And Investors Are Nervous
She’s back. Dilma Rousseff won the second-round runoff of Brazil’s
presidential election on Sunday, to scenes of celebration in São Paulo.
But she won’t get to celebrate for long, because the list of challenges facing
the country is as long as in any other emerging market.
One, the economy. Rousseff and her finance minister Guido Mantega
consistently promised growth of 4% a year, not all that much for a BRIC
economy, but in any case they consistently missed even that target by a mile.
The FT crunched the numbers and calculated that during her four year first
term, Mantega over-estimated forecast growth by an average of 2.77 percentage
points a year. Instead of growing, Brazil is amid a recession without a clear
path out again.
“Rousseff retains the reigns of an economy in the midst of a recession,
with above target inflation and a fiscal position that risks pushing the
country’s debt into junk status,” says fund manager Alquity, which argues that
Brazil’s problems are so bad it wouldn’t have made much difference no matter
who won. “Whichever way the results played out on Sunday, there were inevitably
tough times ahead. Whilst a Neves victory may have inspired a temporary rally,
the undeniable need for currency depreciation, subsidy removal and government
spending cuts would have bitten eventually. Rousseff must now cope with an even
more divided congress and senate than under her previous mandate.”
Her administration has already stepped in to control fuel prices, and
to manipulate the currency, which may have had an effect in the short term but
has done nothing to support investor confidence. Besides, this fiscal stimulus
might have been rational if it had prompted growth, but it has not, and instead
has increased the chance that Brazil could lose its investment-grade credit
rating, with inflation now well above the central bank’s target at 6.5%.
Brazil’s stock market dropped almost 8% last week in the run-up to the election
outcome. It’s not likely to soar up when the markets open today. A downgrade
would increase Brazil’s borrowing costs and make everything worse still.
On top of this, the margin of victory was so small, and the campaign so
fractious, that it will be even harder for Rousseff to get anything done than
it was in her previous term. And in addition to the lack of a decisive mandate,
the government is also under pressure because of allegations that some of its
senior figures accepted kickbacks in exchange for the awarding of contracts
around Petrobras, the vast but beleaguered oil and gas company.
There is not a lot of enthusiasm in the investor community that
Rousseff can deal with these challenges. But there is one point of consensus:
that she has to do something different to what she has done before. Because
more of the same just won’t work.
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