Bangkok Post

TROPICAL DRIFT

- JORGE SVARTZMAN

The Brazilian economy slowed in President Jair Bolsonaro’s first year in office, according to official data.

RIO DE JANEIRO: The Brazilian economy slowed in President Jair Bolsonaro’s first year in office, according to official data released on Wednesday, disappoint­ing news for markets that bet on the far-right leader to engineer an economic take-off.

And the outlook for Latin America’s biggest economy is not much better for this year, given the damaging impact of the new coronaviru­s, analysts warned.

Brazil’s economy grew 1.1% in 2019, down from 1.3% in each of the previous two years, said the national statistics institute, IBGE. Growth for the fourth quarter came in at 0.5%.

Bolsonaro, who has been dubbed a “Tropical Trump,” took office on January 1, 2019, after storming to a shock election win in a Brazil fed up with corruption scandals and coming off a brutal recession.

The former army captain vowed during his presidenti­al campaign to jump-start the economy, winning the support of the business sector despite his open admission that he knows little about economics.

Giving vast power to his University of Chicago-trained economy minister, Paulo Guedes, he began implementi­ng a sweeping agenda of pro-market reforms, austerity cuts and privatizat­ions, including a long-sought pension reform that passed in October.

When Bolsonaro took office, analysts forecast economic growth of around 2.5% for the year. The final figure came in at less than half that.

“It was a cold bath of reality,” said economist Victor Beyrute of Guide Investimen­tos. “Brazil is going through a transition period, and the problem can’t be solved in a year.”

Bolsonaro faced criticism for refusing to answer journalist­s’ questions about the economy.

Instead, he made his daily appearance before the press corps with a surprise guest

— comedian Marvio Lucio, decked out in a presidenti­al sash to imitate Bolsonaro.

The president referred all questions to his double, who asked, “What’s GDP?” Critics did not find it funny.

“It takes a dumb president to find the ‘humour’ in growing poverty and inequality,” tweeted Senate opposition leader Randolfe Rodrigues.

Economy guru Guedes sought to downplay the news, saying it was “no surprise” and that Brazil could grow more than 2% this year “if reforms continue.”

But the powerful minister’s role looks increasing­ly threatened.

“He’s not delivering what he promised .... The Paulo Guedes of today isn’t the Paulo Guedes of January 2019,” said Andre Cesar, of Brasilia-based consultanc­y Hold. “He’s facing the perfect storm.”

This is shaping up to be another tough year for the world’s ninth-biggest economy.

Consulting firm Capital Economics said the latest data “masked a sharp loss of momentum late in the quarter,” and warned of “growing headwinds from the effects of the coronaviru­s.”

Brazil, which has confirmed two cases of the new coronaviru­s, is particular­ly exposed to the economic impact of the disease because of its close ties with China, its largest trading partner.

The government’s current forecast is for 2.4% economic growth this year, but markets are predicting less. Capital Economics revised its own forecast down to 1.3%.

The central bank said on Tuesday it was “closely monitoring the impacts of the coronaviru­s outbreak,” and was prepared to cut its benchmark interest rate again.

The bank has already cut the rate to a series of record lows in a bid to revive economic growth. It lowered it to 4.25% in February, the fifth straight decrease since July.

 ??  ?? Bolsonaro: Dubbed a ‘Tropical Trump’
Bolsonaro: Dubbed a ‘Tropical Trump’

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