Study Shows Brazil Growing at Least 3% for Next 5 Years Despite World Jitters

Downtown São Paulo A study by the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (Eclac) shows that Brazil is going to grow more than Latin America and the Caribbean this year. While the region should grow 4.7%, according to the Eclac, the Brazilian economy should grow 4.8%. This should be the sixth consecutive year of growth in Latin America and the Caribbean.

The growth should be smaller than last year, when it reached 5.7%, but the region, according to the Eclac, should have another five years of sustainable growth of per capita income, of over 3%. A similar period in the history of the region was registered around 40 years ago. The Eclac shows that growth has been taking place despite the unfavorable global scenery.

According to the Eclac, up to 2007 the region grew with the support of a favorable economic conjecture, which was translated into greater export demand, boosted by the Chinese and Indian markets. The region that most benefited, in this case, was South America. Central America, which exports oil, did not benefit as much.

The Eclac study also shows improvement, in Latin America and the Caribbean, in labor market indices. The rate of unemployment has been falling since 2003, reaching 8% in 2007 and expected to reach 7.5% by the end of this year.

Poverty also continued dropping. This is due, according to the Eclac, to the growth of the economy, to reduced unemployment, to an improvement in the quality of work posts created and to greater salaries.

However, poverty is still high, reaching over 36% of the population, or 190 million people in Latin America and the Caribbean.

Anba

Tags:

You May Also Like

Female condom

Brazil Orders 4 Million Female Condoms from US

U.S.-based Female Health Company announced today that it has received an order for four ...

Condoleezza Is Bad News for Brazil and Latin America

Rice’s outdated Cold War credo suggests her term at the helm of the State ...

In Brazil Construction Sector Has Still Long Way to Become Green Friendly

From a general perspective, Brazil’s commitment to environmental sustainability is widely considered commendable compared ...

Take a Hike to Antarctica

For U.S. Trade Secretary Robert Zoellick Brazil is welcome to go sell in Antarctica ...

Brazil: FTAA, Hopes and Fears

Donna Hrinak, US Ambassador to Brazil, is confident that the FTAA will go into ...

Brazil Is Right in Demanding New Fact Before Recognizing Honduras’s New President

Whether one sides with the ousted President Manuel Zelaya or with the interim leader ...

Gil and Gal—What a Guy, What a Gal

Brazil’s Culture Minister, Gilberto Gil, should make singer Gal Costa an arts ambassador and ...

Brazil Threatens to Suspend U.S. Movies and Software Rights

The Brazilian Congress is considering the suspension of intellectual property rights of American products ...

Brazil: Brasí­lia Declaration Defends Falklands Talks

One of the issues mentioned in the BrasÀ­lia Declaration, document with the conclusions of ...

Brazil’s Lula Blames Hunger of 800 Million on US and EU Protectionism

Brazil President, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, said that "over 800 million people every ...