Brazil’s Finance Minister Knocks on Door of Private Sector

During a speech in the Planalto Palace yesterday, November 10, before the Economic and Social Development Council (CDES), the Brazilian Minister of Finance, Antônio Palocci, asserted that Brazil’s growth process is solid and that the country has embarked on a new phase of the economy.

“All the indicators of foreign accounts, investments, and growth show that we are not caught up in a flight of short duration. Brazil has begun a new cycle,” he affirmed.


According to Palocci, it is now necessary to view the Brazilian economic process as a whole, applying the proper incentives with a focus on aspects regarded as basic to the generation of employment.


The Minister referred to Ministry of Labor data demonstrating that 1.6 million formal job positions were created between January and September of this year.


“Maintaining this pace of economic development, job creation, and development, Brazil will surely occupy a different position in the world economy in a few years and will provide its population far better conditions of life, development, and employment than we enjoy at present,” Palocci said.


The Minister also stressed the importance of getting the National Congress to approve the Public-Private Partnerships (PPPs) project, essential for the expansion of investments in infrastructure.


Palocci also recalled that over the course of recent years, government investment capacity in Brazil has decreased.


He pointed out that, several decades ago, Brazil was a young country, with nine people contributing to social security for each retired person, and could therefore invest with tranquillity.


Nowadays, he said, the country has 1.4 contributors for each retiree; consequently, the government’s accounts have become tighter, and the possibilities of government investments are more limited.


“To turn this situation around, a combination of measures must be adopted. The government has to save more, to invest where it is needed; we need to improve the entire institutional and regulatory framework, so that private enterprise can make the basic investments.


“And, in certain areas of investment, we must create the public-private partnerships, a project that is in the final phase of consideration in the Congress,” Palocci observed.


Agência Brasil
Translator: David Silberstein

Tags:

You May Also Like

Lula Says Brazil Has Learned to Get Out and Get It

Brazilian exports currently have as their main destinations the countries in South America. Even ...

Brazil Intent on Doing Without Bolivia’s Gas in 2 Years

Brazil is going to produce, up to 2008, practically the same quantity of natural ...

So Near, Yet So Far

José Serra virtually destroyed Ciro Gomes on television. If he unleashes this force against ...

Brazil Brings World to Rio to Fight Child Prostitution

Nearly 3,000 people from five continents, 300 of whom are adolescents are being expected ...

Brazil: Making a Difference amid Abject Poverty

The Pastoral da Criança (the Children’s Ministry) is a social program of the Catholic ...

Brazil Opens the Door to Its Bio Treasures

In a move to take advantage of Brazil’s enormous biodiversity, the Brazilian Ministry of ...

Brazil’s Key Interest Rate Expected to Rise

Brazilian equities rose, Thursday, alongside various favorable corporate news items. Despite initial profit taking, ...

Foreign Investors Bring Brazilian Shares to Record High

Latin American stocks put in a very positive performance today, as Brazil, Mexico and ...

In Brazil, Buggies Never Go Out of Style

The buggies, those little hoodless cars with fiberglass bodies and large back wheels, have ...

Multinationals Boycott Soy from Brazil’s Deforested Amazon

In a significant development for rainforest protection, Greenpeace and major UK food companies have ...