Brazil : neoliberalism versus democracy

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Bibliographic Information

Brazil : neoliberalism versus democracy

Alfredo Saad-Filho and Lecio Morais

Pluto Press, 2018

  • : pbk

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [200]-230) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Brazil is the world's sixth largest economy, has played a key role as one of the 'pink wave' administrations in Latin America, and was also responsible for wrecking the US-sponsored proposal for a Free Trade Area of the Americas. It is also one of the few large countries where social spending has risen and the distribution of income has improved in the last thirty years. However, as protests during the World Cup in 2014 have shown, the country remains highly unequal, unmet social needs are vast and its infrastructure is precarious. Alfredo Saad-Filho and Lecio Morais review the paradox that is modern-day Brazil. Focusing on the period from 1980 onwards, they analyse the tensions between the two systemic transitions to have dominated the country: the political transition from military rule to democracy, and to neoliberalism. The authors show how these transitions had contradictory logics and dynamics, yet ultimately became mutually supportive as they unfolded and intertwined.

Table of Contents

Tables and Figures Acknowledgements Acronyms Presidents of Brazil, 1930-2017 Preface Introduction 1. A Troubled Path to Development 2. Building a Fragile Democracy 3. Inflation Stabilisation and the Transition to Neoliberalism 4. Impacts of Neoliberalism 5. Neoliberalism under the Workers' Party 6. Developmental Neoliberalism and the PT 7. From Glory to Disaster 8. Class and Class Politics in Brazilian Neoliberalism 9. From the Confluence of Dissatisfactions to the Restoration of Neoliberalism Conclusion: Crisis of Neoliberalism, Crisis of Democracy Notes References Index

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