La estrategia de crecimiento con ahorro externo y la economía brasileña desde principios del decenio 1990
TRABAJOS EN ESPAÑOL
La estrategia de crecimiento con ahorro externo y la economía brasileña desde principios del decenio 1990
Luiz Carlos Bresser-Pereira
In, Vidal, Gregorio e Arturo Guillén R., coord. (2005) Repensar la teoría del desarrollo en un contexto de globalización. México: CLACSO: 213-237.
Abstract. While the Cardoso administration (1995-2002) was successful in defining and implementing social policy, its economic outcomes were frustrating. In this administration's eight years the investment rate did not increase and income per capita growth lagged, while unemployment, the public debt, and the foreign debt increased substantially. This poor economic performance may be explained by three chained causes: a mistake in agenda setting, the adoption of the 'Second Washington Consensus', and the alienation of elites. The decision of setting high inflation as the major problem to be tackled instead of achieving equilibrium in foreign accounts represented a major macroeconomic mistake, which can be explained by the Second Washington Consensus. This consensus proposed in the 1990s that highly indebted countries should grow counting on foreign savings, although this is not the experience among OECD countries. The outcome was to evaluate the real, to artificially increase wages and consumption, so that instead of growth what we have is increased indebtedness. Why was this flopped strategy adopted? Rich countries' interests are not difficult to guess. On the part of Brazil, the only explanation is Brazilian elites' alienation in relation to the country's national interest. As a final outcome, the Cardoso administration ends with another balance of payments crisis.