Top Banner
Helen Joyce Brazil bureau chief Latin America and Brazil: the political and economic prospects for the construction industry
11

Helen Joyce Brazil bureau chief Latin America and Brazil: the political and economic prospects for the construction industry.

Dec 28, 2015

Download

Documents

Buddy Scott
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Helen Joyce Brazil bureau chief Latin America and Brazil: the political and economic prospects for the construction industry.

Helen JoyceBrazil bureau chief

Latin America and Brazil: the

political and economic

prospects for the

construction industry

Page 2: Helen Joyce Brazil bureau chief Latin America and Brazil: the political and economic prospects for the construction industry.

Brazil takes offLatin America: Nobody’s backyard

Page 3: Helen Joyce Brazil bureau chief Latin America and Brazil: the political and economic prospects for the construction industry.

Brazil is the country of the future…(and always will be)

Countries named after commodities: Argentina; Brazil;

Panama; Uruguay

Page 4: Helen Joyce Brazil bureau chief Latin America and Brazil: the political and economic prospects for the construction industry.

Latin America’s strengths•Big; stable; growing population; young•Growing richer and less unequal•Developing domestic consumer market•Mineral resources: oil, iron ore, precious metals•Thriving agribusiness: soya, protein, sugar, fruits, coffee, ethanol, wood…•Optimism! And things are worse elsewhere•The potential for much more growth ahead

Page 5: Helen Joyce Brazil bureau chief Latin America and Brazil: the political and economic prospects for the construction industry.
Page 6: Helen Joyce Brazil bureau chief Latin America and Brazil: the political and economic prospects for the construction industry.

An economy of two halves…Domestic consumption… • The explosion of pent-up consumer demand• 30-40m “new middle-class” in Brazil, and lots more well-off people too• Huge increases in credit

• A developing mortgage market• Shopping centres• Travel and tourism• Auto sales

Page 7: Helen Joyce Brazil bureau chief Latin America and Brazil: the political and economic prospects for the construction industry.

…and extractive industries

• Some of the world’s most productive farms• Huge commodity reserves• Infrastructure being developed by oil and mining companies and agribusiness• Energy: sugar-cane ethanol; flex-fuel cars; advanced biofuels and thermal-power generation• Brazil’s off-shore “sub-salt” oil: like sending a man to the moon

Page 8: Helen Joyce Brazil bureau chief Latin America and Brazil: the political and economic prospects for the construction industry.

…What’s long been lacking: investment and competitiveness…• Low domestic savings (in Brazil < 20% of GDP)

• Capital scarce and pricey; very high interest rates, especially in Brazil

• In Brazil, BNDES provides most long-term credit

• Poor education, low productivity (though not in Mexican industry), fast-rising prices, scarce labour

• Ubiquitous cost and scheduling over-runs

• Backlogs in infrastructure and maintenance

Page 9: Helen Joyce Brazil bureau chief Latin America and Brazil: the political and economic prospects for the construction industry.

Difficulties in doing business• Cartorios; lawyers; despachantes• Growing protectionism• Corruption…or at least a personalised style of doing business• High-cost, low-quality labour• Brazil in particular is still a closed economy; serious bottlenecks in foreign trade• (Cultural) difficulties in saying “no”!

Page 10: Helen Joyce Brazil bureau chief Latin America and Brazil: the political and economic prospects for the construction industry.

The agenda• Persistent slow growth: four BRICs – three that grow and one that doesn’t• A slowdown in China. Domestic consumption based partly on strong commodity exports• Growing political interference• Overvalued currency; high costs; inflation• Complacency: reform fatigue has set in before reforms even started

Page 11: Helen Joyce Brazil bureau chief Latin America and Brazil: the political and economic prospects for the construction industry.

What’s needed• A genuine effort to tackle costs, for example the infamous “custo Brasil”• A “doing business agenda”• Greater government efficiency• Better education• Better rules and regulators• A sense of urgency