Kuwait Times

Brazil’s economy firms, shifting political landscape ahead of polls

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RIO DE JANEIRO: After a torrid couple of years, Brazil’s battered economy is expected to confirm signs of recovery this week, shifting the ground under the already unpredicta­ble 2018 general elections.

Today, the IGBE state statistics office will release October unemployme­nt figures. Go Associados consultant­s expect the seventh monthly fall to 12.1 percent, down from a record high 13.7 percent in the first quarter of this year. Then tomorrow, the IBGE will announce GDP numbers for the third quarter. A Bloomberg survey of 31 economists predicts 0.3 percent growth over the previous quarter, the third consecutiv­e quarterly increase in output.

This would put some meat on the recovery from Brazil’s worst recession in history which saw GDP shrink 3.5 percent in 2015 and 3.6 percent in 2016. It also injects an intriguing new element into the run-up to the October 2018 presidenti­al and legislativ­e elections. So far, polls have been dominated by leftwinger Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, a two-term ex-president who has been convicted of corruption. Some way behind him in second place is rightwing firebrand and former army officer Jair Bolsonaro.

The mood is firmly anti-establishm­ent. But if the economy recovers enough, analysts say, voters might be less keen to go for radical options. They might instead put their faith in more centrist candidates espousing a continuati­on of market reforms pushed by the unpopular current leader Michel Temer.

Carlos Langoni, a former Central Bank chairman, says the strength of the recovery remains uncertain, but it’s already sure “there is no risk of slipping back” into recession.

That plus the potential for joblessnes­s falling below the psychologi­cally important barrier of 10 percent could be “critical on the eve of the electoral process.”

A better economy “would be a major argument” for the currently weak centrist candidates and those tied to Temer’s attempts at pension reform and other austerity measures.

For sure, Brazilians are a long way right now from embracing the Temer agenda. He’s the most unpopular president on record and his centerpiec­e policy of scaling back pensions is flounderin­g in Congress. Besides, a corruption scandal has tainted much of the political eliteTemer himself being twice charged with crimes-making a revolt at the polls more likely. But Brazilians are not necessaril­y in an ideologica­l mood and may be persuaded to vote on their pocketbook­s, says Langoni, who is now at the Getulio Vargas Foundation in Rio de Janeiro. — AFP

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