O que é este blog?

Este blog trata basicamente de ideias, se possível inteligentes, para pessoas inteligentes. Ele também se ocupa de ideias aplicadas à política, em especial à política econômica. Ele constitui uma tentativa de manter um pensamento crítico e independente sobre livros, sobre questões culturais em geral, focando numa discussão bem informada sobre temas de relações internacionais e de política externa do Brasil. Para meus livros e ensaios ver o website: www.pralmeida.org. Para a maior parte de meus textos, ver minha página na plataforma Academia.edu, link: https://itamaraty.academia.edu/PauloRobertodeAlmeida.

Mostrando postagens com marcador recessão econômica. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador recessão econômica. Mostrar todas as postagens

terça-feira, 14 de abril de 2020

Recessões e recessões no Brasil: as importadas e as nossas

Recessões no Brasil: separando os choques externos de internos


Nem todas as recessões se parecem, e cabe separar aquelas derivadas de choques externos.
Deixo de lado a de 1908, bastante severa, pois tenho de fazer ainda algumas investigações históricas.
Vou direto para a “mãe de todas as crises”, a de 1929, que nos afetou em  1930-31, mas da qual nos recuperamos rapidamente, com algumas medidas “keynesianas avant la lettre”, ou seja, sem qualquer teorização ou instrução do mestre de Cambridge, que ainda estava tentando se recuperar das suas especulações em Bolsa, depois de queda de 1929.
Não foi culpa nossa, obviamente, e aproveitamos para avançar no processo de substituição de importações. Houve uma queda em plena Segunda Guerra, o que é absolutamente normal.
A próxima, a de 1981, resulta diretamente do segundo choque do petróleo, em 1979 (e não tínhamos feito o dever de casa no primeiro choque), mas mais exatamente do aumento dos juros americanos no mesmo momento, pelo presidente do Fed, Paul Volcker. O Brasil não conseguiu mais pagar os juros da dívida, que triplicaram, e teve de apelar a empréstimos-ponte dos banqueiros comerciais, e o fez pela recorrente negociação de acordos de créditos stand-by do FMI, nenhum deles implementado corretamente ou completamente, pois nunca cumprimos as condições.
Nossa decadência econômica começou aí mesmo, pois NUNCA mais conseguimos crescer a taxas vigorosas e sustentadas. 
A crise de 1990 deriva tanto do Plano Collor, que sequestrou poupanças e congelou a economia, como da hiperinflação deixada por Sarney: quando este passou o poder a Collor, a inflação rodava a a80% ao mês.
A dupla crise de 2015-16, essa sim, NÃO TEM NADA a ver com choques externos ou hiperinflacionários, mas sim deriva inteiramente da INCOMPETÊNCIA economica de Dona Dilma e seus meninos amestrados, que produziu a mais grave recessão de nossa história feita inteiramente no país: no total, um déficit orçamentário que chegou a 10% do PIB, um decréscimo no PIB de 8% no total e de 10% no PIB per capita, que deixou 12 milhões de desempregados, e a mais violenta confusão nas contas públicas do Brasil.
A que se anuncia agora, inédita sob qualquer critério, foi produzida pela pandemia, mas ocorre no contexto de um país com baixo crescimento, déficits elevados sem solução na presente conjuntura, desemprego em elevação, e sem perspectivas no futuro imediato.

Paulo Roberto de Almeida
Leitor de história econômica
Brasília, 14 de abril de 2020

quinta-feira, 17 de outubro de 2019

Venezuela: 200% de inflação, 50% de desemprego, retração econômica de 33% em 2019, sobre queda à metade desde Maduro

Venezuela cerrará el año con una inflación del 200.000%
El FMI rebaja la previsión del alza de precios, aunque la economía se reducirá un tercio a finales de 2019
Florantonia Singer
 El País, Madri – 17.10.2019

En julio el Fondo Monetario Internacional (FMI) comenzó a recalcular las estimaciones de la brutal hiperinflación que vive Venezuela desde hace dos años y en su nuevo informe de este martes la ha rebajado nuevamente. El país sudamericano, inmerso en una profunda crisis humanitaria y política, cerrará el año con 200.000% de inflación y una estimación de 500.000% para 2020. El indicador está muy por debajo del aterrador pronóstico que hacía el organismo multilateral el año pasado de un indicador del 10.000.000%, que en el trimestre pasado ya había rebajado a 1.000.000%. La reducción de ceros no implica, sin embargo, un escenario más alentador para la nación petrolera.
El régimen de Nicolás Maduro ha aplicado medidas parciales y tardías, en opinión de los economistas, para controlar la subida de los precios y la depreciación del bolívar. El aumento del encaje legal bancario ha sido una de las más extremas, pues la restricción del financiamiento crediticio a las empresas ha tenido un costo muy alto para la actividad económica. Además, después de 15 años de férreos controles de precios y de cambio, el chavismo ha flexibilizado de forma no oficial las fiscalizaciones a comercios, lo que ha llevado a una vuelta de hoja demencial en cotidianidad venezolana, en la que por años había visto en Venezuela: anaqueles llenos de productos básicos y ofertas, pero pocos ciudadanos con capacidad para adquirirlos.
La contracción del Producto Interno Bruto sigue en picada como desde hace cinco años y el FMI la calcula en 35% para cierre de 2019 y con una caída menos severa, del 10%, para 2020. En un lustro de encogimiento sostenido de la economía, este año se producirá la reducción más significativa. Desde que Maduro llegó al poder la economía del país se ha contraído a la mitad; en 2019 se achicará otro tercio. Según los datos del organismo, la relación de las caídas ha sido así: en 2018 fue de 18%, en 2017 de 15,7%, en 2016 de 17%, en 2015 de 6,2% y en 2014 de 3,9%. “Se prevé que continúe el colapso multianual de la producción. La profunda crisis humanitaria y la implosión económica en Venezuela continúan teniendo un impacto devastador, y se espera que la economía se reduzca en aproximadamente un tercio en 2019”, refiere el informe presentado este martes.
El FMI destaca que el empeoramiento de las condiciones macroeconómicas entre 2017 y 2019 en un pequeño grupo de países, entre ellos Venezuela, Argentina, Turquía e Irán, ha incidido en una disminución del crecimiento global de 3,8% en 2017 a 3% este año. Para el país caribeño también prevé un aumento del desempleo de 47,2% en 2019 a 50,5% en 2020.
Pese a la desaceleración de los precios que se ha registrado desde julio, la hiperinflación está todavía lejos de desaparecer de la vida de los venezolanos. El Gobierno de Maduro había controlado el gasto fiscal retrasando el incremento del salario mínimo. En 2018 hizo aumentos cada dos meses para compensar el aumento de precios, pero este lunes le tocó dictar su tercer incremento del año, después de seis meses sin ajuste que llevaron la remuneración a un mínimo histórico de menos de 2 dólares mensuales. La reducción de los ingresos por la merma en la producción en la petrolera, sumado a la camisa de fuerza que han supuesto las sanciones económicas de Estados Unidos, obligarán a un aumento de la base monetaria a través de la impresión de dinero sin respaldo, que seguramente disparará los precios.
Maduro ha anunciado que se reunirá con su equipo para definir una nueva “ofensiva económica” para lo que resta de 2019. El plan anunciado en agosto de 2018, que incluyó la resta de cinco ceros a la moneda y la emisión de nuevos billetes, se fue al traste en menos de un año. El nuevo bolívar soberano nació con un cono monetario cuyo billete de mayor denominación era de 500 bolívares y 10 meses después el Banco Central debió emitir nuevas piezas que ahora llegan hasta 50.000 bolívares, que apenas alcanzan para pagar dos cafés con leche en una panadería.

segunda-feira, 19 de agosto de 2019

Economia global: o grande desmantelamento por causas estruturais e outras acidentais (Trump)

Quatro artigos importantes sobre a redução do crescimento, uma possível recessão e as dificuldades atuais (e futuras) da economia global, inclusive no plano populacional, com meus agradecimentos enfáticos ao amigo e colega Pedro Luiz Rodrigues, que faz a seleção permanente, não apenas diária, das melhores matérias da imprensa internacional.
Paulo Roberto de Almeida 
Brasília, 19 de agosto de 2019

The New York Times – 10.8.2019
What’s Wrong With the Global Economy?
The problem goes much deeper than Trump or tariffs.
Ruchir Sharma

Global markets were seized by fear last week that trade wars were slowing growth in Germany, China and the United States. But the story here is bigger than President Trump and his tariffs.
The postwar miracle is over. Since the financial crisis of 2008, the world economy has been struggling against four headwinds: deglobalization of trade, depopulation as labor forces shrink, declining productivity and a debt burden as high now as it was right before the crisis.
No major economy is growing as fast as it was before 2008. Not one is growing faster than 10 percent, the rate experienced by the Asian “miracle economies” before the crisis. In almost every country, the national discussion focuses on what must be done to revive growth and ignores the fact that the slowdown is driven by forces beyond any one government’s control. Instead of dooming ourselves to serial disappointment and fruitless stimulus campaigns, we need to redefine economic success and failure.
Germany is one of at least five major economies on the verge of a recession, which is typically defined as two consecutive quarters of negative growth. But the real issue is whether that definition still makes sense in a country with a shrinking labor force like Germany’s.
Its working population has been declining for years and is expected to fall to 47 million from 54 million by 2039. And it’s not alone in this. Forty-six countries around the world — including major powers like Japan, Russia and China — now have shrinking populations.
Demographics are usually the main driver of economic growth, so it is basically inevitable that these countries will now grow at a much slower pace. And we are not talking about minor population declines. Projections for 2040 show China’s working-age population falling by 114 million, Japan’s by 14 million. With a shrinking labor force, these economies will inevitably slow and, at times, contract. To keep calling two negative quarters in a row a “recession” implies that this outcome is somehow abnormal or unhealthy. That will no longer be the case.

To avoid overreacting, the discussion about economic health needs to shift to measures that better capture satisfaction and contentment, like per capita income growth. In countries with shrinking populations, per capita incomes can continue to grow so long as the economy is shrinking less rapidly than the population. This helps explain why, for example, Japan isn’t facing more social unrest. Its economy has grown much more slowly than that of the United States in this decade, but because the population is shrinking its per capita income has grown just as fast as America’s — around 1.5 percent per year.
Shrinking populations also help explain why unemployment is at or near multi-decade lows, even in countries with serious growth worries, like Germany and Japan. Gainfully employed Germans and Japanese won’t really feel as if their countries are in a slump until per capita G.D.P. growth turns negative — which may prove to be a more useful way to think about recessions in this new era.
The definition of success also needs to change. Many emerging countries still aspire to the double-digit growth rates experienced by what were known as the “Asian miracle economies” from the mid-1960s to the early 1990s, when populations and trade were booming. But no economy had grown so fast before then, and as population and trade surges recede, it’s unlikely any country can repeat those feats.
As growth downshifts, even little miracles are disappearing. Before the 2010s, it was common for one in every five economies to be growing at 7 percent or more annually. Now, among the world’s 200 economies, just eight, or one in 25, are on track to grow 7 percent this year. Most of those are small economies in Africa.
When the news emerged that China’s economy had slowed to just 6 percent, a new low, many investors and analysts rang the alarm bells. But the reality is that economies rarely grow as fast as 6 percent if the population is not booming too. Not only did China’s working-age population growth turn negative in 2016, but it is one of the countries hardest hit by slumping trade, declining productivity and heavy debts. If the Chinese economy really were growing at 6 percent in this environment, it would be cause for celebration, not alarm.
The benchmark for rapid growth should come down to 5 percent for emerging countries, to between and 3 and 4 percent for middle-income countries like China, and to between 1 and 2 percent for developed economies like the United States, Germany and Japan. And that should just be the start to how economists and investors redefine economic success.
This rethink is overdue. The number of countries with shrinking populations is expected to rise to 67 from 46 by 2040, and the decline in productivity growth is in many ways reinforced by heavy debt burdens and rising trade barriers. Redefining the standard of economic success could help cure many countries of irrational anxieties about “slow” growth, and make the world a calmer place.

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The New York Times – 17.8.2019
How World Leaders Ruined the Global Economy
They took the best growth picture in a decade and put us in danger of recession.
Steven Rattner

Why are so many key global leaders pursuing so many stupid economic policies?
As recently as January 2018, the International Monetary Fund issued one of its most upbeat economic forecasts in recent years, extolling “broad based” growth, with “notable upside surprises.”
By last month, the fund had sliced its forecast for expansion this year to 3.2 percent — a significant falloff from the 3.9 percent projection reiterated just six months earlier — and had pronounced the economic picture “sluggish.” American investors are more concerned; the bond market is sounding its loudest recessionary alarm since April 2007.
The deterioration in the economic picture is not the consequence of irresponsible behavior by banks or a natural disaster or an unanticipated economic shock; it’s completely self-inflicted by major world leaders who have delivered almost universally poor economic stewardship.
The trade war initiated by President Trump sits firmly atop the list of bad policies. But Brexit has tipped Britain into economic contraction. With European governments unwilling to pursue structural reforms, the continent is barely growing. President Xi Jinping of China has focused on standing up to Mr. Trump and solidifying his own power. After a promising start reforming the economy, India’s prime minister, Narendra Modi, has turned instead to oppressing his country’s Muslim minority.
And on and on.
None of this was necessary. As the January 2018 I.M.F. report indicated, the world economy was firing on all cylinders — “the broadest synchronized global growth upsurge since 2010” — as jobs were being added and inflation remained subdued.
Yes, Mr. Trump’s trade war and Brexit loomed, but amid hope that the former would prove empty and the latter would be softened.
Not so today.
Often against the recommendations of his more sensible advisers, Mr. Trump has implemented the country’s most protectionist actions since the 1930s. As a result, world trade has begun to fall for the first time in a decade, with noticeable economic impact. Last week, Goldman Sachs cut its already modest projections for fourth-quarter growth to 1.8 percent from 2 percent.
That’s a far cry from the “4, 5, 6” percent that Mr. Trump talked about just before his tax cut passed.
Nor has that been Mr. Trump’s only misstep in economic policy. Instead of nurturing growth with important investments like a robust infrastructure program, Mr. Trump deployed his political capital to secure tax cuts that disproportionately favored business and the wealthy.
The “sugar high” they produced quickly wore off. And now, instead of developing better policies, the president has chosen to attack the Federal Reserve, whose independence is cherished by investors, business people and economists.
Boris Johnson, Britain’s new prime minister, abandoned his predecessor’s notion of a “soft Brexit” that would have maintained some ties with the European Union. Instead, he reaffirmed his promise that his country would leave the E.U. on Oct. 31 with or without a deal. The pound quickly fell to its lowest level against the dollar since 1985. (It has since recovered slightly.)
Then there’s China. By virtue of both its remarkably fast industrialization and its protectionist policies, the nation has long been a trade threat. But four years ago, the government issued its “Made in China 2025” economic manifesto, which put in writing China’s plans to attain a leadership position in key new sectors, including robotics, pharmaceuticals and aerospace.
The notion of China using its state power to take on important American and European industries instead of pursuing market reforms set off alarm bells across the political spectrum and provided a concrete underpinning for Mr. Trump’s trade confrontation.
Mr. Xi, rather than acknowledging China’s protectionist practices, has proved unwilling to accept a new trade agreement with effective enforcement provisions. That has raised doubts about whether China is seriously interested in reforming its unfair trade practices — keeping key markets fully or partially closed, using state subsidies to favor its companies, forcing American companies to transfer technology to China and the like.
Of course, at least in the world’s democracies, voters bear substantial
But the world is now suffering the consequences of these poor choices. Even in China, Mr. Xi did not take power forcibly; he rose through the Chinese political system — much like the Civil Service in other countries — and was awarded the presidency by his peers.
Occasionally, good choices have been made, such as the election of President Emmanuel Macron of France. But even that has not led to progress; public support for Mr. Macron turned to opposition when he instituted the much needed policy changes that he promised.
Any chief executive officer who botched his or her job as badly as most of these leaders have would be fired. Let’s hope that voters come to that realization when given the chance.

Steven Rattner, a counselor to the Treasury secretary in the Obama administration, is a Wall Street executive and a contributing opinion writer.

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The New York Times – 17.8.2019
With Trump as President, the World Is Spiraling Into Chaos
Trump torched America’s foreign policy infrastructure. The results are becoming clear.
Michelle Goldberg

Earlier this week, Pakistan’s ambassador to the United States, Asad Majeed Khan, visited The New York Times editorial board, and I asked him about the threat of armed conflict between his country and India over Kashmir. India and Pakistan have already fought two wars over the Himalayan territory, which both countries claim, and which is mostly divided between them. India recently revoked the constitutionally guaranteed autonomy of the part of Kashmir it controls and put nearly seven million people there under virtual house arrest. Pakistan’s prime minister compared India’s leaders to Nazis and warned that they’ll target Pakistan next. It seems like there’s potential for humanitarian and geopolitical horror.
Khan’s answer was not comforting. “We are two big countries with very large militaries with nuclear capability and a history of conflict,” he said. “So I would not like to burden your imagination on that one, but obviously if things get worse, then things get worse.”
All over the world, things are getting worse. China appears to be weighing a Tiananmen Square-like crackdown in Hong Kong. After I spoke to Khan, hostilities between India and Pakistan ratcheted up further; on Thursday, fighting across the border in Kashmir left three Pakistani soldiers dead. (Pakistan also claimed that five Indian soldiers were killed, but India denied it.) Turkey is threatening to invade Northeast Syria to go after America’s Kurdish allies there, and it’s not clear if an American agreement meant to prevent such an incursion will hold.
North Korea’s nuclear program and ballistic missile testing continue apace. The prospect of a two-state solution in Israel and Palestine is more remote than it’s been in decades. Tensions between America and Iran keep escalating. Relations between Japan and South Korea have broken down. A Pentagon report warns that ISIS is “re-surging” in Syria. The U.K. could see food shortages if the country’s Trumpish prime minister, Boris Johnson, follows through on his promise to crash out of the European Union without an agreement in place for the aftermath. Oh, and the globe may be lurching towards recession.
In a world spiraling towards chaos, we can begin to see the fruits of Donald Trump’s erratic, amoral and incompetent foreign policy, his systematic undermining of alliances and hollowing out of America’s diplomatic and national security architecture. Over the last two and a half years, Trump has been playing Jenga with the world order, pulling out once piece after another. For a while, things more or less held up. But now the whole structure is teetering.
To be sure, most of these crises have causes other than Trump. Even competent American administrations can’t dictate policy to other countries, particularly powerful ones like India and China. But in one flashpoint after another, the Trump administration has either failed to act appropriately, or acted in ways that have made things worse. “Almost everything they do is the wrong move,” said Susan Thornton, who until last year was the acting assistant secretary of state for East Asian and Pacific affairs, America’s top diplomat for Asia.
Consider Trump’s role in the Kashmir crisis. In July, during a White House visit by Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan, Trump offered to mediate India and Pakistan’s long-running conflict over Kashmir, even suggesting that Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi had asked him to do so. Modi’s government quickly denied this, and Trump’s words reportedly alarmed India, which has long resisted outside involvement in Kashmir. Two weeks later, India sent troops to lock Kashmir down, then stripped it of its autonomy.
Americans have grown used to ignoring Trump’s casual lies and verbal incontinence, but people in other countries have not. Thornton thinks the president’s comments were
At the same time, Modi can be confident that Trump, unlike previous American presidents, won’t even pretend to care about democratic backsliding or human rights abuses, particularly against Muslims. “There’s a cost-benefit analysis that any political leader makes,” said Ben Rhodes, a former top Obama national security aide. “If the leader of India felt like he was going to face public criticism, potential scrutiny at the United Nations,” or damage to the bilateral relationship with the United States, “that might affect his cost-benefit analysis.” Trump’s instinctive sympathy for authoritarian leaders empowers them diplomatically.
Obviously, India and Pakistan still have every interest in avoiding a nuclear holocaust. China may show restraint on Hong Kong. Wary of starting a war before the 2020 election, Trump might make a deal with Iran, though probably a worse one than the Obama agreement that he jettisoned. The global economy could slow down but not seize up. We could get through the next 17 months with a world that still looks basically recognizable.
Even then, America will emerge with a desiccated diplomatic corps, strained alliances, and a tattered reputation. It never again play the same leadership role internationally that it did before Trump.
And that’s the best-case scenario. The most powerful country in the world is being run by a sundowning demagogue whose oceanic ignorance is matched only by his gargantuan ego. The United States has been lucky that things have hung together as much as they have, save the odd government shutdown or white nationalist terrorist attack. But now, in foreign affairs as in the economy, the consequences of not having a functioning American administration are coming into focus. “No U.S. leadership is leaving a vacuum,” said Thornton. We’ll see what gets sucked into it.


Foreign Affairs, Nova Iorque- edição setembro-outubro 2019
The Population Bust
Demographic Decline and the End of Capitalism as We Know It
Zachary Karabell

For most of human history, the world’s population grew so slowly that for most people alive, it would have felt static. Between the year 1 and 1700, the human population went from about 200 million to about 600 million; by 1800, it had barely hit one billion. Then, the population exploded, first in the United Kingdom and the United States, next in much of the rest of Europe, and eventually in Asia. By the late 1920s, it had hit two billion. It reached three billion around 1960 and then four billion around 1975. It has nearly doubled since then. There are now some 7.6 billion people living on the planet. 
Just as much of the world has come to see rapid population growth as normal and expected, the trends are shifting again, this time into reverse. Most parts of the world are witnessing sharp and sudden contractions in either birthrates or absolute population. The only thing preventing the population in many countries from shrinking more quickly is that death rates are also falling, because people everywhere are living longer. These oscillations are not easy for any society to manage. “Rapid population acceleration and deceleration send shockwaves around the world wherever they occur and have shaped history in ways that are rarely appreciated,” the demographer Paul Morland writes in The Human Tide, his new history of demographics. Morland does not quite believe that “demography is destiny,” as the old adage mistakenly attributed to the French philosopher Auguste Comte would have it. Nor do Darrell Bricker and John Ibbitson, the authors of Empty Planet, a new book on the rapidly shifting demographics of the twenty-first century. But demographics are clearly part of destiny. If their role first in the rise of the West and now in the rise of the rest has been underappreciated, the potential consequences of plateauing and then shrinking populations in the decades ahead are almost wholly ignored. 
The mismatch between expectations of a rapidly growing global population (and all the attendant effects on climate, capitalism, and geopolitics) and the reality of both slowing growth rates and absolute contraction is so great that it will pose a considerable threat in the decades ahead. Governments worldwide have evolved to meet the challenge of managing more people, not fewer and not older. Capitalism as a system is particularly vulnerable to a world of less population expansion; a significant portion of the economic growth that has driven capitalism over the past several centuries may have been simply a derivative of more people and younger people consuming more stuff. If the world ahead has fewer people, will there be any real economic growth? We are not only unprepared to answer that question; we are not even starting to ask it. 

BOMB OR BUST?

At the heart of The Human Tide and Empty Planet, as well as demography in general, is the odd yet compelling work of the eighteenth-century British scholar Thomas Malthus. Malthus’ 1798 Essay on the Principle of Populationargued that growing numbers of people were a looming threat to social and political stability. He was convinced that humans were destined to produce more people than the world could feed, dooming most of society to suffer from food scarcity while the very rich made sure their needs were met. In Malthus’ dire view, that would lead to starvation, privation, and war, which would eventually lead to population contraction, and then the depressing cycle would begin again. 
Yet just as Malthus reached his conclusions, the world changed. Increased crop yields, improvements in sanitation, and accelerated urbanization led not to an endless cycle of impoverishment and contraction but to an explosion of global population in the nineteenth century. Morland provides a rigorous and detailed account of how, in the nineteenth century, global population reached its breakout from millennia of prior human history, during which the population had been stagnant, contracting, or inching forward. He starts with the observation that the population begins to grow rapidly when infant mortality declines. Eventually, fertility falls in response to lower infant mortality—but there is a considerable lag, which explains why societies in the modern world can experience such sharp and extreme surges in population. In other words, while infant mortality is high, women tend to give birth to many children, expecting at least some of them to die before reaching maturity. When infant mortality begins to drop, it takes several generations before fertility does, too. So a woman who gives birth to six children suddenly has six children who survive to adulthood instead of, say, three. Her daughters might also have six children each before the next generation of women adjusts, deciding to have smaller families. 
The population bust is going global almost as quickly as the population boom did in the twentieth century.
The burgeoning of global population in the past two centuries followed almost precisely the patterns of industrialization, modernization, and, crucially, urbanization. It started in the United Kingdom at the end of the nineteenth century (hence the concerns of Malthus), before spreading to the United States and then France and Germany. The trend next hit Japan, India, and China and made its way to Latin America. It finally arrived in sub-Saharan Africa, which has seen its population surge thanks to improvements in medicine and sanitation but has not yet enjoyed the full fruits of industrialization and a rapidly growing middle class. 
With the population explosion came a new wave of Malthusian fears, epitomized by the 1968 book The Population Bomb, by Paul Ehrlich, a biologist at Stanford University. Ehrlich argued that plummeting death rates had created an untenable situation of too many people who could not be fed or housed. “The battle to feed all of humanity is over,” he wrote. “In the 1970’s the world will undergo famines—hundreds of millions of people are going to starve to death in spite of any crash programs embarked on now.” 
Ehrlich’s prophecy, of course, proved wrong, for reasons that Bricker and Ibbitson elegantly chart in Empty Planet. The green revolution, a series of innovations in agriculture that began in the early twentieth century, accelerated such that crop yields expanded to meet humankind’s needs. Moreover, governments around the world managed to remediate the worst effects of pollution and environmental degradation, at least in terms of daily living standards in multiple megacities, such as Beijing, Cairo, Mexico City, and New Delhi. These cities face acute challenges related to depleted water tables and industrial pollution, but there has been no crisis akin to what was anticipated. 
Yet visions of dystopic population bombs remain deeply entrenched, including at the center of global population calculations: in the forecasts routinely issued by the United Nations. Today, the UN predicts that global population will reach nearly ten billion by 2050. Judging from the evidence presented in Morland’s and Bricker and Ibbitson’s books, it seems likely that this estimate is too high, perhaps substantially. It’s not that anyone is purposely inflating the numbers. Governmental and international statistical agencies do not turn on a dime; they use formulas and assumptions that took years to formalize and will take years to alter. Until very recently, the population assumptions built into most models accurately reflected what was happening. But the sudden ebb of both birthrates and absolute population growth has happened too quickly for the models to adjust in real time. As Bricker and Ibbitson explain, “The UN is employing a faulty model based on assumptions that worked in the past but that may not apply in the future.”
Population expectations aren’t merely of academic interest; they are a key element in how most societies and analysts think about the future of war and conflict. More acutely, they drive fears about climate change and environmental stability—especially as an emerging middle class numbering in the billions demands electricity, food, and all the other accoutrements of modern life and therefore produces more emissions and places greater strain on farms with nutrient-depleted soil and evaporating aquifers. Combined with warming-induced droughts, storms, and shifting weather patterns, these trends would appear to line up for some truly bad times ahead.
Except, argue Bricker and Ibbitson, those numbers and all the doomsday scenarios associated with them are likely wrong. As they write, “We do not face the challenge of a population bomb but a population bust—a relentless, generation-after-generation culling of the human herd.” Already, the signs of the coming bust are clear, at least according to the data that Bricker and Ibbitson marshal. Almost every country in Europe now has a fertility rate below the 2.1 births per woman that is needed to maintain a static population. The UN notes that in some European countries, the birthrate has increased in the past decade. But that has merely pushed the overall European birthrate up from 1.5 to 1.6, which means that the population of Europe will still grow older in the coming decades and contract as new births fail to compensate for deaths. That trend is well under way in Japan, whose population has already crested, and in Russia, where the same trends, plus high mortality rates for men, have led to a decline in the population.
What is striking is that the population bust is going global almost as quickly as the population boom did in the twentieth century. Fertility rates in China and India, which together account for nearly 40 percent of the world’s people, are now at or below replacement levels. So, too, are fertility rates in other populous countries, such as Brazil, Malaysia, Mexico, and Thailand. Sub-Saharan Africa remains an outlier in terms of demographics, as do some countries in the Middle East and South Asia, such as Pakistan, but in those places, as well, it is only a matter of time before they catch up, given that more women are becoming educated, more children are surviving their early years, and more people are moving to cities.
Morland, who, unlike Bricker and Ibbitson, is a demographer by training, is skeptical that humanity is on the cusp of a tectonic reversal in population trends. He agrees that the trends have changed, but he is less prone to the blanket certainty of Bricker and Ibbitson. This is not because he uses different data; he simply recognizes that population expectations have frequently been confounded in the past and that certainty about future trends is unreasonable. Morland rightly points out that even if fertility rates fall dramatically in Africa, there will be decades left of today’s youth bulge there. Because he is more measured in his assessment of the ambiguities and uncertainties in the data, Morland tends to be more circumspect in drawing dramatic conclusions. He suggests, for instance, that China’s population will peak short of 1.5 billion in 2030 and then stagnate, with an aging population and gradual absolute decline thereafter. Bricker and Ibbitson, on the other hand, warn that China’s fertility rate, already in free fall, could actually get much worse based on the example of Japan, which would lead China to shrink to less than 700 million people in the second half of the century. Morland does agree with Bricker and Ibbitson on one important point: when it comes to global population, the only paradigm that anyone has known for two centuries is about to change. 

GREAT EXPECTATIONS

The implications of the coming population bust occupy a large portion of Bricker and Ibbitson’s book, and they should occupy a much larger portion of the collective debate about the future and how to prepare for it. The underlying drivers of capitalism, the sense that resource competition and scarcity determine the nature of international relations and domestic tensions, and the fear that climate change and environmental degradation are almost at a doomsday point—all have been shaped by the persistently ballooning population of the past two centuries. If the human population is about to decline as quickly as it increased, then all those systems and assumptions are in jeopardy.
Both books note that the demographic collapse could be a bright spot for climate change. Given that carbon emissions are a direct result of more people needing and demanding more stuff—from food and water to cars and entertainment—then it would follow that fewer people would need and demand less. What’s more, larger proportions of the planet will be aging, and the experiences of Japan and the United States are showing that people consume less as they age. A smaller, older population spells some relief from the immense environmental strain of so many people living on one finite globe. 
That is the plus side of the demographic deflation. Whether the concomitant greening of the world will happen quickly enough to offset the worst-case climate scenarios is an open question—although current trends suggest that if humanity can get through the next 20 to 30 years without irreversibly damaging the ecosystem, the second half of the twenty-first century might be considerably brighter than most now assume. The downside is that a sudden population contraction will place substantial strain on the global economic system. Capitalism is, essentially, a system that maximizes more—more output, more goods, and more services. That makes sense, given that it evolved coincidentally with a population surge. The success of capitalism in providing more to more people is undeniable, as are its evident defects in providing every individual with enough. If global population stops expanding and then contracts, capitalism—a system implicitly predicated on ever-burgeoning numbers of people—will likely not be able to thrive in its current form. An aging population will consume more of certain goods, such as health care, but on the whole aging and then decreasing populations will consume less. So much of consumption occurs early in life, as people have children and buy homes, cars, and white goods. That is true not just in the more affluent parts of the world but also in any country that is seeing a middle-class surge. 
The future world may be one in which capitalism at best frays and at worst breaks down completely. 
But what happens when these trends halt or reverse? Think about the future cost of capital and assumptions of inflation. No capitalist economic system operates on the presumption that there will be zero or negative growth. No one deploys investment capital or loans expecting less tomorrow than today. But in a world of graying and shrinking populations, that is the most likely scenario, as Japan’s aging, graying, and shrinking absolute population now demonstrates. A world of zero to negative population growth is likely to be a world of zero to negative economic growth, because fewer and older people consume less. There is nothing inherently problematic about that, except for the fact that it will completely upend existing financial and economic systems. The future world may be one of enough food and abundant material goods relative to the population; it may also be one in which capitalism at best frays and at worst breaks down completely. 
The global financial system is already exceedingly fragile, as evidenced by the 2008 financial crisis. A world with negative economic growth, industrial capacity in excess of what is needed, and trillions of dollars expecting returns when none is forthcoming could spell a series of financial crises. It could even spell the death of capitalism as we know it. As growth grinds to a halt, people may well start demanding a new and different economic system. Add in the effects of automation and artificial intelligence, which are already making millions of jobs redundant, and the result is likely a future in which capitalism is increasingly passé. 
If population contraction were acknowledged as the most likely future, one could imagine policies that might preserve and even invigorate the basic contours of capitalism by setting much lower expectations of future returns and focusing society on reducing costs (which technology is already doing) rather than maximizing output. But those policies would likely be met in the short term by furious opposition from business interests, policymakers, and governments, all of whom would claim that such attitudes are defeatist and could spell an end not just to growth but to prosperity and high standards of living, too. In the absence of such policies, the danger of the coming shift will be compounded by a complete failure to plan for it. 
Different countries will reach the breaking point at different times. Right now, the demographic deflation is happening in rich societies that are able to bear the costs of slower or negative growth using the accumulated store of wealth that has been built up over generations. Some societies, such as the United States and Canada, are able to temporarily offset declining population with immigration, although soon, there won’t be enough immigrants left. As for the billions of people in the developing world, the hope is that they become rich before they become old. The alternative is not likely to be pretty: without sufficient per capita affluence, it will be extremely difficult for developing countries to support aging populations.
So the demographic future could end up being a glass half full, by ameliorating the worst effects of climate change and resource depletion, or a glass half empty, by ending capitalism as we know it. Either way, the reversal of population trends is a paradigm shift of the first order and one that is almost completely unrecognized. We are vaguely prepared for a world of more people; we are utterly unprepared for a world of fewer. That is our future, and we are heading there fast.

quinta-feira, 14 de fevereiro de 2019

Desindustrializacao? Argentina anda pior que o Brasil (Clarin)

Clarín, Buenos Aires – 14.2.2019
Por la recesión, la industria ya trabaja a su nivel más bajo desde julio de 2002
Las fábricas utilizaron apenas el 56,6% de la capacidad instalada, una caída de 7.4 puntos porcentuales en comparación con diciembre de 2017.
Ismael Bermúdez

De la mano del desplome de la producción, la industria trabajó en diciembre pasado “a media máquina”. Las fábricas utilizaron apenas el 56,6% de la capacidad instalada, el nivel más bajo desde julio de 2002, la anterior serie del INDEC. El número representa una caída de 7,4 puntos porcentuales en comparación con el mismo mes de 2017, según el relevamiento oficial mensual. En comparación con noviembre de 2018, el retroceso es de 6,7 puntos.
Se trata de un retroceso generalizado que muestra a una industria con casi un 45% de capacidad ociosa. En la caída se destacan el rubro textil y los autos, en parte por paradas técnicas propias de la industria, con niveles de ociosidad de más del 65%.
Los sectores que presentaron en diciembre de 2018 una menor utilización de la capacidad instalada respecto al mismo mes de 2017 fueron la industria automotriz, textiles, metalmecánica, caucho y plástico, ediciones e impresión y tabaco.
Esto pasó porque, por octavo mes consecutivo, en diciembre la industria manufacturera acentuó su retroceso y se desplomó al récord del 14,7%. y cerró el año con una caída del 5%.
Así, la industria acumula ya tres años con un mal desempeño. En 2016, cayó el 4,6%, en 2017 recuperó apenas el 2,5% y en 2018 cayó el 5 %. Representa en tres años una caída de más del 7%, con un fuerte descenso en el nivel del empleo.
El sector con menor utilización de su potencial de producción fue la industria automotriz, que registró, en diciembre de 2018, “un nivel de utilización de la capacidad instalada de 25,6%, inferior al de diciembre de 2017 (38,3%), como consecuencia de la disminución de la cantidad de unidades fabricadas por las terminales automotrices a partir de la menor demanda local y de la realización de paradas técnicas en algunas plantas productivas”, dice el Informe del INDEC.
El segundo lugar en capacidad ociosa lo ocupó el bloque de productos textiles que presentó “un nivel de utilización de la capacidad instalada de 32,3%, inferior al registrado en el mismo mes de 2017 (55,7%). El menor nivel de utilización del bloque se explica por la menor elaboración de hilados de algodón y de tejidos, tanto tejidos planos como de punto”.
El tercer puesto fue para la metalmecánica, con el 42,8% “principalmente por las caídas de los niveles de producción de aparatos de uso doméstico y maquinaria agropecuaria”.
Tampoco se salvó de la caída la fabricación de alimentos y bebidas, con un nivel de utilización de la capacidad instalada de 58,9%, inferior al 61,2% de un año antes, por “ la baja registrada en la elaboración de bebidas, a partir de la menor producción de aguas y sodas, bebidas gaseosas y cerveza”.
Con relación a un año atrás, hay sectores con retrocesos de dos dígitos. Por ejemplo textiles retrocede 23,4 puntos, caucho y plásticos -14,3 puntos  y la industria automotriz - 12,7 puntos. Por encima de los valores de noviembre de 2018 se destaca sólo refinación de petróleo que subió del 73,2 al 77,4%, pero por debajo del 86,3% de diciembre de 2017.
Junto con el indicador de la capacidad instalada de la industria, el INDEC informó también la evolución del indicador sintético deservicios públicos (ISSP) en noviembre. Este índice registró una caída de 4,6% respecto al mismo mes del año anterior. En términos desestacionalizados, el indicador presentó una contracción de 0,6% en ese mismo mes.
Según el organismo, la demanda de energía eléctrica, gas y agua tuvo una caída de 3,5%; la recolección de residuos tuvo una contracción de 1,0% y el transporte de pasajeros registró una baja interanual de 6,3%. Solo el transporte de cargas, acusó una suba del 22,7%. Porque también cayeron los vehículos pasantes pagos por peajes (-13,7%); el servicio de correo postal (-13,8%) y hasta la telefonía registró un descenso de 4,4%.

sábado, 18 de agosto de 2018

A tragedia fiscal brasileira e os privilégios (e fraudes) corporativos - Ricardo Bergamini, Wilson Lima (IstoE)

“Quem não usar os olhos para ver, terá que usá-los para chorar!” (Foerster).
Prezados Senhores
Tema ausente de todos os programas dos candidatos à presidente do Brasil.
Em 2002 os gastos com pessoal consolidado (união, estados e municípios) foi de 13,35% do PIB, representando 41,64% da carga tributária que era de 32,06%.  Em 2017 foi de 15,90% do PIB. Crescimento real em relação ao PIB de 19,10%, representando 49,20% da carga tributária de 2016 que foi de 32,38%. Em relação à carga tributária o crescimento foi de 18,16%. Para que se avalie a variação criminosa dos gastos reais com pessoal, cabe lembrar que nesse mesmo período houve um crescimento real do PIB Corrente de 36,10%, gerando um ganho real acima da inflação de 43,00% nesse período. Nenhuma nação do planeta conseguiria bancar tamanha orgia pública.
Todos os cidadãos brasileiros honestos deste país deveriam renunciar as suas paixões políticas e abraçarem essa causa como sendo verdadeiramente de segurança nacional, caso contrário o Brasil vai explodir, seja quem for o escolhido. Aceito aposta!
Parabéns aos órgãos de controle do estado brasileiro que estão cumprindo com o seu dever, isentos de masturbação mental ideológica.
Desejo que os brasileiros honestos saiam de seus confortáveis casulos e ajudem, pelo menos, na divulgação dessa orgia, considerada pela esquerda como sendo a sofrida classe trabalhadora explorada pelos patrões. Por isso, e somente por isso, todos os candidatos evitam abordar o tema.
Na história do Brasil a nação sempre foi refém dos seus servidores públicos (trabalhadores de primeira classe), com os seus direitos adquiridos intocáveis, estabilidade de emprego e licença prêmio sem critério de mérito, longas greves remuneradas, acionamento judicial sem perda de emprego, regime próprio de aposentadoria (não usam o INSS), planos de saúde (não usam o SUS), dentre muitos outros privilégios impensáveis para os trabalhadores de segunda classe (empresas privadas). Com certeza nenhum desses trabalhadores de primeira classe concedem aos seus empregados os mesmos direitos imorais.

A farra bilionária dos barnabés
Relatório da CGU mostra que, entre 2010 e 2017, R$ 1,3 bilhão foi pago indevidamente a servidores públicos. Após auditorias, foram encontradas 330 mil inconsistências em folhas de pagamento
MAU EXEMPLO A UFRJ liderou o descontrole nas contas e as ilegalidades 
Wilson Lima/ISTOÉ
17/08/18 - 09h00

Considerado um dos maiores estudiosos sobre administração pública de todos os tempos, o ex-presidente dos Estados Unidos Woodrow Wilson destacava ainda nos idos do século XIX que instituições governamentais, aquelas arcadas com o dinheiro do contribuinte, deveriam ser geridas da mesma forma que no sistema privado: com regras específicas, hierarquias e metas e afins. E que, principalmente, o dinheiro público não fosse administrado como se, por ser de todo mundo, não tivesse dono específico, sujeito, então, a todo tipo de desvio. Bem longe do pensamento do ex-presidente americano, no Brasil o dinheiro público perde-se em benefícios inexplicáveis e indevidos, indo parar nos bolsos de servidores públicos – os eternos barnabés da marchinha de Haroldo Barbosa – em expedientes e irregularidades que, de fato, seriam impensáveis na iniciativa privada, pelo imenso desperdício.
Relatório inédito da Controladoria Geral da União (CGU) ao qual a ISTOÉ teve acesso com exclusividade revela que entre os anos de 2010 e 2017 nada menos que R$ 1,3 bilhão foi pago de forma indevida a funcionários públicos. Foram benefícios ilegais que a CGU, a partir de auditorias, conseguiu recuperar. A conta, na prática, pode ser ainda maior, em razão de alguns organismos que a controladoria não alcança. Há um pouco de tudo nas irregularidades descobertas. Servidores que não tiveram o ponto cortado, apesar de terem faltado ao trabalho, filhas solteiras de ex-funcionários que recebiam pensões mesmo sendo servidoras públicas também, pessoas que recebiam benefícios por gratificações por titularidade mesmo sem ter diplomas que justificassem a benesse, funcionários públicos com carga horária flexibilizada, trabalhando menos do que o mínimo determinado pelo regime do serviço público e até pagamento de horas extras indevidas. Em sete anos, os técnicos da CGU apuraram 72 trilhas de auditorias, ou seja, mais de sete dezenas de diferentes modalidades de desvios. “O resultado das trilhas também é repassado ao Ministério do Planejamento para providências corretivas”, descreve o relatório.
A AUDITORIA

Abaixo, trechos do relatório da CGU que identificou as irregularidades:



Os números impressionam. Entre os anos de 2010 e 2014, por exemplo, a CGU apontou 330 mil tipos de inconsistências em folhas de pagamento após auditorias nas folhas de pessoal em todos os órgãos da administração pública federal. Neste período, por exemplo, chamou a atenção o verdadeiro descontrole das contas da Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ). Somente no ano de 2012, foram diagnosticados aproximadamente 19,3 mil inconsistências nas folhas de pagamento da instituição. Também chamaram atenção as incongruências nas folhas do Ministério da Saúde e do Trabalho. Na amostra de 2012, foram detectadas 10,7 mil irregularidades nas folhas de pagamento do Ministério da Saúde e outras 10,3 mil no Trabalho.
Os casos mais escabrosos
Triste é verificar que foi nas instituições de ensino superior, onde se deveria estar pensando soluções para o futuro do país, que os técnicos da CGU encontraram os casos mais escabrosos. De acordo com o órgão, em 50% das Auditorias Anuais de Contas realizadas nas Instituições de Ensino Federais em 2016 e 2017, foram constatados indícios de acumulação ilegal de cargos docentes. Há diversos casos de professores que, mesmo tendo contrato de dedicação exclusiva com uma instituição, ministravam aulas também em outras. Nada menos do que 373 professores com dedicação exclusiva foram flagrados prestando serviços para faculdades distintas.
As auditorias mostram ainda falta de método na concessão dos benefícios. Na mesma Universidade Federal do Acre, um professor demorou três anos para conseguir obter a gratificação merecida depois de concluir seu mestrado. Já um outro obteve o mestrado em 2014 e em 2015 já estava recebendo a gratificação. Mais do que isso, por alguma razão, ele recebeu o benefício de forma retroativa, desde 2006. Esse tipo de inconsistência, para a CGU, gerou um prejuízo de aproximadamente R$ 180 mil.
Indevidos adicionais de insalubridade e flexibilização irregular da carga horária foram outros problemas comuns. “Há reduções da jornada de trabalho concedidas a servidores que trabalham em setores nos quais o atendimento ao público e o trabalho noturno não são características preponderantes dos serviços desempenhados. Verificou-se, ainda, a ausência dos quadros com a escala nominal dos servidores que trabalham no regime flexibilizado”, destaca o relatório. Em linhas gerais, o relatório da CGU assim pode ser resumido: quando se trata o dinheiro público com frouxidão e desleixo, como se não tivesse dono, alguém mais esperto sempre se apropria dele.
Ricardo Bergamini