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Social unrest increases in Brazil as the political-economic scenario deteriorates

Facing a series of political-economic crises, President Dilma Rousseff witnesses


growing social discontent in Brazil as unemployment rates are raising along with
inflation rates and the tax burden. The strongest signal of growing unrest against her
government came during February, when a truck drivers strike blocked main roads and
delayed the delivery of essential consumption goods, as well as exports, in particular
commodities. Due to the scarcity of staples, prices tend to increase more than expected.

Market projections suggest that inflation this year will surpass in at least 1
percent point the 6.5 percent maximum target;

The official unemployment rate has increased from 4.3 percent last December to
5.3 in January. The scenario tends to worsen as companies involved in the
Petrobras bribery scandal may have to fire thousands of workers;

The government has tightened the fiscal policy, having suspended tax breaks and
establishing new rules to avoid evasion of income tax.

What next
Mass manifestations against the government are scheduled to take place on 15 March.
Although no major oppositional party or organization is coordinating the
demonstrations, they tend to take a relevant number of people to the streets.
Rousseff faces two major problems less than 100 days after the inauguration of her
second term: the deteriorating economic scenario in spite of measures to regain the
markets confidence after a first term pervaded by a loose fiscal policy, and the political
turmoil triggered by the evidence of kickbacks for office holders in Petrobras contracts.
The period which for most heads of government consists of a honeymoon with the
electorate has therefore become a nightmare worse than anyone could expect. Yet, the
president still has conditions to recoverat least in the long termthe confidence of
the electorate.
On the political front, she tends to gain leverage as 45 members of the parliament from
the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate, including the speakers of each house, are listed
as suspects of receiving bribes from Petrobras subcontractors. Public opinions
perception of widespread corruption weakens any eventual attempt of impeaching the
president, as in such a context the Legislative Power lacks legitimacy even vis--vis a
weakened Executive. Although Rousseff herself was between 2005 and 2010 president
of Petrobras Administration Council, she will not face any criminal charges due to the
lack of evidence, reports the Office of the Attorney General, responsible for prosecuting
and demanding inquiries involving elected authorities at the federal level.
However, the president is unlikely to face a truce on the economic front in the as the
adjustments that Brazilian market needs before gaining conditions of recovering the
strength it showed in the last decade. This is the case not only because the fiscal

straitjacket the liberal-minded, Chicago-trained Ministry of Finance Joaquim Levy has


been implementing since January will have positive effects only in the medium-term,
certainly after the next year. Also the short term costs of rising taxes, such as expansion
of unemployment rates, have been increasing due to parallel developments in the
political and social spheres.
Soaring prices
Truck drivers blocked some of the busiest Brazilian roads during the last two weeks of
February. They complain that, with Rousseffs government institution of a tax on fuel
(CIDE, which used to exist during most of the 2000s), they are not making any profit.
Blockades prevented essential goods to arrive to consumers, particularly those who live
hinterland towns, hence triggering price hikes, an additional factor to contribute to
increase inflation beyond current market projections.

In So Paulo, vegetable prices are reported to have increased about 30 percent


only because the strike;

The last Brazilian Central Bank (BCB) Focus bulletin reported a growing
pessimism among market actors, as the average projection for inflation rates is
7.47 percent;

Energy prices increased by 23.4 percent on average this month as a consequence


of the growing costs of production amid the drought that has reduced the
capacity of hydropower plants.

With rising exchange rates, debt contracted in foreign currency increases. According to
the BCB, the total private foreign debt in Brazil totalizes 208 billion US dollars, about
10 percent of the countrys nominal GDP. Moreover, Brazilian investors, among of them
entrepreneurs, tend to
Unemployment and bubble
Petrobras crisis has impacted national production chains, such as shipyards, among
other oil and gas companies. Companies in these sectors correspond to about 13 percent
of Brazils GDP, and most of them depend directly or indirectly on the state-owned oil
giants business to survive. Furthermore, due to disinvestment from ongoing projects
subcontractors had to fire employees, generating a domino effect over oil-related
activities and local business. The government estimates that about 20,000 workers have
already lost their jobs because of the scandal.

Only at Comperj, a new refinery located in Rio de Janeiros outskirts, just 6,000
out of 18,000 workers remain in the project;

Also, companies involved in the kickback scandal employ about 100,000 people
throughout the country. If punished, they may be prohibited to participate in
public works, then being likely to fire most of their current workers;

Moreover, coastal cities that were growing faster due to the perspective of gains
from pre-salt extraction, attracting investment in real estate, are now stagnant.

Many analysts consider that with this Petrobras generated a bubble in regions near
exploration fields, including areas located in the industrialized states of So Paulo and
Rio de Janeiro, but also in some of the largest Northeastern state capitals, such as
Fortaleza. In fact, since the beginning of the 2015, the average new price of new houses
in the country fell for the first time within four years, decreasing about 1.7 percent.
This, however, has not
Increasing taxation
Rousseff's government has just announced strict rules for autonomous white collar
professionals, such as lawyers and medical doctors, as they provide services to third
parts. Currently many of them practice tax evasion, which has been made harder with
new rules for income tax filing, including the identification of clients to the revenue
service. The tight rules tend to increase anger with Rousseff among the middle class in
particular, notwithstanding the generation of extra revenue.

Moreover, the government suspended the tax breaks had been offered to
industrial sectors since 2012

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