly mobile, while ensuring income transfers to thepoorest.
In the past few years, international investors have taken note of the
However, to sustain growth in the 2010s, Rousseff must be able to manage the rising inflation, an overvalued currency and large increases in consumer credit.
In order to realize its full BRIC potential,
Third, reduce the notorious red tape. Fourth, streamline the labor code. Fifth, contain political corruption. Sixth, improve the quality of public services (e.g., education, justice and security). And seventh, develop new infrastructure.
In order to engage in the Asian trajectory of growth, however, even more reforms are needed, including far greater trade openness, significantly higher investment and savings and substantially lower public and foreign debt.
President Lula created the foundation for the new
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