Brazil’s 35 years-old quasi-stagnation: facts and theory


Autoria(s): Pereira, Luiz C. Bresser
Data(s)

07/08/2015

07/08/2015

07/08/2015

Resumo

Brazil is growing around 1% per capita a year from 1981; this means for a country that is supposed to catch up, quasi-stagnation. Four historical new facts explain why growth was so low after the Real Plan: the reduction of public savings, and three facts that reduce private investments: the end of the unlimited supply of labor, a very high interest rate, and the 1990 dismantling of the mechanism that neutralized the Dutch disease, which represented a major competitive disadvantage for the manufacturing industry. New-developmental theory offers an explanation and two solutions for the problem, but does not underestimate the political economy problems involved

Identificador

TD 399

http://hdl.handle.net/10438/13882

Idioma(s)

en_US

Relação

EESP - Textos para Discussão;TD 399

Palavras-Chave #Quasi-stagnation #Investment #Interest rate #Exchange rate #Dutch disease #Estagnação econômica #Taxas de juros
Tipo

Working Paper