Brazil’s Economy: Too Hot

来源 :China’s foreign Trade | 被引量 : 0次 | 上传用户:fantong518
下载到本地 , 更方便阅读
声明 : 本文档内容版权归属内容提供方 , 如果您对本文有版权争议 , 可与客服联系进行内容授权或下架
论文部分内容阅读

Brazil has a lot to be proud of. A de- cade of faster growth and progressive social policies has brought a prosperity that is ever more widely shared. The unemployment rate for April, at 6.4%, is the lowest on record. Credit is booming, particularly to the swelling numbers who have moved out of poverty and into the middle class. Income inequality, though still high, has fallen sharply. For most Brazilians life has never been so good.
That success is partly thanks to good luck, in the form of booming commodity prices. But it is also the result of good policies. A country once known for its macroeconomic incompetence has maintained an enviable stability, deftly navigating the 2008 financial crisis as well as the more recent influx of foreign capital. Not surprisingly, perhaps, many of Brazil’s economic officials now have an air of smugness about them, as they argue that the rest of the world has more to learn from Brazil than vice versa.
The timing of such complacency could not be worse. The economy is overheating. The government is stalling on a deeper reform agenda that is essential to boost Brazil’s longterm growth and fiscal stability. President Dilma Rousseff’s growing political problems do not help: her chief of staff, Antonio Palocci, is under fire over fat consulting fees. All this adds up to a warning: Brazil’s economy is heading for trouble.
Inflation is 6.5% and rising. It is driven(as elsewhere) by food and fuel costs, but the tightness of Brazil’s labor market suggests that it could easily become entrenched as workers expect higher prices and demand higher wages. The jobless rate is well below the level that is consistent with stable prices. Although professional forecasters’ expectations of future inflation have stabilized, the proportion of ordinary folk expecting higher prices has risen. Wage gains in some sectors are already running into double digits. If the labor market remains red-hot, stubborn and creeping inflation seems all too likely, especially if (as seems probable) foreign investors eventually become alarmed and the exchange rate weakens.
The best way to counter the inflation risk is through tighter macroeconomic policies. Brazil’s central bank has been raising interest rates, but monetary conditions are still looser than before the financial crisis in 2008, when joblessness was much higher. Brazilians fret, reasonably, that faster rate rises will attract even more foreign capital. Lured by high interest rates, investors have piled into the country, sending the currency soaring to an increasingly overvalued rate, despite an expanding arsenal of taxes designed to deter them. Brazilian officials are right to worry about the impact of foreign capital flows, but their emphasis on controls and fear of raising rates have distracted them from a more potent tool: tighter fiscal policy.
Ms Rousseff’s government brags about its fiscal squeeze. Thanks to strong revenues and a slowdown in investment spending, the primary budget (ie, excluding interest payments) is on track to hit a surplus of almost 3% of GDP. But that is not nearly bold enough. To dampen overall demand growth and reduce Brazil’s real interest rates, the government needs far more ambitious fiscal consolidation: with the economy growing strongly, the overall budget (ie, including interest payments) should be in surplus, especially if the government is to have the scope for a fiscal stimulus when the next recession comes. Worse, today’s gains are coming from the wrong sources; rather than slowing investment, the state should be squeezing its transfer payments. Nor are the gains likely to be sustained. Under current rules, Brazil’s minimum wage will rise by 7.5% in real terms next year, at huge fiscal cost, since pension payments are linked to the minimum wage.
Tighter fiscal policy is Brazil’s best defense against short-term economic trouble. An overhaul of government is also the route to boosting longer-term growth. A streamlined state will improve productivity growth as well as Brazil’s saving and investment rates. Pension reform is urgently needed in a country that is ageing fast, has absurdly generous pensions and in which the average woman retires at 51. So, too, is an overhaul of Brazil’s fiendishly complicated and distorted tax system.
Such reforms are difficult, and tempting to put off. But without them Latin America’s biggest success story will start to look a lot less lustrous. (The Economist)
其他文献
党的十四大以来,我国的改革开放和社会主义现代化建设各项事业均取得了辉煌的成就,实现了新的飞跃。辉煌的5年再次向世界展示出中国的勃勃生机。 经济体制改革进展显著,经济
聚精会神抓好“新的伟大工程” 党的十四届四中全会讨论通过的《关于加强党的建设几个重大问题的决定》,是在新形势下加强党的建设的纲领性文件。它是领导全党继续进行一项新
作为改革开放的新生事物的民营科技企业,今天面临着如何进一步深化自身改革,以适应形势,抓住机遇,迎接挑战,稳操竞争之胜券的新课题。我们的认识和做法是: 政策是舵 科技是桨
众所周知,在中国古代史上,唐太宗李世民执政的23年,被史家称之为“贞观之治”,这是我国封建社会漫长岁月中的一段鼎盛时期。那么,在封建专制制度的条件下,何以会出现这一奇迹
南京国民政府时期,国民党中央与立法院之间的关系较为复杂。在不同的历史阶段上,二者关系有所变化。训政前期,国民党中央通过立法原则等手段直接控制立法院;抗战期间,控制更
一个人的错误,有可能侥幸地成为另一个的发现。 儿子走上前来,向我报告幼儿园里的新闻,说他又学会了新东西,想在我面前显示显示。他打开抽屉,拿出一把还不该他用的小刀,又从