In LatAm’s Poor Showing on Share of World GDP Brazil Does Best

Debt, inflation and Asia’s strong economic growth forced Latinamerica’s share of the world’s GDP to drop 1.8 points in the last quarter of a century, according to international consultants based on IMF/World Bank reports.

Latinamerica’s contribution which represented 7.2% of GDP in 1980 dropped to 5.4% equivalent to 2.5 trillion US dollars.
United States with 4.6% of world population (compared to LatAm’s 8%) has a 28% share of world GDP.

Big changes also happened inside Latinamerica in the last 25 years. Argentina which concentrated 27% of the region’s GDP in 1980, dropped to third place behind Brazil and Mexico and in 2005 represents a modest 7.8%.

Chile on the other hand managed to climb 0.7 points from 3.6% of LatAm’s GDP in 1980 to 4.3% in 2005. Chile’s success in spite of its relatively small economy is based on sound economics, fiscal discipline, low inflation and pioneering trade relations with Asia which spurred strong, sustained expansion.

Brazil leads in the region with a GDP share ranking between 35/37%, and Mexico boomed ahead particularly with oil and the 1994 North American Free Trade Agreement encompassing United States and Mexico.

However Latinamerica’s high foreign debt, US$ 763 billion in 2004 is one of the factors that help to explain the region’s lesser participation worldwide.

"The heavy debt burden plus high interest rates diminished the region’s countries capacity to invest, particularly in infrastructure", said Ricardo Amorim from the Latinamerican branch of international consultants West LB.

Asia’s growing participation from 22.5 to 27.6% also influenced the poor performance of Latinamerica.

"Hyperinflation, balance of payments crisis originated in the implementation of certain economic policies also contributed heavily to the poor showing", argues Alberto Ramos from Goldman Sacks.

Mercopress – www.mercopress.com

Tags:

You May Also Like

In Critical Condition Brazilian Boy With Needles Had One Pierce His Heart

A Brazilian two-year boy who had about 50 sewing needles inserted in his body ...

Economist Calls Brazil’s Monetary Policy Inconsistent

Roberto Macedo, one of Brazil’s best-known economists and commentators, says the government’s inflation targeting ...

A Brazilian Poet’s Perspective on a Fishy Human Connection

Glauco Ortolano, a Brazilian poet and writer, who teaches college in the US has ...

Landless Movement Wants a New Brazil in the Country and Cities

{mosimage}On 2 May 2005, over 12,000 members and supporters of the Brazilian Landless Movement ...

Brazil Creates Close to 200,000 New Jobs in May, Less than April or May 2005

198,837 new formal jobs (with signed working papers) were created in May, in Brazil, ...

Stop Complaining on a Full Stomach, Brazil Tells Businessmen

The financial sector in Brazil is complaining for nor reason, says Guido Mantega, the ...

Brazil’s Fragole Uses Art to Sell Clothes Worldwide

A garment factory from Porto Alegre, capital of the southernmost Brazilian state of Rio ...

An Arab Helpful Hand to Brazilian Deserts

During the international seminar about the semiarid and water resources, which took place in ...

Brazil Calls UN Rapporteur Arrogant and a Liar

The president of Brazil’s National Indian Foundation (FUNAI), Mércio Gomes, used the term " ...

LETTERS

Investments into Brazil economy should reach $15 billion this year, almost as much as ...