Economic Growth, Inequality and Crony Capitalism

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A01=Danilo Rocha Limoeiro
agricultural sector
Agro Export Sector
Asian Soybean Rust
Author_Danilo Rocha Limoeiro
Brazil
Brazil's Center West
Brazil's Central Bank
Brazilian economy
Brazil’s Center West
Brazil’s Central Bank
Business Insiders
Category=KCD
Category=KCL
Category=KCM
Category=KCP
costly business environment
Credit Default Swap Spreads
Crony Capitalism
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Exchange Rate
Foreign Exchange Rate
Generic Drugs
Healthy Business Environment
Healthy Market Economy
High Level Equilibrium
High Risk Bet
High Transaction Costs
inequality
international development
Lead Business Coalitions
Nash Equilibrium
Optimal Stop Problem
Patrimonial Model
pharmaceutical sector
policy reform obstacles
political business collusion Brazil
political economy Brazil
prosperity in developing countries
Public Administration
Push Back
quantitative political analysis
Regulatory Distortion
sectoral case studies Brazil
Secure Property Rights
state intervention business
state-imposed transaction costs
Tax Breaks
tax policy
transaction cost theory
unequal economies
Weberian Bureaucracy

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367896515
  • Weight: 660g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 13 Jul 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Researchers in international development have long argued that the high costs of doing business harms prosperity in developing countries, a claim that invites the question of why governments impose these costs and why societies fail to enact reforms reducing them. This book seeks to answer the question by looking at the case of Brazil, a large and highly unequal economy riddled with state-imposed transaction costs. By delving into the political dynamics underlying a costly business environment, this book provides the reader with novel insights into crony capitalism and inequality. It argues that the root cause of a costly business environment is the collusion between political actors, bureaucrats and business insiders. Politicians and bureaucrats relish their discretion over rules and policies as a power resource, since they can increase or decrease the costs of doing business faced by firms and sectors. Business insiders collude with government agents to access the loopholes that decrease the cost of doing business, thus gaining a competitive edge over outsiders. This gives the insiders weaker preferences for reforms that could decrease the overall cost of doing business. By pursuing their self-interest, these actors create a low-level equilibrium that perpetuates crony capitalism and inequality to the detriment of overall prosperity. The book makes its case with a sophisticated combination of formal modeling, quantitative analyses and in-depth case studies of tax policy and of the pharmaceutical and agricultural sectors in Brazil. Observers have declared the need for reforms that improve the business environment in developing countries for a long time. However, the findings presented in this book suggest they might have underestimated the challenge ahead. Scholars and policy-makers in international development, business politics and political economy will be interested in the innovative perspective of this book.

Danilo Rocha Limoeiro holds a Ph.D. in Political Science from MIT and a Master’s degree with distinction from Oxford University. Currently, he is the co-founder of Turivius, a company dedicated to helping developing countries decrease bureaucracy through technology.

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