The Brazilian GDP growth in the second quarter of 2019, 0.4% over the first three months of the same year, confirms the existence of a low growth cycle in Brazil since the end of the recession in 2016.
The advance in the Brazilian GDP is undeniably too small for the size of the problem. There are more than 12 million unemployed and the growth below 1% forecast for this year does not solve this problem at all. With this level of unemployment, consumption in the country does not grow, as jobless people stop consuming to spend on what is completely essential.
There is an undeniable lack of dynamism in the Brazilian economy. To overcome this, Brazil needs public policies focused on infrastructure urgently, but this scenario is not on the Brazilian horizon. On the contrary, there are few measures aimed at infrastructure investments, especially from the federal government.
To meet the global average, Brazil needs to invest 4.7 percent of GDP in infrastructure, according to a study by consultancy McKinsey, prepared at the request of the National Bank for Economic and Social Development (BNDES) and the International Finance Corporation (IFC) of the Bank. Worldwide. Between 2000 and 2016, however, Brazil applied on average only 2.1% of GDP on infrastructure.
According to economist Laura Carvalho, "the return of direct public investment in infrastructure to the pre-crisis level would have high stimulus power, even if it were entirely covered by the elimination of tax cuts, subsidies and other lower multiplier expenses on job creation and income and/or higher income taxes for the rich." However, this is not on the Brazilian political horizon either. Therefore, everything indicates that Brazil will continue to show small GDP growth. As a result, labor supply will remain very weak in Brazil.
One of the sectors that showed improvements was the construction industry in the region of the city of São Paulo, but this is still little to reactivate Brazil's economy.