Swift growth by nimble Latin American countries like Chile, Colombia and Peru has put renewed focus on regional heavyweight Brazil, whose relatively closed, high-tax economy is now sputtering below its potential.
The three Andean countries grew more than twice as fast as Brazil last year and are expected to outpace it again this year. Brazil has also lagged its peers in the BRIC club of emerging market heavyweights that includes China, India and Russia.
Officials in the Andean countries say they have benefited from low public debt loads, fiscal surpluses that allow them to invest heavily, and an aggressive pursuit of free-trade deals with big countries that have made their economies among the most open in the world.
In Brazil, politics have at times stymied ambitious fiscal reforms to eliminate the deficit in a country with powerful public sector unions.
Strong business groups anxious to protect their lucrative positions in the domestic market of 200 million people have resisted free-trade pacts. That has left consumers in the lurch: the iPhone 4S was retailing for $1,250 at an outlet in Brasilia in February. They sell for half as much on Amazon.com.
“There are two visions,” about which economic model to follow: an open one or a closed one, Colombian Finance Minister Juan Carlos Echeverry said at the weekend at a meeting of the Inter-American Development Bank in Uruguay’s capital Montevideo.
“The message we send to our producers is you are in the world, not just Colombia. The future is about being competitive and this is as painful as giving birth.”
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The three Andean countries grew between six and seven per cent last year, well above Brazil’s 2.7 per cent.
Brazil’s economy has expanded steadily over the last decade and it grew 7.5 per cent in 2010, leading some economists to say it had finally buried its history of slow growth. But with last year’s sharp decline, those worries are back.
Most economists now say Brazil will grow only around 3.3 per cent this year. Peru expects to grow up to six per cent and Colombia is so confident of its expansion that the central bank has been boldly raising interest rates.
“In open economies like Peru there are fewer market distortions, unlike economies which tend to close themselves and create new artificial barriers,” Peruvian Finance Minister Luis Miguel Castilla said in Montevideo. “That also means the capacity of companies in open economies to adapt in a context of international competition is much greater.’
Castilla said the risk for small countries that rely on commodities exports is that they can suffer shocks when prices fall, but that they also can recover quickly.
Echeverry and Castilla declined to explicitly pinpoint Brazil’s challenges but touted the success of their efforts to streamline taxes, lower tariffs and ramp up public investments.
Brazil lacks a major free-trade agreement despite exports that have surged over the last decade. Its Byzantine tax code soaks up about 34 per cent of gross domestic product and requires companies to hire armies of accountants.
Its debt load of 37 per cent of GDP, though it has fallen from more than 50 per cent over the last decade, is costly to finance because of interest rates that are among the highest in the world and a net public sector deficit that historically has crowded out investment by the private sector.
Years of shortfalls have left infrastructure bottlenecks that contribute to inflation and which the government is racing to eliminate before Brazil hosts the World Cup in 2014 and the Olympics two years later.
Brazil’s companies have been mostly sheltered from competition for years. Now, what the government has dubbed a global “currency war” has left its currency, the real, near all-time highs and undermined the competitiveness of Brazilian industry.
Economists worry that 75 per cent of Brazil’s exports are tied to commodities prices.
“This leaves us vulnerable. We need to diversify our exports and we must make our industries more competitive,’ said Elcio Gomes Rocha, chief economist at state-owned Banco do Brasil.
He said capital investments make up only 19 per cent of Brazil’s GDP and that the minimum the economy needs is about 24 per cent. Brazil also has a relatively low domestic savings rate.
“You grow when you save,” Colombia’s Echeverry said. “The Asian countries keep on growing because they have savings rates of 30 or 40 per cent and investment rates of 40 to 45 per cent. It’s not like this if you just consume and don’t save.”
Mauro Leos, regional credit officer for Latin America at the ratings agency Moody’s, said it is a medium-term worry for Brazil.
“Brazil is a large economy, it’s a BRIC. However it’s one of the few countries in the sovereign universe where you have investment rates below 20 per cent. Those countries that have low investment rates tend to be poor, small or not rich. It’s something that’s strange.”
‘Reasonable growth’
Though Brazil has made enormous progress over the last decade — lowering the poverty rate and joblessness to record lows — its reforms never went as deep as those in Chile and Peru, where right-wing authoritarian governments in the 1980s and 1990s slashed tariffs and overhauled public pension liabilities.
Pension and social security liabilities have long been a major cause of Brazil’s continuing public sector deficit, which governments since the return to democracy in 1985 have narrowed to 2.4 per cent of GDP by making piecemeal changes.
But talk of sweeping fiscal reforms has run into political resistance. The ruling Workers’ Party has close ties to public sector unions, which were instrumental in helping it win the presidency in 2002.
Opposition to shrinking the state became a rallying cry during President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva’s re-election campaign in 2006, when the party seized on a plan by the economics advisor to opposition challenger Geraldo Alckmin to drastically cut spending 10 percent across the board.
Lula’s aides said the Alckmin plan would throw the economy into a tailspin.
But Miriam Belchior, Brazil’s planning minister under President Dilma Rousseff, says that is changing and that fiscal and monetary policy now work together to help reduce the lofty benchmark interest rate, which has contributed to an overvaluation of the real and undermined the competitiveness of Brazilian exports. The Selic benchmark rate is currently at 9.75 percent after a series of cuts over the past six months.
"Right now it’s possible to have this new mix between fiscal and monetary policy," she said. "This is the big change."
Rousseff froze 55 billion reais ($32 billion) in spending this year, mainly on administrative and discretionary costs, while preserving outlays for public investments. That followed a 50 billion reais reduction last year.
Belchior said the government has also sent a bill to Congress that over the long-term would help control pension costs for public sector workers, a major drag on fiscal accounts. It has cleared the lower house but not the Senate and relations between the government and Congress are strained.
Brazil’s economy grew at an annual average of 3.8 percent over the last decade, but Peru had an average rate of 6.4 percent.
Brazil’s former central bank chief, Henrique Meirelles, tried to downplay worries about modest growth. "Brazil still has a reasonable trend growth rate," he said. "The country has the conditions to grow but has challenges."
He said Brazil’s economy was not driven only by exports. "It’s very important that the domestic market is kept strong and that has been one of the reasons for strong growth."
Rousseff’s government was criticized as protectionist by policymakers at the IADB meeting for pressuring Mexico last week to restrict its auto exports to Brazil.
Chile and Peru - and to a lesser extent Mexico and Colombia - have arguably the world’s most ambitious free-trade agendas.
Their free-trade pacts stretch from China and Japan and South Korea, to the United States and Europe. More pacts with smaller trading partners have been signed or are in progress with countries like India.
EU trade ministers agreed on Friday to approve a free trade pact with Colombia and Peru.
"Once the EU accord, is ratified 90 percent of our trade will be covered by some kind of preferential accord," Peru’s Castilla said. "I think this an advantage that our country has relative to our neighbors who don’t."
(Additional reporting By Guido Nejamkis, Antonio De la Jara, Krista Hughes and Felipe Llambias; Editing by Kieran Murray)