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From a Miracle to a Disaster: the Brazilian Economy in the Last 3 Decades

Brazilian Review of Econometrics

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Title From a Miracle to a Disaster: the Brazilian Economy in the Last 3 Decades
From a Miracle to a Disaster: the Brazilian Economy in the Last 3 Decades
 
Creator Gomes, Victor
Teixeira, Arilton
Bugarin, Mirta Sataka
Ellery Jr, Roberto
 
Subject Depression Analysis, Neoclassical Growth Model, Technological Progress
E13, E20, E30
depression analysis, neoclassical growth model, technological progress
E32, N10, O40
 
Description After showing a persistent and high growth rate since the World War II, in the beginning of the eighties the Brazilian growth rate of per capita GNP fell abruptly. In this paper we ask if this fall can be explained by the behavior of technological progress (measured by Total Factor Productivity or TFP). We study the period between 1970 and 1998. We divide this period in two sub-periods. In the first, the seventies, per capita GNP grew at 5.05% a year. In contrast with per capita GNP, TFP grew only until 1974, declining in the rest of the decade. After 1974, the growth rate of per capita GNP was sustained by an increasing investment as a share of GNP due to the increase in public (government plus state-owned firms) and private investments sustained by government subsidies that went from 1% to 4% of GNP in the second half of the seventies. In the second sub-period, the eighties and nineties, both TFP and per capita GNP decreased until 1993, increasing thereafter. We also find in thesecond half of the eighties that investment share was increasing while TFP was decreasing. In this second case it went up mainly as a result of the higher cost of capital relative to consumption. Our main conclusion is that the behavior of the technological progress can fairly describe the dynamics of the Brazilian economy during the period under study.
After showing a persistent and high growth rate since the World War II, in the beginning of the eighties the Brazilian growth rate of per capita GNP fell abruptly. In this paper we ask if this fall can be explained by the behavior of technological progress (measured by Total Factor Productivity or TFP). We study the period between 1970 and 1998. We divide this period in two sub-periods. In the first, the seventies, per capita GNP grew at 5.05% a year. In contrast with per capita GNP, TFP grewonly until 1974, declining in the rest of the decade. After 1974, the growth rate of per capita GNP was sustained by an increasing investment as a share of GNP due to the increase in public (government plus state-owned firms) and private investments sustained by government subsidies that went from 1% to 4% of GNP in the second half of the seventies. In the second sub-period, the eighties and nineties, both TFPand per capita GNP decreased until 1993, increasing thereafter. We also find in the second half of the eighties that investment share was increasing while TFP was decreasing. In this second case it went up mainly as a result of the higher cost of capital relative to consumption. Our main conclusion is that the behavior of the technological progress can fairly describe the dynamics of the Brazilian economy during the period under study.
 
Publisher Sociedade Brasileira de Econometria
 
Contributor
CNPq
 
Date 2010-10-11
 
Type info:eu-repo/semantics/article
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion


 
Format application/pdf
 
Identifier http://bibliotecadigital.fgv.br/ojs/index.php/bre/article/view/2823
10.12660/bre.v30n12010.2823
 
Source Brazilian Review of Econometrics; Vol 30, No 1 (2010); 3–22
Brazilian Review of Econometrics; Vol 30, No 1 (2010); 3–22
1980-2447
 
Language eng
 
Relation http://bibliotecadigital.fgv.br/ojs/index.php/bre/article/view/2823/2255
http://bibliotecadigital.fgv.br/ojs/index.php/bre/article/downloadSuppFile/2823/419