If you ask any Brazilian about the major problems
facing their country, one of the first responses (after corruption, of course)
will certainly be lack of infrastructure. I have mentioned this issue in previous
posts, and there is no doubt that infrastructure has become a major topic of
discussion in the national media. With the 2014 World Cup and 2016 Olympics
looming (not to mention next month’s Rio+20 summit and the 2013 Confederations
Cup), the world is watching closely as Brazil seeks to modernize its airports,
roads, ports, and urban transportation systems.
Much of the recent criticism, both national and
international, has focused on poor execution and slow implementation, as
projects across the country are behind schedule and makeshift solutions such as
temporary airport terminals are being proposed. Time is certainly of the
essence as the date for the events moves closer. But in fact it is quite normal
for infrastructure projects to come in over budget and behind schedule.
In my home state of Maryland, the Inter-County
Connector, a major new toll road which finally opened in November 2011, was
criticized for years due to ballooning costs and a slow construction schedule.
South Africa heard many similar critiques regarding its infrastructure projects
in the run-up to the 2010 World Cup. While preparations may not be ideal, I am
confident that they will be adequate for Brazil to fulfill its responsibilities
as host country for all these events in the years ahead. And if insufficient
preparations end up causing Brazil significant international embarrassment
during the World Cup, that should serve as a powerful incentive to improve
execution of infrastructure projects in the future.
Long term, however, Brazil faces real challenges
regarding its infrastructure. At its heart, the issue is not execution but
rather financing. Simply put, Brazil needs to come up with a lot of money if it
is to pay for the massive reforms needed to update the entire country's
infrastructure system and put it on a path to achieve higher rates of economic
growth. This represents a major challenge for a country that currently invests
only 19% of its GDP.
China serves as a useful foil for Brazil in this
regard. Having recently reached middle-income status after years of
urbanization and large scale, low-wage manufacturing, China is trying not to
hit a wall but rather to unlock a new era of growth to transition from
middle-income to high-income country over the next several decades, following
in the path of its East Asian neighbors Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan. To
achieve this end, the country's leaders have invested massively in
infrastructure, creating a new high-speed rail system in addition to numerous
other projects. As a result, investment reached 48% of GDP last year. While
this extraordinarily high rate was temporarily inflated by the government’s
$586 billion stimulus plan to counteract the 2008 financial crisis and has led
many to cry panic about an investment bubble, it is not far off from the
roughly 40% rates of investment of Japan in the 1970s and South Korea in the
1990s, suggesting that China
is following a historical development path that will pay dividends in the
future.
Unfortunately, Brazil does not have China’s
ability to finance large-scale infrastructure improvements. It has a low
domestic savings rate, equivalent to 17% of GDP over the last decade compared
with 50% in China. It also does not have a large trade surplus. Whereas China
ran extremely large current account surpluses averaging nearly 6% of GDP over
the last decade, Brazil ran a deficit averaging -.5%. (Source:
tradingeconomies.com) In other words, China saved up the money it made from
exports during the last ten years of rapid economic expansion, whereas Brazil
spent its earnings. Now, China is able to fund huge infrastructure projects all
over the country, whereas Brazil is struggling to find the cash it needs.
President Rousseff’s aggressive focus on reducing
interest rates may help in this regard, as falling rates are
already lowering the government’s borrowing costs, freeing up money for
investment that would otherwise be spent on servicing the debt. However, this
step alone will not solve the problem. The Brazilian government’s drive to
lower interest rates should improve the country`s macroeconomic fundamentals,
but expanding the credit supply will do little to improve the savings rate.
A more important step forward in financing
infrastructure projects has been the recent wave of privatizations. Recognizing
that the government simply did not have the money to finance much-needed
airport reforms, Ms. Rousseff turned to the private sector for help. Infraero,
the country’s airport authority, began last year by selling the concession to
operate the airport in Natal, a small World Cup host city in the Northeast that
has been the most behind schedule in preparations. This February, the agency auctioned off concessions to
operate public-private partnerships for three major airports in São Paulo and
Brasília. Two more auctions are expected to follow for the airports in Belo
Horizonte and Rio de Janeiro. If these projects turn out well, privatizations
may become an increasingly important tool in updating the country’s
infrastructure.
The downside to privatizations is that investors
expect to earn a commercial rate of return, and often end up charging a hefty
price tag for use of the infrastructure. I was astounded by the tolls on a
recent car trip from Belo Horizonte to the coastal city of Cabo Frio. The road
was of remarkably better quality than anything else I had seen in Minas Gerais,
but we ended up paying 45 reais in tolls over the course of seven hours in the
car, and the price tag was significantly higher for trucks and other large
vehicles. Similar fears abound regarding the airline privatizations. After the
winning bid to operate São Paulo’s main airport came in at five times the
government’s asking price, many have started to worry that the high costs of
the concessions will be passed on to airlines and consumers. Private money is
desperately needed to improve Brazil’s infrastructure, but the government will
have to figure out ways to keep fees from spiraling out of control.
It could start by improving its auction
processes. Outside of the problem of keeping bids under control to prevent
future spikes in fees, the government should adequately vet proposals at an
early stage to ensure that the consortia have the necessary expertise to
operate efficiently. The government caused
a stir several weeks ago when rumors leaked that it was worried about some
of the winning operators’ lack of expertise in operating large airports and
history of accumulating unpaid debt, although the transfer of the concessions
is still proceeding as planned. In addition to the issues regarding the airport
auctions, the proposed high-speed rail project linking Rio and São Paulo has
been postponed several times, after three auctions in 2010-2011 failed
to yield a single proposal from a national construction firm. The
government is currently revising the auction rules, but the project, which was
originally supposed to be ready for the 2016 Olympics, now looks to be at least
ten years away.
Ironically, Brazil’s ability to attract
infrastructure financing may depend on its emerging market foil mentioned
above: China. As it has done across the developing world, China is investing
huge amounts of money in securing access to Brazil’s export market, due
primarily to its appetite for steel, oil, and foodstuffs. China’s massive
savings are being used to improve Brazil’s electrical grids, rail systems, and
ports. The biggest symbol of Chinese investment in Brazil is the Açu
Superport, nicknamed “The Highway to China”, a $2.5 billion project set to
open this year that will become one of the main conduits for trade between the
two countries.
Yet even with lower interest rates,
privatizations and foreign direct investment, it is difficult to see how Brazil
will reach the investment levels needed to spring the middle-income trap and
become a wealthy country without fundamentally learning to save more and
consume less. Brazil has become increasingly reliant on consumer spending, not
investment, to finance its economic growth. These three graphs illustrate just
how poorly Brazil fares against its BRIC peers in this regard, as it invests
little, relies more on consumption, and has experienced a drop in its capital
stock per person over the last three decades (courtesy of the Angry
Bear Blog):
There is hope that the coming oil boom will flood
the state’s coffers, creating a large trade surplus that can then be invested
not only in a massive infrastructure program, but also in new health,
education, and scientific research and development initiatives. Spent wisely,
oil money could be the key to Brazil’s long-term economic success. But the
chances are equally high that oil could feed Brazil’s vices, encouraging a
bloated public sector, commodity dependence, and lavish, inefficient spending
sprees without promoting the key investments needed to put the economy on a
more dynamic path. If that becomes the case, Brazilians may have to come to
accept dirt roads and sky-high tolls for a long, long time.
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