Thursday, August 12, 2010

Brazil, to be or not to be.

What I like about the Pearson Publishers, is that they actually manage to have clear, critical and sometimes even contradicting opinions if you look at their two flagship publications, the FT and The Economist.

If we look at a recent The Economist article first, called "Four Reasons to Believe in Brazil", from July, the outlook is outright positive. The highlights are commodities and the global commodity hunger, the second oil (actually also a commodity, but the focus here is on self-subsistency and strategic importance in an increasingly energy-hungry world), demography (i.e. a major amount of people joining the work force and slower birth rates kicking in meaning infrastructure is set for the kids there and more people there to pay for it), and urbanisation, where wages usually are higher and access to education, infrastructure, etc. are much better.

Mr. Wolf from the FT takes on a much more pessimistic view in his June article "Why Brazil must try harder". Commodities also plays a significant role here, but with a highlight that while exports in Brazil have increased, the share of manufactured goods still remains low. This is similar to what I recently heard from a presentation of the Trade Ministry at the São Paulo Chamber of Business. The share of commodities in exports has actually increased. All of this still leaves Brazil at a lower development level, as industry development is not significantly challenged if all you have to do is dig out the stuff and ship it to China.

Most interesting, however, is Mr. Wolf's comparison of Brazil to two other BRICs, China and India. Brazil has lower ratios of trade, savings, exchange-rate ratios and population, and lower growth, meaning that while Brazil may have gained in the world, it has fallen behind China and India in world power over the past decades.

I believe it is exagerated to say, that this means that Brazil will not be of any significance in the future, but Mr. Wolf does have a point - especially if we consider the massive infrastructure needs the country has and the low level of savings, there is something Brazil must do, to catch up.

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

No World Cup in Sao Paulo?



In the middle of the world cup of South Africa, the Fifa has announced (rather quietly) that the Morumbi stadium in Sao Paulo and surrounding infrastructure is not suited for a world cup game...

This does not really come as a surprise - during a game I recently saw in the stadium, I was afraid parts of the ceiling would come down and I walked for 10 minutes to find food that went beyond dry popcorn.

But I am sure there will be some "jeitinho" to find an alternative - maybe they can build a new stadium?

The picture above shows a (poor) design that was planned to "pimp" the stadium for the world cup...

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Invest in Infrastructure

Ok, it's more an advertisement than news, and it is German, but the main two points are:

1. Invest in Infrastructure in Brazil

2. The government in Brasilia has noticed this too - there will be a World Cup and Olympics... or so they hope.

But read my lips: There will be no bullet train by 2014 and none by 2016 between SP and Rio... the bullet train is the oldest promise of wanting to be the country of the future - I had heard it when I still lived here in the early 90s...

Read more here.