Brazil is no longer the world's 7th largest economy. According to the IMF, the Brazilian share of world goods and services production, which was 4.4% in 1980, reached 2.5% last year, the lowest rate ever since. The data refer to the share of global GDP in purchasing-adjusted dollars, which reflects differences in the cost of living between countries. As a result, in 2018, Brazil lost the position of the seventh largest economy in the world, which it had held since 2005, to Indonesia. The difference is that Indonesia's GDP has grown above 5% a year since the Asian crisis of 1998.
The figures indicate that Brazil's relevance to the global economy declines considerably after six years of the economic crisis that began under Dilma Rousseff's government, passed by Michel Temer's government and is now under the administration of Jair Bolsonaro. The Brazilian economy is practically stagnant compared to growth of 1.2% in the last two years and the growth forecasts for 2019 are getting smaller. It is undeniable that the last three governments, the last Brazilian governments (Dilma, Temer, and Bolsonaro), have committed many misconceptions when directing the country's macroeconomic policies.
According to Laura Carvalho, an economist, and professor at University of São Paulo (USP), Brazilian governments should collect more taxes from the rich and make investments in innovation and services go hand in hand. For her, the recessive adjustments proposed by the current government will continue amid the scrapping of physical and social infrastructure.
For the economist, Nelson Marconi, of the Getulio Vargas Foundation (FGV), the fiscal adjustment is the big issue of the Brazilian economy. According to him, the proposed Pension Reform of the government of Jair Bolsonaro will worsen the living conditions of those who need it the most because it does not fight the privileges and reaches mainly low-income workers.
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