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Dilma pledges new economic policy and team if she wins: bye, bye Mantega

Monday, September 8th 2014 - 05:56 UTC
Full article 3 comments
 “I won't speak of appointments, but a new government will require a new staff. I have no doubt about that,” said the Brazilian president “I won't speak of appointments, but a new government will require a new staff. I have no doubt about that,” said the Brazilian president
Last year Lula da Silva suggested Guido Mantega to be replaced, which Dilma promised to assess, an advice she ended up not taking. Last year Lula da Silva suggested Guido Mantega to be replaced, which Dilma promised to assess, an advice she ended up not taking.

Brazil’s President Dilma Rousseff has hinted that if re-elected next month, she would not reappoint Finance Minister Guido Mantega. When reporters in Fortaleza asked Rousseff about Mantega’s role if she were re-elected, she responded that, “A new election means a new government, a new team.”

 “I won't speak [of appointments]. Do you want to know why? Because it brings bad luck to talk about something that hasn't happened yet. Nevertheless, it will be a new government; it will require a new staff. I have no doubt about that,” she added.

Removing Mantega would likely be an attempt to appeal to the markets as the country’s stagnant economy has been a persistent problem for Rousseff, despite repeated attempts to stimulate growth, particularly through consumption.

In an interview with Folha de Sao Paulo, presidential aides said that Dilma Rousseff's speech in the state of Ceará was part of a “process” to bring her government closer to the business sector and that it does suggest a change to the financial team is impending, if the current president faces reelection.

Mantega has been in charge since 2006 and is the minister to have held the longest office in the country during the democratic period. Rousseff has been pressured by former president Lula da Silva to signal changes to Brazil's economic policy in the event of a second mandate, in order to get business support.

Last year Lula da Silva suggested Guido Mantega to be replaced, which Dilma promised to assess, an advice she ended up not taking.

Marcos Troyjo, director of the BRICLab at Columbia University said that Rousseff and her mentor, Lula da Silva, were likely looking for a new appointment in an attempt to appeal to the business sector and calm the markets.

“I don’t think that Dilma blames [Mantega] for the struggle of the economy, but I do think that she knows that she needs to signal change to the market and perhaps sufficient short-term change, in her view, will be achieved by replacing Mantega with someone else,” Troyjo said.

Rousseff is deeply unpopular with Brazil’s business and industry sectors, which have objected to her highly interventionist economic policies and failure to reform Brazil’s Kafkaesque tax code. Her economic record took an another blow last week when data showed that the Brazil slipped into recession during the first half of the year.

According to Troyjo, the Rousseff administration has been characterized by attempts to simply repeat and intensify economic policies that proved successful for Lula – combining a consumption-based growth model with insufficient reform and too much focus on domestic, rather than global, trade.

“They didn’t work partly because Dilma didn’t have a strong personality in the central bank, and Mantega has failed to produce growth, failed to control inflation and failed at forecasting too, making so many mistakes on what growth will be,” he said. “So the element of trust and predictability has simply withered away from the administration.”

Since Marina Silva’s entrance into the presidential race on Aug. 20, following the death of Brazilian Socialist Party (PSB) candidate Eduardo Campos in a plane crash, Rousseff’s chances of winning the election have fallen. In response, bond and equity markets have rallied, expressing their discontent with the incumbent.

“The market really wants to see Dilma and her team go” Troyjo said.

Marina Silva, the daughter of poor and illiterate rubber tappers from the Amazon, is expected to benefit from a fatigue many in Brazil feel for the political establishment as represented by Rousseff and Aecio Neves, whose parties have, between them, held power for the past 20 years.

Yielding to the demands of last year’s mass street protest movement, which is central to her campaign, Marina Silva has promised to direct 10% of the GDP to public health care, extend school hours and launch digital-democracy programs.

Silva has also promised to run for only one term – a canny proposal designed to appeal to Workers' Party voters who are tired of Rousseff, but would like to see the still-wildly Lula da Silva return to the Planalto in 2018.

Categories: Economy, Politics, Brazil.

Top Comments

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  • GeoffWard2

    Digital-democracy?

    Sep 08th, 2014 - 10:44 am 0
  • ChrisR

    “I don’t think that Dilma blames [Mantega] for the struggle of the economy,’

    Correct, she doesn’t and she is wrong about that and many other things with the economy, not the least of which is screwing Mr. Market.

    She just cannot get her head around the fact that setting market conditions is NOT the remit of any government, but setting the monetary supply and access to it thus encouraging producers and consumers alike IS.

    The main problem is of course that Marina Silva is just another Dumb Ass when it comes to the economy, or so it seems thus far.

    Brazil: back to the future for another decade or two.

    Sep 08th, 2014 - 06:34 pm 0
  • Jack Bauer

    Dilma says ““I won't speak of appointments. Do you want to know why? Because it brings bad luck to talk about something that hasn't happened yet. Nevertheless, it will be a new government; it will require a new staff.”“”
    Let's hope she gets that right.....“a new government”, without dumbass Dilma.

    Sep 08th, 2014 - 07:10 pm 0
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