Description

This groundbreaking work is the first volume in English to examine Brazil's historic policy reforms of the 1990s and the political, economic, and social results. For years the large and ineffective government of Brazil could neither improve the country's greatly uneven distribution of wealth nor maintain inflation at reasonable levels. In the 1990s, long overdue changes bettered the government's fiscal performance, tamed inflation, and addressed chronic social ills stemming from the imbalance of wealth. But many problems, and many questions, remain. Why is Brazil still so poor, and why is inequality so intransigent? Were some of the reforms counterproductive, or could they have been implemented in a more effective way? Collecting essays by top Brazilianist scholars from various disciplines and intellectual traditions, Reforming Brazil provides new insights for international policy makers, economists, and scholars of Brazil.

Table of Contents

Part 1 Introduction
Part 2 Dawn of a New Era
Chapter 3 The Reform Agenda
Part 4 Reforms
Chapter 5 Monetary and Fiscal Reforms
Chapter 6 Privatization: Reform Through Negotiation
Chapter 7 Social Policy Reform
Chapter 8 Agrarian Reform
Chapter 9 Political Reform: The 'Missing Link'
Part 10 Institutions, Actors, and Regional Context
Chapter 11 Competitive Federalism and Distributive Conflict
Chapter 12 Industrialists and Liberalization
Chapter 13 Entrepreneurs: The PNBE
Chapter 14 Working-Class Contention
Chapter 15 Brazil and Hemispheric Integration

Product details

Published Jun 15 2004
Format Paperback
Edition 1st
Extent 280
ISBN 9780739105870
Imprint Lexington Books
Dimensions 227 x 166 mm
Series Bildner Western Hemisphere Studies
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

Related Titles

Environment: Staging