BRICs as an Engine of Recovery: Brazil Inside the Beltway
Richard Basas
The last month of economic news has been as diverse as the last 10 months of the same forecasts. With the start of July, the drop in recent markets worldwide and predictions of further problems in large economies such as the UK and Japan set to bring the recession further attention, but by mid month the result was that some US banks were making some profits, even paying back small sums of money to Mr. Obama and some auto manufacturers were not destined to be completely eliminated as stability slowly crept back into market forecasts. While these announcements will likely change in the next few weeks as SME’s continue to wind up their companies, the biggest market change seems to be coming from China and India. While many believe that only 8% growth in China may be the limit in order to stave off mass discontent among its population, growth rates of 5% or more in places like India, and lower yet stable rates in Brazil draw attention to hopes of an economic recovery coming from the recently famous super emerging economies of the BRICs. Of great interest and increasing popularity, Brazil, who has managed to maintain a stable growth rate in their economy since the 1990’s global economic troubles between 3-5% and was able to reasonably shield itself from the meltdown of Argentina’s economy in 2001. Brazil is beginning to change into the next large emerging market economy in form and function. The recent recession has taken the new Brazil and brought its relative successes in the last few months into the meeting rooms and policy branches of those economies who wish to change the relationship between North America and Europe towards South America’s largest and most promising economy.
In the Americas there are two large economies outside of the United States that while being hit hard by the recession, have managed to keep the core financial and economic systems of their countries in good shape. Canada and Brazil have stood out as two of the largest stable economies in the Americas and worldwide. With banking systems that have not collapsed and reserves of cash from past years of growth shielding some of the effects of the global economic crisis, both countries could begin to push the Americas and world economy back into positive territory. Limits to BRICs and other relatively healthy economies may be restricted formally and informally however depending on how the EU and US decide to react to other large economies worldwide. Effects on countries such as Canada and Brazil might be produced by restrictions coming from the new Buy America provisions in the US or as an example, be expanded by talks of a possible EU-Canada Free Trade Agreement. Limiting trade between NAFTA partners in North America and retracting from agreements between the US and trade partners in the Americas is what all trading partners of the US fear in the region as well as globally.
Many experts on global economics such as Zakaria and Khanna see the US as possessing a major role in the future world economy, but also one of shared influence and regional power as a necessity. Limits to expanding the economies of the Americas in a united fashion is seen in the lack of interest in regional trade agreements and the lack of support for trade agreements as with the one with the US and Colombia. While the US seeks to put pressure on its economic allies during the recession, the EU is seeking increased open trade with large economies such as Canada, India and China, and China is seeking many economic ties with countries such as Peru, Chile, Venezuela, Argentina and of course Brazil. Even Canada has ratified a trade agreement between itself and Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica and is working on agreements with CARICOM. Effects from Buy America might better regarded as the Buyer Beware provisions, as the US creates a policy environment to push its allies to trade with other economies outside of the Americas and produce economic legacies outside of the US which will strangle future growth of private industry in the US itself. As with any investor, the prospect of future governmental and trade restrictions by doing business with a US company or investor will produce negative incentives in the long run. With so few healthy investors currently, economic legacies such as Ford, Disney, Coca-Cola and McDonalds may be replaced by those created and grown in other healthy economies outside the US and the Americas…bad economic policy is simply a caveat emptor of economic growth.
Not all US policy experts agree with Buy America, and some even have been making attempts to approach Brazil as the next India or China. Mind month, the publication and discussion of the new book: Brazil as an Economic Superpower? Understanding Brazil’s Changing Role in the Global Economy was accompanied in Washington DC by a discussion of Brazil as a rising global economic power. This book launch and discussion followed the Brooking Institutions release of interesting economic data and reports on the region as a whole. Many of these discussions focus or Brazil or Latin America as the next China or India, but in reality the Latin American method or growth and that of growth in China, India and Russia only bare some basic similarities. Latin America and Brazil have traditionally depended on commodity prices principally. While the Brazilian economy is fairly diversified, a large portion of its GDP does come from commodity and oil prices, which is similar to a country like Canada who have a great deal of GDP linked to natural resources. Manufacturing in all economies, including Canada, Brazil, China and India have been greatly affected, leaving China with a growth rate of 6.1% in the first quarter of 2009. While oil prices and other commodity prices have bounced back and forth since 2008, manufacturing has taken severe hits in all nations. China and to a certain degree, India, depend greatly on the demand in foreign markets on US and global consumer spending. Entrepreneurial Organisations such as the SBA.org in the US and CFIB in Canada would be able to make the point that many of the jobs in the US and North America depend on SME’s, and with the increase in bankruptcies and the lack of business loans coming from banks in any financial state, the job loss will only increase and create a further decline in consumer spending. Manufacturing depends on its consumers being able to purchase its good and grow the economy. China, who produces many of these good in the US and EU are entirely dependent on these economies as their growth is directly linked to US and EU consumers. Brazil, while dependent on consumer spending has less than 40% of its trade with the US and is balanced by heavy industry, commodities and technology industries. While many of these sectors are hurt by the recession, it gives Brazil some added security in the long term within the global economy.
The news on recent increases in growth in China and India are positive, but with many consumers losing jobs recently and many smaller industries only failing in recent weeks, it is hard to predict a concrete economic demand for consumer products and link growth in China to the markets it depends on. In reality, many smaller and larger US firms often depended on cheap operating loans from US banks, and without not only financially stable banks, but banks willing to give out loans to investors, it is impossible to justify any prediction of growth in consumer spending when SME’s are neglected from economic recovery and are the last to receive financial aid in the economic crisis, yet provide the majority of jobs in many developed countries. Countries like Brazil and Canada should be considered a relatively strong option for investors, as historically and logically growth seems more likely for all levels of industry in few similar countries in the long run and the avoidance of economic bubbles have been relatively successful in the past.