Business-State Relations in Brazil

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93)
A01=Mahrukh Doctor
Author_Mahrukh Doctor
Brazil
Brazil Cost
Brazilian Business
Brazilian National Development Bank (BNDES)
Brazilian Political Economy
Brazilian Ports
Business Collective Action
business lobbying port sector Brazil
Business State Relations
Category=JP
Category=JPH
Category=KC
Category=KCM
Category=KCP
Category=KJ
Category=KNG
Category=KNX
Civil Society
Collective Action
Corporatism
corporatist institutions
Critical Juncture
Desired Policy Output
Dilma Rousseff
Dock Companies
Economic Liberalisation
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Growth Acceleration Programmes (PAC)
Incremental Institutional Change
infrastructure investment policy
Institutional Economics
institutional modernization
Interest Intermediation
Latin American Politics
Lava Jato
Lobbying
Logistics Infrastructure
Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva
National Dock Labour Scheme
Part III
PNA
Policy Implementation
Policy Network Analysis
policy networks Latin America
Policy-Making
Political Economy
political economy Brazil
Port Administration
Port Authority
Port Modernisation Law (Law 8630
Port Modernisation Law (Law 8630/93)
Port Modernisation Law (Law 863093)
Port Reform
Port Reform Lobby
Port Sector
Port Workers
Private Terminals
PT Government
Public Ports
Reform
Stevedore Union
Trade Union
transport logistics analysis

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367000318
  • Weight: 430g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 27 Jul 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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In recent years, the spotlight of international attention on Brazil has often been in the area of logistics infrastructure—for example, on its capacity to deal with the high demand expected during the World Cup and the Olympics. However, neither competitiveness nor infrastructure concerns are new for Brazil. In the 1990s, Brazilian policy-makers adopted a series of liberalizing economic reforms that exposed the poor condition of logistics infrastructure and inadequate investment in Brazilian ports, roads, railways and airports. Over twenty years later, the implications of those reforms still colour Brazil’s prospects for development.

Mahrukh Doctor’s book evaluates the political economy of reform in Brazil and the difficulty of implementing institutional modernization in the context of opposition from vested interests originating in the state and civil society. It focuses specifically on the Port Modernization Law, which aimed to augment the country's competitiveness by creating efficient and low cost ports. Based on primary research carried out over a period of twenty years using original qualitative data, Doctor’s analysis focuses on the difficulties in implementing this law and how those difficulties are symptomatic of the wider issues associated with lack of sufficient investment in infrastructure in Brazil. Using the case of the business lobby for port reform, the book examines the evolving nature of business-state relations and the process of institutional change in Brazil. Doctor particularly examines the building of consensus for reform and policy formulation in the port sector and the challenges of reform implementation and institutional modernisation. The analysis provides extensive insights and lessons related to the prospects for boosting competitiveness of Brazilian ports. The book concludes by suggesting a likely path for the evolution of corporatist institutions as well as the provision of adequate logistics infrastructure to support business success in Brazil.

A unique work on the subject of port reform in Latin America that uses a hybrid analytical framework to understand reform in Brazil, this book is pertinent for a variety of subjects from Latin American Studies to political economy to economic-policy making.

Mahrukh Doctor is Senior Lecturer in Political Economy at the University of Hull and Adjunct Professorial Lecturer at the Johns Hopkins University SAIS-Europe. Her research interests include political economy of Brazil and regionalism in Latin America.

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