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.

sexta-feira, 24 de janeiro de 2014

Foreign Affairs: o fim do paradigma do Estado-falido (sera?) - Michael J. Mazarr

The Rise and Fall of the Failed-State Paradigm
Requiem for a Decade of Distraction
Foreign Affairs, January-February 2014

A broken globe in an abandoned school in Ukraine. (Fiona McAllister / Flickr)
For a decade and a half, from the mid-1990s through about 2010, the dominant national security narrative in the United States stressed the dangers posed by weak or failing states. These were seen to breed terrorism, regional chaos, crime, disease, and environmental catastrophe. To deal with such problems at their roots, the argument ran, the United States had to reach out and help stabilize the countries in question, engaging in state building on a neo-imperial scale. And reach out the United States did -- most obviously during the protracted campaigns in Afghanistan and Iraq.
After a decade of conflict and effort with precious little to show for it, however, the recent era of interventionist U.S. state building is drawing to a close. And although there are practical reasons for this shift -- the United States can no longer afford such missions, and the public has tired of them -- the decline of the state-building narrative reflects a more profound underlying truth: the obsession with weak states was always more of a mania than a sound strategic doctrine. Its passing will not leave the United States more isolationist and vulnerable but rather free the country to focus on its more important global roles.
THE BIRTH OF A PARADIGM
In the wake of the Cold War, contemplating a largely benign security environment, many U.S. national security strategists and practitioners concluded that the most important risks were posed by the fragility of state structures and recommended profound shifts in U.S. foreign and defense policy as a result. In an interconnected world, they argued, chaos, violence, and grievances anywhere had the potential to affect U.S. interests, and weak states were factories of such volatility. Experiences in Somalia, Haiti, and the former Yugoslavia helped fuel the concern, and by 1994, the CIA was funding a state-failure task force to get a handle on the problem.
In 1997, the Clinton administration released Presidential Decision Directive 56, “Managing Complex Contingency Operations,” which began with the assertion that “in the wake of the Cold War, attention has focused on a rising number of territorial disputes, armed ethnic conflicts, and civil wars that pose threats to regional and international peace.” A new focus of U.S. policy, accordingly, would be responding to such situations with “multi-dimensional operations composed of such components as political/diplomatic, humanitarian, intelligence, economic development, and security.”
Critics of a realist persuasion objected to the emerging narrative, arguing that the Clinton administration’s forays into state building in peripheral areas represented a strategic folly. And during his 2000 presidential campaign, George W. Bush ran as the candidate of foreign policy humility, arguing in part that nation building was a dangerous distraction. His adviser Condoleezza Rice grumbled that U.S. troops should not be asked to escort toddlers to school; his vice presidential candidate, Dick Cheney, suggested that a Bush administration would end U.S. participation in Balkan operations; and the day before the election, Bush himself declared, “Let me tell you what else I’m worried about: I’m worried about an opponent who uses ‘nation building’ and ‘the military’ in the same sentence.”
But the 9/11 attacks swept these hesitations aside, as the practical implications of an interventionist “war on terror” became apparent. The first page of the Bush administration’s 2002 National Security Strategy argued that “America is now threatened less by conquering states than we are by failing ones. We are menaced less by fleets and armies than by catastrophic technologies in the hands of the embittered few.”
The new consensus was bipartisan. The Democratic foreign policy hand Susan Rice, for example, wrote in 2003 that Bush was “wise to draw attention to the significant threats to our national security posed by failed and failing states.” Where the right emphasized security and terrorism, the left added humanitarian concerns. Development specialists jumped on the bandwagon as well, thanks to new studies that highlighted the importance of institutions and good governance as requirements for sustained economic success. In his 2004 book, State-Building, the political scientist Francis Fukuyama wrote, “Weak and failing states have arguably become the single most important problem for international order.” The Washington Posteditorialized the same year that “weak states can compromise security -- most obviously by providing havens for terrorists but also by incubating organized crime, spurring waves of migrants, and undermining global efforts to control environmental threats and disease.” This argument, the paper concluded, “is no longer much contested.” A year later, the State Department’s director of policy planning, Stephen Krasner, and its newly minted coordinator for reconstruction and stabilization, Carlos Pascual, argued in these pages that “in today’s increasingly interconnected world, weak and failed states pose an acute risk to U.S. and global security. Indeed, they present one of the most important foreign policy challenges of the contemporary era.”
From one angle, the concern with weak states could be seen as a response to actual conditions on the ground. Problems had always festered in disordered parts of the developing world. Without great- power conflict as an urgent national security priority, those problems were more clearly visible and harder to ignore. From another angle, it could be seen as a classic meme -- a concept or intellectual fad riding to prominence through social diffusion, articles by prominent thinkers, a flurry of attention from the mainstream press, and a series of foundation grants, think-tank projects, roundtables, and conferences.
From a third angle, however, it could be seen as a solution to an unusual concern confronting U.S. policymakers in this era: what to do with a surplus of national power. The United States entered the 1990s with a dominant international position and no immediate threats. Embracing a substantially reduced U.S. global role would have required a fundamental reassessment of the prevailing consensus in favor of continued primacy, something few in or around the U.S. national security establishment were prepared to consider. Instead, therefore, whether consciously or not, that establishment generated a new rationale for global engagement, one involving the application of power and influence to issues that at any other time would have been seen as secondary or tertiary. Without a near-peer competitor (or several) to deter or a major war on the horizon, Washington found a new foreign policy calling: renovating weak or failing states.
THE DECLINE OF A STRATEGIC NARRATIVE
The practical challenges of state-building missions are now widely appreciated. They tend to be long, difficult, and expensive, with success demanding an open-ended commitment to a messy, violent, and confusing endeavor -- something unlikely to be sustained in an era of budgetary austerity. But the last decade has driven home intellectual challenges to the concept as well.
The threat posed by weak and fragile states, for example, turned out to be both less urgent and more complex and diffuse than was originally suggested. Foreign Policy’s Failed States Index for 2013 is not exactly a roster of national security priorities; of its top 20 weak states, very few (Afghanistan, Iraq, and Pakistan) boast geostrategic significance, and they do so mostly because of their connection to terrorism. But even the threat of terrorism isn’t highly correlated with the current roster of weak states; only one of the top 20, Sudan, appears on the State Department’s list of state sponsors of terrorism, and most other weak states have only a marginal connection to terrorism at best.
A lack of definitional rigor posed a second problem. There has never been a coherent set of factors that define failed states: As the political scientist Charles Call argued in a powerful 2008 corrective, the concept resulted in the “agglomeration of diverse criteria” that worked to “throw a monolithic cloak over disparate problems that require tailored solutions.” This basic methodological flaw would distort state-building missions for years, as outside powers forced generic, universal solutions onto very distinct contexts.
The specified dangers were never unique to weak states, moreover, nor would state-building campaigns necessarily have mitigated them. Take terrorism. The most effective terrorists tend to be products of the middle class, often from nations such as Saudi Arabia, Germany, and the United Kingdom, not impoverished citizens of failed states. And terrorist groups operating in weak states can shift their bases of operations: if Afghanistan becomes too risky, they can uproot themselves and move to Somalia, Yemen, or even Europe. As a result, “stabilizing” three or four sources of extremist violence would not render the United States secure. The same could be said of threats such as organized crime, which finds comfortable homes in functioning but troubled states in Asia, eastern Europe, and Latin America.
As the scholar Stewart Patrick noted in a 2006 examination of the purported threats issuing from weak states, “What is striking is how little empirical evidence underpins these assertions and policy developments. Analysts and policymakers alike have simply presumed the existence of a blanket connection between state weakness and threats to the national security of developed countries and have begun to recommend and implement policy responses.”
And although interconnectedness and interdependence may create risks, the dangers in such a world are more likely to come from strong, well-governed states with imperfect regulations than weak ones with governance deficiencies. Financial volatility that can shake the foundations of leading nations and cyberattacks that could destabilize energy or information networks pose more immediate and persistent risks than, say, terrorism.
A third problem was misplaced confidence about the possibility of the mission’s feasibility. The last decade has offered an extended, tragic reminder of the fact that forcible state building simply cannot be accomplished by outsiders in any sustainable or authentic way. When a social order has become maladapted to the globalizing world -- when governing institutions are weak, personalized, or kleptocratic; corruption is rampant; and the rule of law is noticeable by its absence -- there are simply no proven methods for generating major social, political, economic, or cultural change relatively quickly.
As the Australian political scientist Michael Wesley argued in a brilliant 2008 essay, state weakness is primarily a political problem, and yet state building is often conceived and executed as if it were an apolitical exercise. “The intention of remaining aloof from politics while concentrating on technocratic reforms has proved unrealistic,” he wrote. “Even seemingly technocratic tasks confront international administrators with essentially political decisions: the nature and basis of elections; which pressure groups to consult; the reintegration or de facto separation of ethnic communities; school curricula; degrees of public ownership of enterprises; the status of women; and so on. However technocratic their intention, state-building missions inevitably find themselves factored into local rivalries.”
In trying to force change on recalcitrant governments and societies, moreover, outside interventions undermine internal motives for reform by transferring responsibility for a better future from local leaders to external actors. The outside power needs cooperation from its local clients more than they need its sponsorship. The result is a dependency paradox that impedes reform. As success stories from South Korea to Chile show, the path from state weakness to strength has to be traveled by the states themselves, gradually and fitfully, most often under the influence of strong, decisive leadership from visionary architects of governance. It is an organic, grass-roots process that must respect the unique social, cultural, economic, political, and religious contexts of each country. And although it can be encouraged and even modestly shaped by outside contributions and pressure, it cannot be imposed.
A fourth problem with the state-building obsession was that it distorted the United States’ sense of its central purpose and role in global politics. Ever since World War II, the United States has labored mightily to underwrite the stability of the international system. It has done this by assembling military alliances to protect its friends and deter its enemies, by helping construct a global architecture of trade and finance, and by policing the global commons. These actions have helped buttress an interdependent system of states that see their dominant interests in stability rather than conquest.
Playing this role well demands sustained attention at all levels of government, in part to nurture the relationships essential to crisis management, diplomacy, and multilateral cooperation of all kinds. Indeed, the leading danger in the international system today is the peril that, assaulted by a dozen causes of rivalry and mistrust, the system will fragment into geopolitical chaos. The U.S. experience since the 1990s, and growing evidence from Northeast Asia, suggests that if the relatively stable post–Cold War era devolves into interstate rivalry, it will be not the result of weak states but that of the escalating regional ambitions, bitter historical memories, and flourishing nationalisms of increasingly competitive states. The U.S. role in counteracting the broader trends of systemic disintegration is therefore critical. The United States is the linchpin of a number of key alliances and networks; it provides the leadership and attractive force for many global diplomatic endeavors, and its dominant military position helps rule out thoughts of aggression in many quarters.
The weak-state obsession has drawn attention away from such pursuits and made a resurgence of traditional threats more likely. Focusing on two seemingly endless wars and half a dozen other potential “stability operations” has eroded U.S. global engagement, diminished U.S. diplomatic creativity, and distracted U.S. officials from responding appropriately to changes in the global landscape.
When one reads the memoirs of Bush administration officials, the dozen or more leading global issues beyond Afghanistan, Iraq, and the “war on terror” begin to sound like background noise. Top U.S. officials appear to have spent far more time between 2003 and 2011, for example, managing the fractious mess of Iraqi politics than tending to relationships with key global powers. As a consequence, senior U.S. officials have had less time to cultivate the leaders of rising regional powers, from Brazil to India to Turkey. Sometimes, U.S. actions or demands in state-building adventures have directly undermined other important relationships or diplomatic initiatives, as when Washington faced the global political reaction to the Iraq war.
Such tradeoffs reflect a hallmark of the era of state building: secondary issues became dominant ones. To be fair, this was partly the fault of globalization; around-the-clock media coverage now constantly shoves problems a world away onto the daily agendas of national leaders. Combined with the United States’ self-image as the indispensable nation, this intrusive awareness created political pressure to act on issues of limited significance to core U.S. interests. Yet this is precisely the problem: U.S. perceptions of global threats and of the country’s responsibility to address them have become badly and perhaps permanently skewed. A great power’s reservoir of strategic attention is not infinite. And the United States has become geopolitically hobbled, seemingly uninterested in grand strategic initiatives or transformative diplomacy, as its attention constantly dances from one crisis to another.
A fifth problem flowed directly from the fourth. To perform its global stabilizing role, the United States needs appropriately designed, trained, and equipped armed forces -- forces that can provide a global presence, prevail in high-end conflict contingencies, enable quick long-range strike and interdiction capabilities, and build and support local partners’ capacities. The state-building mission has skewed the operations, training, equipping, and self-conception of the U.S. military in ways that detract from these responsibilities.
Much of the U.S. military has spent a decade focusing on state building and counterinsurgency (COIN), especially in its training and doctrine, to the partial neglect of more traditional tasks. Massive investments have gone into COIN-related equipment, such as the MRAP (mine-resistant, ambush-protected) vehicles built to protect U.S. troops from improvised explosive devices, draining billions of dollars from other national security resources. The result of these choices has been to weaken the U.S. military’s ability to play more geostrategic and, ultimately, more important roles. Between a demanding operational tempo, the requirements of refitting between deployments, and a shift in training to emphasize COIN, the U.S. military, especially its ground forces, lost much of its proficiency in full-spectrum combat operations. Simply put, the U.S. military would be far better positioned today -- better aligned with the most important roles for U.S. power, better trained for its traditional missions, better equipped for an emerging period of austerity -- had the state-building diversion never occurred.
AN ALTERNATIVE MODEL
None of this is meant to suggest that a concern for the problems posed by weak or failing states can or should disappear entirely from the U.S. foreign policy and national security agendas. Counterterrorism and its associated tasks will surely remain important, and across the greater Middle East -- including Afghanistan after 2014 -- internal turmoil may well have external consequences requiring some response from Washington. Effective local institutions do contribute to stability and growth, and the United States should do what it can to nurture them where possible. The difference is likely to be in the priority Washington accords such efforts. The January 2012 Defense Strategic Guidance, for example, reflected the judgment that “U.S. forces will no longer be sized to conduct large-scale, prolonged stability operations” and announced an intention to pursue “innovative, low-cost, and small-footprint approaches” to achieving objectives. Recently, the vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admiral James “Sandy” Winnefeld, went even further: “I simply don’t know where the security interests of our nation are threatened enough to cause us to lead a future major, extended COIN campaign.”
In the future, the United States is likely to rely less on power projection and more on domestic preparedness, replacing an urgent civilizing zeal with defensive self-protection. This makes sense, because the most appropriate answer to the dangers inherent in an era of interdependence and turbulence is domestic resilience: hardened and redundant networks of information and energy, an emphasis on local or regional self-sufficiency to reduce the cascading effects of systemic shocks, improved domestic emergency-response and cybersecurity capacities, sufficient investments in pandemic response, and so forth. Equally important is a resilient mindset, one that treats perturbations as inevitable rather than calamitous and resists the urge to overreact. In this sense, the global reaction to the recent surge in piracy -- partly a product of poor governance in African states -- should be taken as a model: no state-building missions, but arming and protecting the ships at risk.
When it does reach out into the world to deal with weak states, the United States should rely on gradual progress through patient, long-term advisory and aid relationships, based on such activities as direct economic assistance tailored to local needs; training, exchanges, and other human-capacity-development programs; military-to-military ties; trade and investment policies; and more. The watchwords should be patience, gradualism, and tailored responses: enhancing effective governance through a variety of models attuned to local patterns and needs, in advisory and supportive ways.
As weak states continue to generate specific threats, such as terrorism, the United States has a range of more limited tools available to mitigate them. It can, for example, return terrorism to its proper place as a law enforcement task and continue to work closely with foreign law enforcement agencies. It can help train and develop such agencies, as well as local militaries, to lead in the fight. When necessary, it can employ targeted coercive instruments -- classic intelligence work and clandestine operations, raids by special operations forces, and, with far greater selectivity than today, remote strikes -- to deal with particular threats, ideally in concert with the militaries of local allies.
Some will contend that U.S. officials can never rule out expeditionary state building because events may force it back onto the agenda. If al Qaeda were to launch an attack that was planned in restored Taliban strongholds in a post-2014 Afghanistan, or if a fragmentation and radicalization of Pakistani society were to place nuclear control at risk, some would recommend a return to interventionist state building. Yet after the United States’ recent experiences, it is doubtful that such a call would resonate.
The idea of a neo-imperial mission to strengthen weak states and stabilize chaotic societies always flew in the face of more important U.S. global roles and real mechanisms of social change. There is still work to be done in such contexts, but in more prudent and discriminate ways. Moving on from the civilizing mission will, in turn, make possible a more sustainable and effective national security strategy, allowing the United States to return its full attention to the roles and missions that mean far more to long-term peace and security. One of the benefits of this change, ironically, will be to allow local institutional development to proceed more organically and authentically, in its own ways and at its own pace. Most of all, the new mindset will reflect a simple facing up to reality after a decade of distraction.

Foreign Affairs: Six Markets to Watch (nenhum deles se refere ao Brasil)

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South Korea is a rich, technologically advanced, mature democracy with an impressive record of innovation, economic reform, and sound leadership, so to call it an emerging market is a bit of an anachronism. But the country's chief economic virtue, its openness, also...




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How Erdogan Did It -- and Could Blow It
With an impressive decade behind it and an important election ahead, Turkey's biggest challenges are in the realm of domestic politics. As Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan flirts with authoritarian populism, the country teeters between continued growth and a reversion...




A Tale of Two Archipelagoes
Indonesia confronts a host of political challenges, and a crucial election in 2014 will determine whether it delivers on its promise or returns to stagnation. Meanwhile, the nearby Philippines, now an outsourcing powerhouse, has been racing ahead under the stewardship of...




A River Runs Through It
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Politica economica companheira: o discurso magico na montanha magica

Não, caro leitor, a matéria abaixo não tem a mesma grandeza da conhecida obra de Thomas Mann, e sequer é mágica, mas pura embromação.
Se trata de matéria da Agência Companheira, ops, Agência Brasil, sobre esse outro agente de notícias alvissareiras que é um dos keynesianos conselheiros de quem toma decisões.
Estamos servidos com o que existe de melhor no pensamento econômico no cerrado central.
Apertem os cintos, a ciranda vai continuar...
Paulo Roberto de Almeida


Mantega: Brasil dribla crise mundial com geração de empregos e combate à desigualdade

O ministro da Fazenda, Guido Mantega, em entrevista ao Blog do Planalto, destacou que o Brasil foi um dos únicos países que, mesmo num período de crise, conseguiu avançar na redução da desigualdade e da pobreza. Simultaneamente, o País continuou a ver a renda da classe média e da base da pirâmide aumentar de forma mais rápida.
“Então, podemos dizer que a população brasileira foi a que menos sentiu a crise mundial. E mantivemos também elevado o nível de emprego, que é fundamental. Enquanto na Europa, o desemprego chega a níveis acima de 12% e, até agora, não se vê uma saída para isso, no Brasil nós conseguimos manter uma situação de praticamente pleno emprego para todos os segmentos sociais e durante todo o tempo”, destacou Guido.
O ministro afirmou que o País se prepara, junto com o resto do mundo, para a superação da crise econômica, o que vai trazer taxas maiores de crescimento.
O ministro está em Davos (Suíça), onde participou ontem do Fórum Econômico Mundial, em um debate sobre o BRICS, bloco formado por Brasil, Rússia, Índia, China e África do Sul. Segundo Mantega, tem-se feito uma avaliação errada de que, com a recuperação da economia, os países avançados retomarão a dianteira do crescimento.
“Os analistas acham que os países avançados agora vão liderar o crescimento mundial. Eu acho que isso é um equívoco. (…) Os BRICS, mesmo neste momento de crise, continuaram crescendo muito acima do que as taxas dos países avançados”, disse. Ele sublinhou que à medida que o comércio mundial se reativar, voltar a crescer a taxas um pouco maiores, os BRICS retomarão o crescimento com base em suas taxas históricas.

Sambas e cochilos: a politica economica companheira na montanha branca de Davos

Por que Dilma vai a Davos

23 de janeiro de 2014
Editorial O Estado de S.Paulo

Depois de esnobar por três anos o Fórum Econômico Mundial, a presidente Dilma Rousseff desembarca hoje na Suíça para participar do ritual praticado por dezenas de governantes, todo fim de janeiro, na paisagem branca de Davos. Com ela deve chegar uma comitiva de ministros e altos funcionários. Alguns dos acompanhantes, como o ministro da Fazenda, Guido Mantega, também já demonstraram desprezo à grande celebração anual do capitalismo - uma festa prestigiada, habitualmente, por autoridades da mais nova potência capitalista, a China.

Autoridades de velhas potências, como Estados Unidos, França e Alemanha, e de emergentes de peso e de muito respeito, como México e Chile, batem ponto regularmente no centro de congressos da cidade. Neste ano, o primeiro-ministro do Japão, Shinzo Abe; o presidente do Irã, Hassan Rouhani; e o presidente do México, Enrique Peña Nieto, estão entre os participantes.
No ano passado só um funcionário brasileiro de primeiro escalão apareceu em Davos. Foi o ministro de Relações Exteriores, Antônio Patriota. Convidada, a presidente Dilma Rousseff recusou-se a valorizar o evento com sua presença. O ministro da Fazenda também preferiu ficar longe da reunião. O Fórum de Davos, disse na ocasião o chanceler Patriota a dois jornalistas brasileiros, é procurado por pessoas interessadas em ganhar projeção. Não seria esse o caso da presidente brasileira e de sua equipe econômica.
No dia anterior, em Davos, o secretário do Tesouro dos Estados Unidos, Timothy Geithner, havia conversado com jornalistas de várias nacionalidades. Devia estar, segundo a teoria das autoridades brasileiras, em busca de promoção pessoal. Esse devia ser o caso também de seu colega Ron Kirk, principal negociador comercial americano e equivalente, nessa função, ao ministro brasileiro de Relações Exteriores.
Geithner deixou o governo há alguns meses. Mas seu sucessor, Jack Lew, está, neste ano, entre as autoridades esperadas para os eventos do Fórum. A reunião é também frequentada por figuras como o presidente do Banco Central Europeu e dirigentes de entidades como o FMI e a OMC.
Alguma novidade muito importante deve ter motivado a presidente Dilma Rousseff a aparecer em Davos com sua comitiva. Não deve ser apenas a mudança no cenário mundial, um tanto mais luminoso que nos últimos anos. Em toda reunião do Fórum há discussões sobre o estado e as perspectivas da economia global, sempre com a participação de acadêmicos, empresários e políticos importantes. Neste momento, as perspectivas para a maior parte do mundo são melhores que as do começo de 2013. As do Brasil, nem tanto. Deve estar aí o motivo mais forte para a presidente confraternizar com os frequentadores de Davos.
A melhora do quadro mundial abre a perspectiva de mais comércio, mais produção e mais prosperidade para a maioria dos países, mas prenuncia também alguns perigos. Com a recuperação da economia americana, o Federal Reserve (Fed) começa a reduzir os estímulos monetários para a recuperação econômica. Não se espera um aperto, mas apenas uma redução gradual do dinheiro emitido para estimular os negócios. Essa mudança envolve riscos para alguns países.
O Brasil é um dos menos preparados para a mudança da política monetária americana. Suas contas externas estão mais fracas do que há alguns anos e sua economia, menos atrativa para capitais estrangeiros. Além disso, o crescimento econômico projetado é medíocre, a inflação é elevada, as contas públicas estão mais frágeis e a credibilidade do governo despencou. O risco de rebaixamento pelas agências de classificação de risco é tangível.
Esse quadro ruim ajuda a entender a decisão presidencial de se misturar com a multidão de empresários, banqueiros, funcionários internacionais e líderes políticos de todo o mundo. Seu programa em Davos inclui um pronunciamento numa sessão especial. Conseguirá a presidente resistir à inclinação de dar lições ao mundo? 

Politica economica do Governo: sensacao de um aviao caindo... (bem, fortes emocoes...)

Foi a piada que eu vi (li) na manhã de quinta-feira, 23/01/2014, aliás a propósito de um projeto de discurso em Davos aqui colocado (vejam o post: Meus caros capitalistas...).
O governo é realmente capaz de causar sensações fortes, embora nem todas positivas.
E assim vamos vivendo...
Paulo Roberto de Almeida

Você está em Economia
Celso Ming
Início do conteúdo

Emocional cambiante

23 de janeiro de 2014 | 2h 06
Celso Ming - O Estado de S.Paulo

O governo Dilma tem se esforçado por encorajar empresários e formadores de opinião, porque entende que o pessimismo é corrosivo para o crescimento econômico. Mas não tem sido bem-sucedido.

Nos dois últimos dias, quatro fatos diferentes falavam de estado de espírito cambiante dos brasileiros em relação ao que acontece com a economia e a renda.
O relatório da Confederação Nacional da Indústria (CNI) mostrou ontem que o empresário brasileiro começou 2014 menos confiante no governo e no comportamento da economia (veja o gráfico). "A queda de confiança reflete tanto o aumento do número de empresários que perceberam piora nas condições atuais dos negócios como, também, menor otimismo em relação aos próximos meses", diz a nota que acompanha os resultados do levantamento.
O presidente do Bradesco, Luiz Carlos Trabuco, pareceu afinado com o governo quando reconheceu ontem em Davos, na Suíça, onde se realiza o Fórum Econômico Internacional, que as críticas à política econômica têm "certa dose de exagero". Mas seu banco não vem fazendo projeções melhores sobre o comportamento da economia do que as demais instituições financeiras. De todo modo, Trabuco admitiu que há alguma coisa errada na maneira como o governo Dilma encara o mundo dos negócios e suas manifestações: "O (governo do) Brasil precisa reafirmar a confiança num modelo que não seja estatista, que seja de (boa) convivência entre o público e o privado".
Na terça-feira, o diretor da agência de classificação de risco Standard & Poor's, Roberto Sifon-Arevalo, já adiantara que não via sinais de melhora na economia brasileira e, que por isso, não tinha também como acenar com uma reversão da "perspectiva negativa" em que foram colocados os títulos de dívida soberana do Brasil.
Também em Davos, o ministro-chefe da Secretaria de Estudos Estratégicos (SAE), economista Marcelo Neri, levou ontem o assunto para o lado da psiquiatria. Ele vê no brasileiro uma síndrome bipolar, "excesso de otimismo na população, que pode reduzir a poupança, e excesso de pessimismo dos empresários, o que conduz à redução do investimento". Mas não apontou como reverter esse desvio patológico.
O problema é que o governo Dilma parece insistir mais em fazer a cabeça dos empresários do que em apresentar resultados. Tenta cercar os inimigos na guerra das emoções, mas eles escapam sempre. Comporta-se como o imperador Dario I, da Pérsia que, no século 5.º antes de Cristo, não conseguiu combater os citas porque eles não se deixavam encontrar. Mudavam todos os dias sua posição. Esse povo nômade não tinha cidades a defender ou onde se concentrar e, assim, cambiante, fez Dario de bobo e desgastou irremediavelmente seu exército.
O presidente do Bradesco explicou ontem que há US$ 1 trilhão, apenas nos bancos dos Estados Unidos, à espera de oportunidades e que o Brasil só conseguirá atrair esses capitais se mudar seu jeito de tratar os negócios.

Tangos e tragedias, 3: uma analise economica das medidas cambiais argentinas

El color del dinero
¿Cómo sigue la película del dólar?
Carlos Fernández
Argentina Exporta, 23/01/2013

En medio de los sacudones de la cotización del dólar de los últimos días, para la que hay que retroceder varios años para ver un salto tan abrupto en la cotización diaria, nos vamos encontrando con otras medidas que también pretenden impactar en el balance de divisas.

En efecto, las últimas medidas de AFIP que restringen las compras al exterior vía internet, tienen el claro objetivo de reducir la salida de dólares por compras “hormiga” de bienes por este canal electrónico. Estas compras se pagan con tarjeta de crédito, y se estima que representan unos 3.000 millones de dólares al año.

Esta medida vino antecedida por otra aún más relevante (que sin embargo no proviene de resolución o circular alguna, sino que la aplicó de facto la Aduana a  partir del 15 de enero), la cual implementó cambios en los datos requeridos para la solicitud de DJAIs, añadiendo el plazo y la forma de pago.

Estos cambios fueron anticipados por Argentina Exporta en nuestro informe titulado “28-O, escenarios posibles” publicado previo a las elecciones legislativas de octubre 2013. En ese momento manifestamos que un escenario posible post-elecciones era el retorno a las políticas de comienzos de 2002 mediante las cuales se impusieron plazos mínimos de pago en función del tipo de producto, lo que implicó una moratoria comercial forzada por el régimen cambiario. Hoy en día, esos plazos probablemente sean regulados a través de las autorizaciones de DJAIs donde se prioricen las de mayor plazo de pago, en detrimento de los pagos anticipados y a la vista.

Ahora bien, ¿que escenarios podemos visualizar de cara a lo que resta del 2014, sabiendo que el dato cierto es que el gobierno necesita recuperar divisas para poder solventar los “fundamentals” del modelo, y que hasta ahora no ha tenido el éxito esperado?

Vale recordar que días pasados desde la misma autoridad monetaria estimaron que la caída de reservas va a tener una continuidad por lo menos hasta marzo del presente año (pudiendo llegar a un piso de 26.000 millones de dólares), donde se espera comience el ingreso de divisas proveniente de las liquidaciones de ventas de granos al exterior y se formalice el ingreso de capitales genuinos por inversiones externas en el sector energético.

Siempre desde el punto de vista cambiario, las opciones podrían pasar por:

Por el lado de los egresos (pagos al exterior), podrían intensificarle los controles del flujo diario a través de la planilla que el BCRA pide a las grandes empresas, bajando el tope actual de 300.000 dólares, tal vez a 100.000.

¿Puede haber desdoblamiento cambiario? No lo vemos probable en lo inmediato. Tal vez se intenten otros mecanismos, como por ejemplo el de subasta de cupos de divisas, tal como sucede en Venezuela (denominado SICAD). El país caribeño es ciertamente un espejo donde podemos ver una cierta inspiración para las autoridades locales en materia económica. Y lo más sorprendente tal vez es que la oposición (Capriles) también sostiene que les resultaría imposible liberar el mercado cambiario en las condiciones actuales ("Es imposible levantar los controles ahorita. Habría una fuga total de capital. Si fuera yo en Miraflores (sede del Gobierno), no lo haría", dijo Capriles). También es posible que continúe el ritmo devaluatorio hasta una nueva “flotación administrada” en torno de los $9, apuntando fuerte a estabilizar las expectativas en un piso más alto.

Pero por otra parte, no hay que descuidar el flanco de los ingresos de divisas, teniendo en cuenta que el ritmo devaluatorio actual incentiva a retrasar todo lo posible su liquidación a precio oficial.

Al intento fallido del ingreso de una masa importante de divisas a través del blanqueo, ya se han implementado medidas a fines del 2013 para estimular el ingreso vía anticipos y prefinanciaciones, dirigidos a los grandes exportadores del complejo oleaginoso. En ellos también pensaron cuando lanzaron los bonos del BCRA ajustables a precio dólar pagadero en 90 días. No vemos entonces mayores novedades por el lado de los bienes.

En nuestra opinión, la vuelta de tuerca vendrá por el lado de los servicios. ¿De qué manera?

Si bien hoy las exportaciones de servicios están obligadas a ser liquidadas en el mercado oficial, esto no ocurre según lo esperado, puesto que el BCRA obliga a liquidar lo efectivamente percibido, y no hay mecanismos de control entre lo que se factura y lo que se cobra. Los ingresos registrados por el BCRA en 2013 cayeron un 16% (1.500 millones de dólares) en los primeros 9 meses de 2013 vs. mismo período de 2012, con una caída proyectada interanual de 2.000 millones.

El problema es que se estima que lo liquidado en el mercado representa solo el 50% de lo facturado al exterior, por lo que la brecha sería de unos 4.000/5.000 millones de dólares. ¿Y qué pasa con la diferencia? O bien no se cobra, o bien se cobra pero se liquida por el canal informal.

¿Qué puede pasar entonces? Una posibilidad es que los controles vengan a través de la Declaración Jurada Anticipada de Servicios (DJAS), que hoy aplica solo a los pagos. La forma de control sería que se amplíe el régimen a los cobros, teniendo que declarar a la AFIP todo lo facturado por servicios para que de esta manera este organismo pueda cruzar esta información con el BCRA y detectar los faltantes de divisas.

La otra posibilidad es que se fijen plazos máximos para las facturas de servicios, equiparando los mismos a las exportaciones de mercaderías para forzar la liquidación de divisas.

En conclusión, nuestra intención no es preocuparlos sino proporcionarles un análisis de escenarios, para que puedan tomar decisiones empresarias en este contexto de incertidumbre, donde la política devaluatoria del valor oficial no se detiene y no se sabe a ciencia cierta hasta donde llegará.

Saludos cordiales.
Lic. Carlos Fernández
Asesor financiero del Programa Argentina Exporta.


Nomenklatura chinesa presente nos paraisos fiscais - Jornalistas Investigativos

Publicado sob os auspícios do International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, para evitar retaliações individualizadas dos dirigentes corruptos do Partido Comunista Chinês, nossos aliados estratégicos.
Paulo Roberto de Almeida


 

Investigative Stories Delve Into the Use of Offshore Companies by Chinese

Sun Tiangang has filed a lawsuit accusing the state-owned oil enterprise Sinopec of working with police officials to illegally imprison him for five years.Michal Czerwonka for ICIJSun Tiangang has filed a lawsuit accusing the state-owned oil enterprise Sinopec of working with police officials to illegally imprison him for five years.
The first big China investigative story of the year has come from the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, which on Tuesday published, in tandem with several Western news organizations, a detailed look at the widespread use of offshore companies and tax havens by Chinese businesspeople and relatives of Communist Party leaders.
The investigation into Chinese activity primarily in the British Virgin Islands originated with a trove of financial documents leaked to the consortium, anonprofit group based in Washington. On Wednesday, the group published in both English and Chinese its second big story on China, a case study of a former Chinese oil industry executive who set up dozens of shell companies in the Cayman Islands, Bermuda and the British Virgin Islands. The report also said that the leaked documents show China’s three large state-owned oil companies — the biggest players in an industry rife with corruption — and executives at those enterprises set up dozens of offshore shell companies between 1995 and 2008.
The case study lays out how Sun Tiangang, the former executive, made a fortune as an entrepreneur in the oil industry before having his main company and its assets seized by former employees allied with powerful state interests. The reporters, Alexa Olesen and Michael Hudson, based their narrative on interviews with Mr. Sun and on a lawsuit he filed last year in a United States district court in Los Angeles against Sinopec, one of the three giant Chinese state-owned oil enterprises and the fourth-biggest company in the world.

In the lawsuit, Mr. Sun accused Sinopec of working with police officials to illegally imprison him for five years, starting in 2005, and strip him of a company in the British Virgin Islands he had set up in connection to a profitable oil pipeline contract in the western Chinese region of Xinjiang. Even after Mr. Sun was released from jail in 2010, the lawsuit said, he was kept under a form of house arrest for two more years.
The lawsuit said Sinopec did not want to honor the 20-year contract and had built its own pipeline to move oil from the Tahe field in Xinjiang. Sinopec did not respond to repeated requests for comment from the reporters. Lawyers for the defendant have asked the U.S. court to dismiss the lawsuit because it is “a quintessentially foreign dispute,” according to a court filing.
Mr. Sun’s colorful tale brings into the spotlight many questionable practices common to business in China. One is the use of so-called reverse mergers to get Chinese companies listed on stock exchanges, but in a way that masks their identity and core business. This practice of backdoor listings has come under growing scrutiny by American officials. Mr. Sun got his oil pipeline joint venture onto the Hong Kong Stock Exchange by folding the British Virgin Islands company he had started, which was the majority shareholder in the oil pipeline business, into a food company that was listed on the exchange in 2001. Mr. Sun then changed the listed company’s name to GeoMaxima Holdings and spun off the food business.
The article explained that this was a way around what Mr. Sun regarded as onerous restrictions. At the time, companies registered in the British Virgin Islands could not list in Hong Kong, nor could a mainland-registered company unless it had approval from officials in Beijing, which was difficult to secure.
The overview published on Tuesday of Chinese use of offshore shell companies said that there are legitimate reasons to set up such companies. The practice started becoming popular among Chinese businesspeople in the 1990s because the executives wanted, among other things, to get around strict capital controls and investment laws that favored foreign companies over domestic ones.
But there are more shadowy motivations too. The companies are tax shelters, and they can also hide the identities of important stakeholders. Mr. Sun said that setting up a company in the British Virgin Islands costs just a few hundred dollars and “gives very strong cover” by allowing the real owner to stay off stage.
Forty percent of offshore business in the British Virgin Islands comes from China and other Asian nations, the report said, citing officials in the islands. Among the clients are executives at the three Chinese oil giants: the China Petroleum and Chemical Corporation, or Sinopec; the China National Petroleum Corporation, or PetroChina; and the China National Offshore Oil Company, or Cnooc. The report said there were no signs of illegal activity by these executives or the oil enterprises, but the secretive nature of the offshore companies makes it difficult to pinpoint why the companies were set up.
Executives at PetroChina have been detained as part of a wide-ranging corruption investigation by Communist Party officials. Party insiders say the main target of the investigation is Zhou Yongkang, the former member of the ruling Politburo Standing Committee who worked in the oil industry and, later, oversaw the domestic security agencies.
Two smaller companies implicated in the PetroChina investigation have ties to offshore shell companies that show up in the leaked documents.
Hua Bangsong, the founder of one of the two implicated companies, Wison Engineering Services, listed in Hong Kong, incorporated three Wison-related companies in the British Virgin Islands in 2003. Wison suspended its public trading in September and announced that Chinese officials had seized some books and records and had frozen some of its bank accounts as part of the investigation. It has said Mr. Hua is cooperating with officials.
The other company implicated in the investigation that has links to a British Virgin Islands company is Zhongxu Investment Co. Ltd., which manages gas stations for PetroChina and runs hydropower plants. Caixin, a respected Chinese news magazine, reported that Wu Bing, the head of Zhongxu, was taken away from the Beijing West Railway Station on Aug. 1 and has not been seen since.

A Crise Financeira da Abolicao - John Schulz (lancamento em SP, 13/02/2014)

Um livro que já li em sua primeira edição, e recomendo.
Paulo Roberto de Almeida


190 mil dolares cash? Ufa! Nao era um aloprado do partido milionario...

Calma, calma: era só um traficante normal.
Os companheiros redobraram os cuidados agora.
Essa coisa de cuecaforte foi definitivamente abandonada.
Agora eles podem usar transporte blindado...
Paulo Roberto de Almeida

23.janeiro.2014 18:27:46

PF apreende quase US$ 190 mil em dinheiro vivo em São Paulo

Dinheiro foi encontrado com suspeito de envolvimento com o tráfico no quarto de um hotel da zona Sul da Capital.
por Fausto Macedo
A Polícia Federal apreendeu na madrugada desta quinta feira, 23, a quantia de 189,8 mil dólares americanos em um quarto de hotel em São Paulo.
Após obterem informações de que haveria grande quantidade de dinheiro vivo no local, policiais federais encontraram a quantia, em poder de um homem no quarto do hotel de uma rede internacional localizado na zona sul da Capital paulista.
O portador do dinheiro é residente em Brasília e possui antecedentes criminais por tráfico de drogas. A PF suspeita que o valor apreendido seria utilizado para compra de entorpecentes.
A PF informou que vai realizar investigações para apurar a origem e o destino dos valores, além da identificação de possíveis outros envolvidos com o tráfico.

Notas foram apreendidas em quarto de hotel. Foto: Divulgação

Um partido milionario, e fora-da-lei? Contribuicoes militantes para sentenciados por corrupcao

SOLIDARIEDADE A DELÚBIO SOARES
As forças do atraso, derrotadas nas eleições do presidente Lula e da presidenta Dilma, promoveram o mais violento processo judicial de exceção de toda nossa história. A difamação, a desinformação, a pressão midiática, tudo foi usado e nada foi poupado na criminalização da atuação política de combativos companheiros petistas, condenados sem provas e com a aplicação de penas excessivas e multas exorbitantes.
A Delúbio Soares, especialmente, tiraram-lhe o emprego, a paz e por fim, seus direitos políticos e a própria liberdade. Mas não conseguiram afastar-lhe os amigos, companheiros e admiradores de sua longa e digna trajetória de vida. Professor, sindicalista, fundador do PT e da CUT e lutador das causas sociais, Delúbio jamais amealhou patrimônio pessoal, vivendo modestamente e sofrendo toda sorte de perseguições. E são esses companheiros, amigos e admiradores que se unem para ajudá-lo a efetuar o pagamento de absurda e pesada multa de R$ 466.888,90 (quatrocentos e sessenta e seis mil oitocentos e oitenta e oito reais e noventa centavos), que lhe foi injustamente imposta no julgamento de exceção na AP 470.
O sentimento de solidariedade ao companheiro Delúbio é tão grande quanto nosso inconformismo diante do processo injusto de que foi alvo.
Dê sua colaboração, faça diferença. Desde já agradecemos!
Companheiros e Companheiras de Delúbio Soares

Multa
Valor Arrecadado
R$ 466.888,90
R$ 70.403,35





NOTA OFICIAL DO PT
O presidente nacional do PT, Rui Falcão, conclama os militantes, filiados, simpatizantes e amigos(as) do PT a contribuírem para o pagamento da multa injustamente imposta ao companheiro José Genoino Neto. Embora indevida e, além disso, desproporcional, trata-se de sentença judicial, obrigando, portanto, ao seu cumprimento.
Como o PT, em virtude da lei, não pode utilizar recursos próprios e nem do Fundo Partidário, propomos esta corrente de solidariedade que deve, igualmente, estender-se aos companheiros José Dirceu, Delúbio Soares e João Paulo Cunha. As contribuições devem atender aos requisitos legais de origem e identificação do doador, com RG e CPF.
Rui Falcão
Presidente Nacional do PT

Tangos e tragedias 2: argentinos so podem comprar duas vezes ao ano online no exterior

De vez em quando eu leio uma manchete sobre  a Argentina, penso que é uma brincadeira, vou ler e vejo que não é. É de verdade.
Seria a Argentina o país da piada pronta?
Talvez...
Paulo Roberto de Almeida 
LÍGIA MESQUITA
FOLHA DE SÃO PAULO, 23/01/2014
O governo argentino anunciou uma nova medida para conter as importações via lojas on-line. Agora, os argentinos poderão realizar apenas duas compras virtuais por ano em sites de fora do país.

A resolução foi publicada no "Diário Oficial" um dia depois de a Afip, a Receita do país, informar outras regras que restringem a aquisição de produtos em sites do exterior.

O argentino que gastar mais de US$ 25 em compras on-line terá de preencher uma declaração juramentada para o fisco e pagar 50% do valor do produto em impostos.



No Twitter, a restrição foi chamada de "corralito" da web, em alusão ao congelamento dos depósitos bancários que entrou em vigor no fim de 2001.

O chefe de gabinete da Presidência, Jorge Capitanich, defendeu a resolução.

"Se queremos que haja indústria na Argentina, temos que ser capazes de defender o nosso", disse.

A medida é mais uma tentativa do governo de evitar a fuga de divisas do país.

Em dezembro, a Casa Rosada já havia aumentado de 20% para 35% a alíquota do imposto para transações financeiras de pessoas físicas no exterior, passagens e pacotes de viagens.

O produtor musical J.F., 31, que pediu que não fosse identificado, compra discos e livros em sites como Amazon e eBay. Agora vai pensar antes de adquirir algo.

"Querem apagar um incêndio com um copo d'água. Mais uma vez vão prejudicar as pessoas com menos dinheiro", afirmou.

PESO DESVALORIZA

E ontem o peso argentino teve sua maior desvalorização em 11 anos. Com o dólar paralelo, que é comercializado em casas de câmbio não oficiais, atingindo a cotação de 12,15 pesos, o dólar oficial passou a 7,14 pesos.

Em maio de 2013, a presidente Cristina Kirchner havia dito que as pessoas que queriam ganhar dinheiro à custa de uma desvalorização da moeda teriam que esperar "por outro governo", já que quem pagaria por isso seria o povo. De lá pra cá, o peso já desvalorizou 36,5%.