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| FHC
foi barrado do clube de Clinton e Blair |
“TERCEIRA VIA”: FHC VAI
CORTAR OS PULSOS
Paulo Henrique Amorim
Máximas e Mínimas 1110
Em nenhuma democracia séria
do mundo, jornais conservadores, de baixa qualidade
técnica e até sensacionalistas,
e uma única rede de televisão
têm a importância que têm
no Brasil. Eles se transformaram num partido
político – o PiG, Partido da Imprensa
Golpista.
. Um bom amigo que mora em Paris chamou a minha
atenção para uma reportagem do
jornal “Independent”, de Londres.
. O “Independent” é um jornal
de centro-esquerda, a favor da Europa.
. Ou seja, na Inglaterra há bons e prósperos
jornais de centro-esquerda.
. Não é essa mediocridade do
PiG brasileiro: uma só voz golpista,
antitrabalhista.
. O “Independent” acaba de publicar
reportagem sobre o Brasil – “É
Carnaval para a economia brasileira”,
a propósito do “grau de investimento”
outorgado pela Standard & Poor’s.
. O “Independent” faz o que o Financial
Times e o Wall Street Journal fizeram antes:
desdizer o PiG.
. O PiG, como se sabe, transformou o “grau
de investimento” numa das sete pragas
do Egito… (*)
. O mais interessante do artigo do “Independent”,
porém, é dizer que o Presidente
Lula é uma “Terceira Via”
melhor do que Tony Blair e Bill Clinton.
. Agora mesmo é que FHC vai cortar os
pulsos.
. O “Independent” nem cita o FHC
entre os da “Terceira Via”.
. A “Terceira Via” é uma
mistificação concebida por um
amigo de Blair, Anthony Giddens.
. Foi a ideologia montada às pressas
para justificar a guinada à direita do
movimento trabalhista inglês, sob a liderança
de Blair.
. Blair precisava ser Margaret Thatcher e continuar
chic, sem ser chamado de reacionário.
. Clinton fez o mesmo: jogou o Partido Democrata
no centro e, muitas vezes, na direita, para
sobreviver.
. Tudo o que o Farol de Alexandria quis foi
ser uma estrela da “Terceira Via”.
. Era ser de esquerda, só que em Londres
e em Washington.
. E, aqui, vender o Brasil ao Daniel Dantas.
. Os passageiros do Concorde da “Terceira
Via” viajavam de primeira, tomavam champagne
brut rosé e iam a inúteis colóquios
em aprazíveis cidades européias,
não trabalhavam, faziam meia dúzia
de discursos óbvios e se diziam fiéis
à origem de esquerda, comme il faut.
. Era a esquerda de free-shop.
. Que se exercitava na futura profissão
de palestrante de US$ 50 mil por uma hora de
trabalho.
. Pois, o “Independent” diz que
Lula é uma “Terceira Via”
muito melhor que o Blair e o Clinton.
. Além do mais, o “Independent”
ressalta as virtudes de Lula como negociador
internacional e “broker” de conflitos
como o da Venezuela com a Colômbia.
. (FHC achava que ele era o único presidente
brasileiro que seria levado a sério no
exterior.)
. Até na “Terceira Via”
o FHC vai ser o Dutra do Getúlio.
. (Clique
aqui para ler)
. No mais, jogue o PiG na lata do lixo e, sobre
o “grau de investimento”, leia o
“Independent”.
Carnival time for Brazil's economy
Once an economic basket case, even by emerging
market standards, Brazil has staged a remarkable
recovery and now promises to become a major
global power. By Stephen Foley
Friday, 2 May 2008
It was an incongruous sight. King Carl XVI Gustaf,
bespectacled monarch of Sweden, and President
Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, the bush-bearded
populist who has governed Brazil since 2003,
riding a downtown bus in Stockholm last autumn.
The reason the two men were there? A fleet of
buses in the Swedish capital has been kitted
out to run on ethanol, the biofuel that is fast
becoming one of Brazil's most important exports,
and the latest chapter in the country's remarkable
economic "coming of age" story.
The Brazilian stock market, already buoyed by
the boom in prices for the country's commodities
and other exports, has surged to a record level
this week on news that Standard & Poor's,
the credit rating agency, has declared the country
to be "investment grade". Specifically,
that is a stamp of approval on Brazilian government
debt, but it is also the culmination of Brazil's
long slog away from financial crisis, hyper-inflation
and democratic sclerosis. The country might
finally be about to deliver on its promise as
an economic power.
"Brazil is a success story and foreign
investors believe in Brazil," said Rafael
Amiel, an analyst at the research firm Global
Insight. "There is economic stability,
there is price stability, the public finances
have shown a huge improvement and the economy
is growing at a much more rapid pace than before."
The explosive growth of Brazil's ethanol production
is typical of a country rich in natural resources
and whose agricultural sector is regarded as
one of the most efficient in the developing
world. Brazil is the world's biggest producer
of sugar and coffee, whose prices have been
rising on global exchanges. It is also the world's
biggest producer of iron ore, which is being
greedily consumed by China and other developing
nations.
And then there is oil. Two massive finds off
Brazil's Atlantic coast have the potential to
catapult the country into the world's top 10
producers over the next 10 years. Although the
offshore fields will take time and money to
develop, Petrobras, the state oil company, has
already completed a series of promising test
drills. Estimates of the exact size of the Tupi
and Carioca fields vary, but the reserves have
been acclaimed as the biggest oil finds for
30 years.
But Brazil's economic recovery from its financial
crises of 1999 and 2002 – when it had
to be bailed out by the International Monetary
Fund – is based on more than just the
boom in commodities prices. Manufactured goods
account for 55 per cent of the country's exports.
Companies such as Embraer, the aircraft maker,
have emerged on to the world stage, showcasing
an improving technological base in the country.
Lula's sales and marketing tour of Sweden is
in keeping with his business-friendly leadership
which, contrary to initial fears, maintained
the gently reformist and fiscally responsible
policies of his predecessor, Fernando Cardoso,
and won praise from Standard & Poor's this
week.
"Generally pragmatic and predictable policy
and fairly transparent institutions have underpinned
macroeconomic stability in Brazil," S&P
analyst Lisa Schineller wrote. "This has
facilitated a sounder foundation for economic
growth and fiscal improvement over the past
five years that should continue over the next
several years."
Chief among the achievements of recent years
is the taming of inflation. In 1993, it was
2,500 per cent. A new currency and an operationally
independent central bank have kept it below
10 per cent for almost all of the past decade,
and the central bank governor, Henrique Meirelles,
has earned his credentials as an inflation-buster.
His decision to hike interest rates last year
in the face of rising food and fuel prices gave
S&P confidence to upgrade Brazil's sovereign
debt this week, much earlier than anyone had
anticipated.
Global Insight's Mr Amiel praised the track
record of Mr Meirelles. "In 2005, when
the economy was slowing and inflation going
up, the central bank was very aggressive in
increasing interest rates – against all
odds. It sent a clear signal that it would not
allow high inflation any more. It said if the
country goes into a recession, it goes into
a recession. That meant that... little by little,
prices stabilised."
With biofuels, investment in nuclear power and
a sophisticated hydroelectricity programme,
Brazil has achieved energy independence, while
Lula's policy of paying families who keep their
children in school has also helped blunt just
a little of the social inequality. As a result
foreign companies are pouring investment into
the country. London-listed Eurasian Natural
Resources, which yesterday paid $300m for the
iron ore company Bahia Mineracao, is just the
latest in a long line.
All of which has contributed to Brazil's ballooning
reserves of foreign currency, which have grown
to $200bn now from $85bn at the end of 2006
and $57bn at the end of 2005, when it finished
paying off its IMF loans early. This cushion
means the government can manage any short-term
crisis very easily, if it were to come. The
country is solid, and debt repayment capacity
is not an issue.
The question for Brazil now turns from one of
stability to one of growth. It is the B in the
so-called Bric countries which promise super-size
growth over the coming decades, but its 4.5
per cent rate lags Russia, India and China by
some distance and it will continue to do so
until it can haul its investment levels higher.
Government debt remains high, at 44 per cent
of GDP, and consumes significant sums in interest
payments, with spending – particularly
on pensions – continuing to worry economists.
Only 16 per cent of Brazil's GDP is channeled
into investment, compared with a Latin American
average of 20 per cent and 40 per cent in China,
but at least the percentage is creeping upwards.
The elevation to investment grade status should
help matters, too, triggering a virtuous circle
of lower sovereign debt interest costs and higher
foreign investment. One of the reasons the Bovespa
stock market index jumped on Wednesday was that
a new cadre of overseas investors, barred from
investing in sub-investment grade countries,
can now buy into Brazilian companies.
Augusto de la Torre, the World Bank's chief
economist for Latin America, said: "This
formally opens the door to quite a bit of money
in investors hands to support Brazil's development."
The timing of the S&P upgrade – in
the midst of a global credit crisis and concerns
over the economic outlook in North America –
should be a big boost to private investor sentiment
on Brazil, Mr de la Torre added.
A stable financial environment should also help
Lula's government shift its focus to infrastructure
investment – a key plank in Lula's re-election
campaign in 2006 and vital if Brazil's economic
growth rate is to be sustained. He is promising
new roads, dams and railways, with tax incentives
to help seal the deals.
"The country is vast and resourceful,"
said Global Insight's Mr Amiel. "It has
plenty of natural resources and so much potential
for expansion of its infrastructure and development.
It has ample room to grow."
Lula is a reassuring figure
If you want to understand President Luiz Inacio
Lula da Silva of Brazil – more popularly
known simply as "Lula" – then
think of him as a sort of South American version
of Tony Blair, but with a better story. Lula
believes as fervently as Bill Clinton or Blair
ever did in the merits of the "third way",
that half-forgotten piece of political philosophy
that is about pragmatism, permanently triangulating
conflict and a vaguely humanised form of capitalism.
Like Blair, Lula is there as a relatively reassuring
figure to the international business community,
a signal that Brazil is not hostile, and a welcome
change form the statist military dictators who
ran the country until the 1980s, and the Communists
and Castro clones who occasionally crop up around
Latin America.
"Before the Workers' Party came to power,
people were afraid of us," Lula once said.
"And they were right."
Lula has been reformist, partially privatising
the public pensions system, creating an independent
central bank and instituting a basic income
for all poor families. As a result, Lula has
succeeded where his more radical neighbour to
the north in Venezuela, Hugo Chavez, has failed:
in working with private companies to maximise
his nation's economic potential.
Yet he has also strained to maintain good relation
with President Chavez and with President Bush
and tried to broker peace in the border conflict
between Colombia and Venezuela.
As the leader of the Workers' Party of Brazil,
possibly as misleading a label as "labour"
became in the UK, Lula became President in 2002
with 61 per cent of the vote. His popularity
has hardly waned since, and he was re-elected
in 2006 in a similar landslide. Barring disaster,
he will be around until 2011, but no longer,
he says.
His personal story is an impressive, almost
astonishing tale. He was brought up in poverty
and began work as a shoe shiner at 12. Modern-day
tourists in Rio and Sao Paulo encounter his
successors, virtually begging for work from
passers by, every day. His first wife died in
childbirth in a run-down hospital and he lost
a finger in an accident in a car parts factory.
His rise in politics came via the trade union
movement, and the foundation in 1980 of the
Workers' Party. In 1986, he won a seat ion the
Brazilian Congress, the start of his political
career. Few world leaders can out-humble him.
Lula has overseen a rapidly growing economy,
but one with an almost equally booming population,
so growth in GDP per head has not been so impressive.
Nonetheless this nation of almost 190 million,
mainly younger people, and led by the charismatic
Lula is laying claim to an increasing role as
a leader of Latin America and of the wider developing
world.
Corruption and splits are there, but a bigger
voice in such bodies as the UN, the World Trade
Organisation, the G7 and elsewhere for Brazil
are bound to follow. We will be hearing a great
deal more from Lula.
Sean O'Grady
. (*) Nos jornais de domingo, a Mirim Leitão
fez peripécias para demonstrar que “grau
de investimento” ... era melhor que tivesse
ido para o Haiti. O Globo faz extensa reportagem
para demonstrar que o “grau de investimento”
foi uma desgraça para o Peru, que, aliás,
recebeu o titulo um mês antes do Brasil.
E, finalmente, o Farol de Alexandria faz, como
sempre, um artigo obtuso – não
se sabe aonde ele quer chegar – para dizer,
num acesso cabotino, que o “grau de investimento”
foi conferido ao Governo dele, aquele que quebrou
três vezes ...
Leia também:
Grau
de investimento fecha o PiG
PIB
em alta + dívida em queda = grau de investimento
O
grau de investimento foi uma desgraça