Political Economy of Lula’s Brazil

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Brazil
Brazilian Central Bank
Brazilian Economy
Caporale Madi
Cash Transfer Programs
Category=JBSL
Category=JP
Category=KCL
Category=KCP
conditional cash transfers
Consumer Credit Market
Cristina Fres
De Borja Reis
deveopment
Dilma Rousseff
ecological contradictions
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eq_business-finance-law
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External Insertion
Family Allowance Program
Felix Ruiz Shez
FHC's Government
Gdp Growth
heterodox economic policies
heterodox economics
Human Development Index
IBGE
income distribution analysis
IPEA
Jaime Marques Pereira
latin america
Latin American development
Lula
Lula Years
Lula's Brazil
Lula's Governments
Marcelo Milan
Maria Alejandra
Miguel Bruno
Operation Car Wash
Parliamentary Coup
Partido Dos Trabalhadores
Pierre Salama
Political Functionality
Politicasl Economy
Popular National Project
post-neoliberal economic transformation
PT Model
Public Administration
Real Average Wage
Reginaldo Moraes
Ricardo Caffe
Roberio Paulino
state intervention markets
Wage Share
WLN

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138050242
  • Weight: 521g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 17 Apr 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The Political Economy of Lula’s Brazil describes the social, political and economic transformations that led to increased interest in the tropical giant at the start of the 21st century. This volume demonstrates that Brazil’s rise was the result of the adoption of heterodox economic policies, while also highlighting the obstacles to choosing an egalitarian development path in Latin America.

Adopting an innovative perspective in terms of methodology and interpretation, contributors from Brazil, Latin America and France follow a non-dogmatic critical approach in order to explain the institutional changes that made a new cycle of development possible in Brazil. The authors also argue that the evolution of Brazil, following the implementation of leftist policies, paradoxically gave birth to several economic, political and environmental contradictions. They contend that these contradictions, including the falling rate of profit linked to the full employment of resources; the redistributive process seen as a menace by the conservative middle classes; and the growing intervention of the state in the different markets, eventually led to the end of the early 21st century development cycle.

Providing clues to understanding the contradictory and painful path towards the development of semi-industrialised countries, this book will interest students and academics in the fields of economics, sociology, history and political science. The story it tells may also interest all those searching for independent analysis of the successes and failures of Lula’s Brazil.

Pedro Chadarevian is Assistant Professor at Universidade Federal de São Paulo, Brazil, where he teaches economics and public policy. He has been working on several research issues including racial inequalities, affirmative action, economic development and the political economy of the environment and climate change.