04 Sep 2015 - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}

It was Charles de Gaulle, France’s Second World War statesman, who said, “Brazil has a great future, and always will.” Under the benign presidency of the ex-car metal worker, Luis “Lula” Inacio da Silva, the adage seemed to be banished. But now under his successor Dilma Rousseff, the tag has stuck once again. Brazil is back to its old ways, albeit with a difference. An economy going downhill, incompetent economic mismanagement and massive corruption are frightening investors away. Brazil is now suffering its biggest recession since the 1930’s Great Depression. The difference is that this time the safety net of financial support built for the very poor by Lula remains intact.
But last year growth per capita, after years of rapid increase ground to a halt. The fall in commodity prices caused, not least, by China’s slowing growth, together with the slow-down in the world economy has hit Latin America hard. Most countries have not used the good times to diversify their economies and build up their industry and services.
03 Jul 2026 10 minute ago
03 Jul 2026 27 minute ago
03 Jul 2026 34 minute ago
03 Jul 2026 1 hours ago
03 Jul 2026 1 hours ago