Brazil and IMF Discuss How to Grow with Fiscal Responsibility

The International Monetary Fund mission that is discussing a pilot project which would permit the Brazilian government to make investments in infrastructure without considering such expenditures in calculating the country’s fiscal performance (specifically the primary account) has returned to Brazil.

The mission was last in the country in July. The IMF mission is once again led by Teresa Ter-Minassian, the head of the institution’s Fiscal Department.


Yesterday she met with Minister of Finance, Antonio Palocci, for further talks on the issue.


They were joined by minister of Planning, Guido Mantega, who has already explained the government’s Public-Private Partnership (PPP) project to the IMF.


The PPP project is an attempt by the government to resolve the country’s perennial problems with infrastructure through partnerships with the private sector. A PPP bill is in Congress and could be voted on this week.


The government’s position on the issue is that solid fiscal responsibility can be compatible with growth. The government denies it wants a “blank check” to spend as it wishes.


What the government desires is to have certain infrastructure expenditures excluded from the calculation of the primary account.


The Brazilian government remains open to other suggestions which would make it possible to achieve the same objective: that is, sustainable growth along with sustainable fiscal rigor.


Agência Brasil
Translator: Allen Bennett

Tags:

You May Also Like

Russia Lifts Embargo on Brazilian Meat

Since Wednesday, April 20, the Russian embargo on Brazilian beef and pork has been ...

Sex in Brazil: We Don’t Have This in Toledo

Why so many Anglo-American men consider Brazilians to be "so hot" and sexually active? ...

World Crisis Puts a US$ 40 Billion Dent in Brazil Exports this Year

From January to September Brazil's trade surplus  totaled US$ 21.275 billion, a figure 8.1% ...

Brazil’s Supreme Court Message: We’d Better Learn to Live with Corruption

Just when the AMB (Brazilian Magistrate Association) thought that Brazil has finally decided to ...

1.758 Million Barrels of Oil a Day. A New Record for Brazil’s Petrobras.

Brazil’s oil company Petrobras ended the month of February with an average daily petroleum ...

US Probe Concludes Brazil Is Seriously Fighting Piracy

The government of the United States decided to wrap up the investigation of Brazil ...

All the President's Men (and Women)

President-elect Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva's cabinet members are mostly from his own party, ...

Has the Brazilian Judiciary Become a Mafia?

The Brazilian judiciary has historically been so rife with corruption and nepotism that one ...

Making Amends

The Brazilian Agrarian Reform Association disagrees  with the manner in which the number of ...

In Bed With a Brazilian

Brazilians spend an average of 30 minutes doing it. By comparison, Thais don’t spend ...

WordPress database error: [Table './brazzil3_live/wp_wfHits' is marked as crashed and last (automatic?) repair failed]
SHOW FULL COLUMNS FROM `wp_wfHits`