Thursday, October 11, 2012

Could Brazil Become the Next Greece?

In this blog, I have generally tried to paint a picture of Brazil that is cautiously optimistic, emphasizing the major challenges the country is facing while suggesting possible approaches to address them. In this post, however, I will present the pessimist’s case. Despite the immense progress that Brazil has made in the last twenty years, there is a very real concern that such gains will ultimately prove illusory, just as the famous “Brazilian Miracle” of the 1970s led to a massive debt crisis and a lost decade of economic stagnation. Looking at the ongoing situation in Southern Europe, it is difficult not to draw parallels with Brazil.

By now, the troubles of Greece, Italy, Spain and Portugal have been well documented. The countries had long been plagued by similar problems: underlying competitiveness issues in businesses and labor markets due to weak productivity growth, a large, entrenched bureaucracy that soaked up government spending while inhibiting the private sector, entrenched corruption and tax evasion issues that led to inefficient spending and revenue collection, and overly generous salaries and pensions in the public sector that grew exponentially with the demographic aging of the population. While economies suffering from such flaws would normally be expected to stagnate, Southern Europe actually boomed over the last decade due to the adoption of the euro and the governments’ ability to borrow money at cheap interest rates. People excitedly talked about the “convergence” of the Eurozone, and Greece, Spain and Portugal became part of a handful of countries to cross the threshold from middle- to high-income status. Now, of course, that story is quickly unwinding, and Southern Europe looks set to struggle with economic hardship for many years to come.

Brazil suffers from many of these same underlying weaknesses. It has a very large, bloated public sector whose salaries and pensions take up most of government spending, and federal spending continues to rapidly outpace the overall expansion of the economy:


 
(Source: The Economist)

Furthermore, Brazil already spends more on pensions than any major country in the world save Italy, despite having a much younger population. This means that as the population ages, the problem is expected to get significantly worse, resulting in an explosion of costs for the government:


(Source: The Economist)

These problems, combined with an underlying lack of competitiveness and poor productivity growth, point to serious structural problems facing the Brazilian economy. Like the nations of Southern Europe, these issues have plagued Brazil for a long time. Whereas Southern Europe’s problems were camouflaged by the adoption of the euro, Brazil’s problems were camouflaged by a massive commodity boom due to China’s industrialization. The dangers have not yet become as acute in Brazil as they are now in South Europe, but as the population ages it is clear that the country is walking toward a major fiscal crisis.

Yet there are reasons to be hopeful that Brazil will not necessarily go down this path. Brazil learned about fiscal mismanagement the hard way after crises in 1982, 1998 and 2002. Long a poster child for out-of-control spending and hyperinflation, the country is now considered to be fairly fiscally prudent. It has regularly run a fiscal surplus, boosted its foreign currency reserves, brought down its debt-to-GDP ratio, maintained rigid inflation targeting through monetary policy controlled by an independent central bank, and seen its sovereign debt rating rise over the last few years. Furthermore, unlike its Southern European peers, it has strengthened its tax collection agency, referred to locally as “The Lion”, which has successfully cracked down on evasion and adopted aggressive revenue collection tactics that are lauded internationally. The adoption of these policies under President Cardoso and their continuation under President Lula has been the hallmark of Brazil’s success, and the reason that the country was able, for the first time in its history, to adopt counter-cyclical measures in 2008 and 2012 to stimulate the economy and shield it from the effects of the global financial crisis. This was a major step forward for the country.

But this sound fiscal management in itself will not be enough over the long term to avoid an economic crisis. With the economic tailwind from China fading and the population aging (the worker-retiree ratio is set to fall from 8.51 in 2010 to 2.89 by 2050), the government cannot rely indefinitely on a commodity boom and a demographic dividend to buoy its finances. Major structural reforms will be needed to avert a Southern Europe-style catastrophe.

The ruling PT’s record of leadership is not encouraging on this front. President Lula established a reputation as a free-wheeling populist, generously spending government funds on an assortment of development projects. While many of these programs achieved very admirable social goals, others simply expanded the political patronage machine and bloated the government payroll. President Rousseff has changed course somewhat, staring down striking public workers, fighting congressional patronage machines, publishing bureaucrats` salaries to promote public shaming, and successfully passing a first-step pension reform program. But there are some worrying signs that she is letting Brazil’s fiscal rigor slip: pressuring the central bank to continue to reduce interest rates despite rising inflation concerns, and reducing the primary budget surplus in order to stimulate growth. (However, these moves may end up being wise over the long run, as falling interest rates and new tax cuts could improve competitiveness, providing inflation can be kept under control.)

Overall, it is clear that President Rousseff is moving the PT toward more prudent fiscal policies. There is hope that, like the Socialists in France, economic realities will force the leftist party to restrain its big-spending instincts and move to a more moderate position in the long term. The danger, however, is that Brazil’s problems are not as immediate as those of Europe, and its political leaders can probably get away with putting off major reforms for some time to come. Ms. Rousseff has taken a few steps in the right direction, but she has not been bold enough. To avoid becoming the next Greece, Brazil will need to be much more aggressive in radically reorganizing its bureaucracy, improving its spending efficiency, simplifying its tax code, and promoting productivity gains in the private sector. The major worry is that Brazil, like its Southern European cousins, will ignore the problem until it is too late. Courageous leadership will be needed to save the country from becoming the next Greece.

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