More Latin America
Brazil worthy of BRIC status?
June 3, 2013 -- Updated 1234 GMT (2034 HKT)
(File) Brazil grew by less than 1% in 2012, the lowest of the BRIC countries, and only 2.7% in 2011.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- Many are asking if Brazil deserves to be seen as an economic powerhouse given its weak growth
- Over the last ten years Brazil has benefited from a commodity boom, but that boom is slowing
- The political system seems incapable of responding to these challenges
- But it may be too early to count Brazil out of the BRIC club, Anthony Pereira argues
Editor's note: Anthony Pereira is a professor and director of the Brazil Institute at King's College London.
(CNN) -- When former Goldman Sachs economist Jim
O'Neill first went to Brazil after coining the acronym BRIC, someone
asked him whether he had included the "B" just to make the name sound
good.
Such skepticism is
becoming common again, as investors compare the projected rate of growth
in Brazil this year -- just 3% -- to that in China and India, around 8%
and 6% respectively.
So does Brazil still deserve to be seen as an economic powerhouse?
Many would say no. Brazil
grew by less than 1% in 2012, the lowest of the BRIC countries, and
only 2.7% in 2011. Its problems are well known. It saves less than it
invests, and 70% of its growth comes from consumption.
Credit has risen dramatically over the last few years, but many families are now heavily indebted, which slows growth.
Over the last ten years
Brazil has benefited from a commodity boom, but that boom is slowing.
Brazil has become an expensive country, with a strong currency, and that
has eroded the competitiveness of its industry.
Ten years ago around 50%
of exports were manufactured goods; today the proportion is closer to
35%. The tax burden is heavy, at around 35% of GDP, especially in
comparison to the quality of services the state provides, and government
spending is rising faster than GDP.
Brazil's productivity
grew by only 1.3% between 1990 and 2010, while China led the way at
8.3%, followed by India at 4.7% over the same period.
There are other causes
of concern. Inflation is pushing right up against the Central Bank's
ceiling of 6.5% per year. The balance of payments deficit is rising.
Infrastructure such as ports, roads, and airports is poor, and attempts
to bring in the private sector to modernize some of it, such as with
airports, have not been entirely successful.
Expensive electricity,
an inadequately funded public sector pension system, and high interest
rates round out this negative picture.
According to some analysts, the fundamental pillars of the Brazilian economy are being eroded.
The political system
seems incapable of responding to these challenges. The state's
bureaucratic machinery is cumbersome and antiquated; corruption is rife
among politicians, and effective opposition to and debate about current
policies almost non-existent.
The current government
is planning for president Dilma Rousseff's re-election in 2014 and there
is a danger that it will postpone necessary adjustments, making a bad
situation worse.
So should we be talking about the RIC rather than BRIC countries?
Not really.
There are three main sets of reasons why it is too early to count Brazil out as a global economic player.
The first has to do with
fundamentals of its economy that are often ignored by short-term
investors. Brazil's economy has a higher per capita GDP than both China
and India, and as a more mature economy, it is not surprising that its
growth rate is slower.
More importantly, the
country is much less vulnerable to external shocks than it used to be.
Public debt as a percentage of GDP declined from about 60% to 35% of GDP
between 2002 and 2012.
International reserves
are now $377 billion. Brazil attracted around $62 billion in foreign
direct investment in 2012, making it the largest recipient of FDI in the
world after China and the United States.
All of these factors are
reasons to be confident in the capacity of the Brazilian economy to
continue to advance in an unspectacular but steady fashion.
Second, Brazil has a
number of enviable attributes. It has few threats to its security,
meaning that it can afford to spend relatively little on national
defence. Brazil is alone among the BRIC countries in not possessing
nuclear weapons.
Brazil also has a
generous land to people ratio, with a large basket of natural resources,
including petroleum, for a population that is relatively small (200
million) compared to China and India. It boasts a world-class
agricultural sector that has not yet reached its potential.
Already the largest
producer in the world of soy and beef, it has the capacity to adapt more
crops to its tropical soils and develop its vast land frontier.
In addition, Brazil is
becoming an environmental leader. Its management of the Amazon
rainforest is crucial to the health of the planet, which is why the
recent large reduction in the rate of deforestation has been so
encouraging. It has some of the largest reserves of fresh water in the
world.
Almost half of all energy coming from renewable sources, mainly hydroelectric but also biofuels.
There is a third and final set of factors that make Brazil stand out.
Together with Russia,
and unlike China and India, Brazil has reduced economic inequality in
recent years. Its Gini index, a measure of income inequality, dropped
from 0.63 to 0.52 from 1989 to 2009.
Between 2003 and 2011,
about 30 million Brazilians joined the so-called "new middle class,"
earning between GBP100 and GBP400 per capita per month, and gaining
access to formal sector employment, credit, and the country's large
consumer market.
This reduction in
inequality has a racial component, because 75% of the new middle class
is non-white. It also has a gender component -- formal sector employment
for females has increased 136% in the last twenty years.
It is true that Brazil's rate of economic growth is slow compared to China and India.
But so are the growth rates of most countries. Brazil tends to be the focus of exaggerated analyses of its economy.
If one looks past the
superficial concern about growth at Brazil's economic fundamentals, its
resources, and the extraordinary social progress that the country has
made in recent decades, it seems premature to remove the "B" from BRIC.
The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of Anthony Pereira.
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