
A DEVELOPING STORY
We know who Brazil’s next president will be.
Pen poised, I had hoped to be able to provide the name in this issue but
as the elections have gone to a second round that is not possible because of my
publishing deadline. Even so, in
September’s column (“The Power Game”) I said that whoever the new
president will be, it was important that there was no change at all in the
positive direction in which the country is moving.
Jim O’Neill, the chairman of Goldman Sachs’s asset management
business and creator of the BRIC acronym, is uncertain who would have made the
best president between Dilma Rousseff and José Serra, the two leading
contenders, but he is certain of one thing:
it is very important for the country that the existing macro policies
remain in place. Reassuringly, both
candidates for the presidency agree with him.
Dilma Rousseff fell short by 3 percentage points of an
outright win in the first round at the beginning of October and perhaps the
victory she has fought hard for was denied her because of the wild card in the
pack, Marina Silva, who was once (no relation) the environment minister in Mr.
Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva’s government. She
represents the Green party and achieved nearly 20 per cent of the votes in the
first round.
The perception, however, has been that José Serra is more
market-friendly (he was a very successful health minister in the previous
Fernando Henrique Cardoso government) whereas Dilma Rousseff is likely to
increase the role of the public sector in the economy, a move which would not be
welcomed by many businessmen in the private sector, as well as put
more emphasis on growth and income distribution with less priority being
given to (much needed) fiscal reform, including a complete overhaul of the
country’s tortuous tax system and labour laws.
If, however, she does have populist tendencies she is also pragmatic and
throughout the campaign she has promised to protect, rather than tamper with,
the three mainstays of Brazil’s stability:
inflation targeting, a floating exchange rate and the reduction (albeit
gradual) of public debt.
But a Rousseff win on 31st October, which Lula
wanted, means that, like him, she will have to fight the statist elements within
her own Workers Party and at the same time be able to successfully defend the
central bank. If president, can she
be as effective in doing so as her predecessor who has been, so far, the most
popular president in Brazilian history? Although
George Bernard Shaw argued that “we learn from experience that men never learn
anything from experience”, if Lula’s candidate has won and has observed her
mentor closely, then maybe the new president’s gender will make the
difference.
Prospects for Brazil and other developing economies remain
bright as the economic and political picture in the United States of America, as
well as in some European countries, grows darker (think of the recently
de-clawed Celtic tiger). According
to the United Nations World Investment Report there are, for example, around
21,500 multinationals based in this new emerging world and the number of
companies from Brazil, India, China or Russia on Britain’s Financial Times 500
list more than quadrupled from 15 to 62 in 2006-8 (a period best remembered by
most developed countries as an economic nightmare).
Each of the BRICs enjoys a particular advantage:
in China’s case it is manufacturing, it is services in India (coupled
with the English language) and for both Brazil and Russia it is energy and
commodities. In fact, multinationals
predict that about 70 per cent of the world’s growth over the next few years
will emanate from emerging markets (40 per cent of it is expected to come from
China and India alone).
Another significant development has been the number of
businessmen and bankers who are looking at Latin America as an alternative to
China where some of them have experienced difficulties.
To be sure, the positives outweigh the negatives in Latin America
(Brazil, Mexico, Chile, Colombia, Panama and Peru all having investment-grade
credit ratings) and which has 15 per cent of the world’s oil reserves, vast
mineral wealth, about 25 per cent of the planet’s arable land and 30 per cent
of its water.
Developing countries appear to be replicating Japan’s
business style of the 1950s which, by the 1980s, caused America’s car
manufacturers to wake up, horrified to find that Japan had taken over from the
US as the world’s leading car maker. In
a similar fashion, today’s rising economies are themselves centres of business
innovation with re-tooled production and distribution systems.
Not only are they developing new products and services, they are offering
them at prices significantly cheaper than those to be found in the West, such as
US$3,000 cars, US$300 computers and
US$30 mobile telephones.
It is also not difficult to forecast where most of the
consumers of the future will live, based on figures provided by the United
Nations Population Division. North
America’s population in 2030, with a total of around half a billion, could be
almost half that of Latin America (Europe, however, will be roughly on a par
with Latin America) whereas Asia is expected to have almost 5 billion consumers.
In both China and India hundreds of millions of people will enter the
middle class in the coming decades with consumers in developing countries, taken
as a whole, getting richer much faster than their equivalents in the West have.
In Latin America the latest figures suggest that in the first
decade of this century about 30 million people in Brazil alone have joined the
ranks of the middle class. It is a
trend seen elsewhere in the region according to data from the Economic
Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean which has tracked the changes in
regional inequality during the period 2000-06.
In 12 of the 17 countries surveyed the level of inequality declined, with
the greatest improvement being found in Ecuador versus unwelcome increases in
Guatemala, Uruguay, Costa Rica, Nicaragua and (especially) Honduras.
It has taken 200 years of independence in some of Latin
America’s countries to really
begin to see their potential reach fruition but which still remains hampered by
the fact that productivity (except in farming), savings and investment are
growing too slowly. Innovation in
the region, with a few exceptions such as Brazil, needs a boost as does the
quality of education and on both counts this is the trump card held by Asians.
Latin America, however, has been fortunate in other ways
despite the shortcomings. The evils
which fell upon the region some 20 years ago – debt default, deflation and
terrifying budget deficits – are now what the West is confronted with.
Not only that, but the thirst for raw materials – especially in China
and India – is being quenched to a large degree by the plentiful supply of
them in South America. This
bountiful bonanza has been complemented by the significant improvement seen in
the quality of economic management, sensible banking policies and the taming of
inflation across the region.
Still, like a Shakespearean ghost at a banquet, an
ever-present reliance on commodities is an unwelcome guest which holds the
region hostage because of unpredictable price fluctuations.
Although down from 86 per cent in the 1970s, commodities still accounted
for 52 per cent of the region’s exports in the past decade according to the
World Bank. Encouragingly, several
economies, including Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Mexico and Peru, all have growing
domestic economies with low debt levels and large foreign reserves, so perhaps
there are sound reasons for long-term optimism.
Over time it is even possible that general perceptions of the region will
change and go beyond the image of just “a man with a moustache, a guitar and
revolver” (as a Nobel prize winner for literature, Colombian Gabriel García Márquez,
once put it).
While a new president will don the sash of office in Brazil
this month, Panama will be celebrating its independence from Spain as well as
Colombia. In the US a new 435-member
House of Representatives will be elected along with one-third of the 100-seat
Senate and in Seoul, South Korea’s capital, a G20 summit is being held.
On a lighter note, in Guangzhou, China, the Asian Games take place.
But I suspect that given the West’s current economic health, November
will see fun and games in Washington and Seoul as well.