terça-feira, 8 de junho de 2010

Clipping Internacional, 08 de junho de 2010


New Brazilian fairness leaves behind bitterness of past era


By Zhou Zhiwei | Illustration: Liu Rui | June 07 2010

The new emerging countries, such as Brazil, Russia, India and China, are often lumped together as a group. But what they have in common is their status as rapidly developing nations, not a shared developmental model. Brazil's development model, for instance, is very different from China's and India's, and has produced different outcomes.

Unlike its economic miracles of the past century, the current economic growth of Brazil, based on macroeconomic stability, is a form of coordinated and balanced social development. The sustainable growth targets reflect Brazil's pursuit of the quality of economic development. These concepts are a very good reference point for other emerging countries.

Since the return of democracy in 1985, democratic institutions in Brazil have been effectively promoted and consolidated. After three election failures, current president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva (usually known as Lula), then a left-wing radical, became more pragmatic. He took office and established an extensive government alliance including central and right-wing parties, which created a favorable environment for political stability, democratic consolidation and economic development. This is why Lula is defined as a "moderate leftist," in contrast to radicals like other Latin American leaders.

According to a number of economic and social indicators, Brazil is experiencing its best development period ever. Prudent fiscal and monetary policies have helped Brazil enter a long period of rapid economic growth. The annual growth rate of Brazil reached 4 percent from 2003 to 2008, making it among the top 10 fastest growing nations in the world.

Lula once promised three meals a day for the poor, and an important characteristic of the current Brazilian model is balanced economic and social development. Through the implementation of zero hunger and family assistance fund policies, the Brazilian social development indicator index has been enhanced significantly.

The Gini coefficient, which measures inequality, has been declining for the past decade, while the human development index has risen to more than 0.8. The percentage of the population living in absolute poverty has sharply decreased, while the middle class now makes up 52 percent of the Brazilian population.

While achieving coordinated economic and social development, Brazil has also increased its involvement in international affairs, aiming at becoming a permanent member of the UN Security Council.

Brazil hopes to enhance its international influence and achieve greater participation in international configuration changes by working together with emerging powers. In dealing with international peacekeeping operations, the Middle East peace problem and the Iranian nuclear issue, Brazil is looking to upgrade from a regional power to a world power. It is attempting to improve its soft power through backing international campaigns.

Although the active and assertive international strategy of Brazil doesn't have sufficient national strength behind it, the daring diplomatic style of seeking equality, justice and multilateral principles has widened Brazil's diplomatic territory and enhanced its influence.

Brazil has changed from the aggressive approach of simply pursuing economic growth. Although the Brazilian economic growth rate is behind China's and India's, its methodology of coordinated and simultaneous development of all areas is a very good model for other developing countries.

More importantly, although Brazil and other emerging countries face similar development chal-lenges, their level of development is actually different.

After more than half a century's development, Brazil has completed the process of industrialization. Its industrial structure is much closer to developed countries, which means the current problems in Brazil might also be future bottlenecks of other emerging countries, such as polarization between the rich and the poor, overloaded urbanization, a widening urban-rural disparity and regional economic imbalances.

Brazil is trying to overcome the remaining problems of its aggressive development model. The transformation of Brazil's development model can not only serve as an early warning for emerging countries, but also provide guidelines for sustainable development.

For emerging countries, blindly pursuing high economic growth and ignoring the balance between efficiency and justice will lead to impeded social development and an imbalanced economic structure. It could even destroy current economic achievements and endanger the stability of the regime.

This is the bitter fruit that Brazil tasted after the rapid economic growth of the 1970s. It took Brazil a detour of 20 years of slow development to treat these complications, and the conse-quences are still being felt.

The author is secretary-general of the Center for Brazilian Studies, the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. forum@globaltimes. com.cn


 


2010-06-07 07:58

Will the BRIC countries' coordinated mechanisms bring international cooperation into action? How seriously should analysts take the term BRIC? Two experts express their views.

Global cooperation thick as BRIC


Gina Caballero

An ingenious idea takes on a life of its own. Thinking globalization was not going nor is supposed to be Americanization, Jim O'Neill envisioned the BRIC (Brazil, Russia, India and China). These four non-Western countries' economic prowess and keenness to embrace global markets buttressed his belief that their future economic weight would reorganize world policymaking forums. So after the BRIC nations began trading in the banking sector, the four countries decided to bolster the label by grouping together.

This not only reflects their understanding of globalization, albeit a socio-economic process enriched by different civilizations' philosophical traditions, but also their initiative to lead that process into the creation of a new multilateral, equitable and democratic world order. The tenets of such a world order are no other than the principles under which the four countries have held their meetings: mutual respect, equality and shared benefits.

In April, BRIC heads of state gathered again in Brasilia for their second summit to advocate cooperation, coordinated action and collective decision-making of all the states. As emerging economic engines expected to add most of the 2 billion people who are estimated to join the global middle class by 2030, BRIC move in tandem with the developing world in pursuit of common development and prosperity.

To enhance developing countries' growth potential and fight against poverty, BRIC countries, as declared in their joint statement "support technical and financial cooperation as a means to contribute to the achievement of sustainable social development, with social protection, full employment, and decent work policies and programs". Joint efforts and actions to improve the living conditions of people in the developing world are part of the BRIC nations' commitment to lift them into stable secured lives.

Bringing in more people into the growing global middle class will move forward the sense of shared ownership, distinctive of a multi-polar world order. Moreover, it will continue to clear out the via media for countries in the periphery to gradually root out inequality and social exclusion that result from the present world stratification system.

To do so, the four countries could innovate different frameworks with their appropriate platforms to promote the common interests of emerging market economies and developing countries. Within, the four countries already developing these types of engagement mechanisms, as the first BRIC think tank seminar held alongside the second BRIC summit testifies. The BRIC + IBSA (India, Brazil and South Africa) business forum, too, is a sign of the concerted efforts being made to reach out through dialogue and cooperation other important players in today's world.

It is therefore possible, to build a comprehensively strategic issue-by-issue network with the developing world. Based on experiences, the BRIC countries could extend the forums to invite other developing countries to discuss a wide range of issues. For example, the BRIC countries designed a platform for women of other developing countries, including China, to come together and, through South-South cooperation, formulate proposals for an integrated gender approach in macroeconomic policies. The platform was based on the IBSA Women's Forum, held before the fourth IBSA summit on April 15.

Furthermore, to pragmatically promote international cooperation on financial and trade issues, terrorism, food security, energy, climate change and sustainable development, the BRIC nations could draw more frameworks for building a bridge between developed and developing countries.

On the issue of sustainable development, a BRIC + 5 (Japan, Germany, Singapore, Canada and Australia) sustainable technologies platform would, through the sharing of environmentally sound technology and successful local experiences, address in concrete terms the challenges and constraints the BRIC countries still face in cultivating a green economy.

Continuing to build a far stretch bridge towards a truly mutually beneficial and multilateral world system, the BRIC countries could then meet with, for instance, Bangladesh, Indonesia, Mexico, Nigeria and Turkey under a BRIC + 5 sustainable development platform, to follow up on the relevant technologies and lessons learned from their previous BRIC + 5 sustainable technologies meeting. In this way - providing a participative mechanism for discussing and exchanging green development modes - the countries could adapt to their specific national characteristics and socio-economic conditions. Like economic spillovers do, these sustainable technologies and practices, too, could spill over into the regions of the five developing countries.

Hence, while the BRIC nations open up more round tables of specific issues for discussion, they could gradually start opening dialogues with other developing countries to share developmental practices and views on mutual interests and concerns.

With this political structure, the BRIC countries will advance the active participation of the developing world in global governance. And through exemplary South-South cooperation, they can set the guideline for developed countries to interact with them. Leading the developing world, the BRIC countries' strategic coordinated mechanisms could bring international cooperation into action. This can only herald the coming on of a multi-polar harmonious world system.

The author is the Beijing academic correspondent of Colombia-based research center Asia Pacific Observatory and runs LatinChina Network for Development, an NGO that promotes common understanding and active cooperation between China and Latin America.

Nothing to bind group together

Joseph S. Nye

Journalists continue to lavish attention on the so-called BRIC countries (Brazil, Russia, India and China), but I remain skeptical of the concept. Goldman Sachs coined the term in 2001 to draw attention to profitable opportunities in what it considered "emerging markets".

The BRIC countries' share of world GDP rose from 16 percent in 2000 to 22 percent in 2008. Collectively they did better than average in the subsequent global recession. Together, they account for 42 percent of world population and one-third of global economic growth in the past 10 years.

Obviously, that is good news for the world economy, but an economic term has taken on a political life of its own, despite the fact that Russia fits poorly in the category. In June 2009, the foreign ministers of the four countries met for the first time in Yekaterinburg, Russia, to transform a catchy acronym into an international political force.

The BRIC nations hold $2.8 trillion or 42 percent of global foreign reserves (though most of that is held by China.) So, in Yekaterinburg, Russian President Dmitri Medvedev declared: "There can be no successful global currency system if the financial instruments that are used are denominated in only one currency."

After China eclipsed the US as Brazil's largest trading partner, Beijing and Brasilia announced plans to settle trade in their national currencies rather than dollars. And although Russia accounts for only 5 percent of China's trade, the two countries announced a similar agreement.

After the recent financial crisis, Goldman Sachs upped the ante and projected that the combined GDP of the BRIC countries might exceed that of the G7 countries by 2027, about 10 years sooner than initially believed. Such simple extrapolations of current economic growth rates often turn out to be mistaken because of unforeseen events. But, whatever the merits of this linear economic projection, the term BRIC still makes little sense for long-term assessments of global power relations.

While a BRIC meeting may be convenient for coordinating some short-term diplomatic tactics, the term lumps together disparate countries that have deep divisions. It makes little sense to include Russia, a former superpower, with three developing economies. Of the four members, Russia has the smallest and most literate population and a much higher per capita income, but, more importantly, many observers believe that Russia is declining while the other three are rising in power resources.

Russia today not only suffers more from the aftermath of the global recession, but also faces severe long-term liabilities: a lack of diversified exports, severe demographic and health problems, and, in Medvedev's own words, an urgent need for "modernization".

When one looks closely at the numbers, the heart of the BRIC acronym is the rise in China's resources. The role of Brazil is a pleasant surprise, though.

Since curbing inflation and introducing market reform in the 1990s, Brazil has shown an impressive rate of economic growth in the range of 5 percent. With a territory nearly three times the size of India's, 90 percent of its 200 million people literate, a $2-trillion GDP equivalent to Russia's and per capita income of $10,000 (three times India's and nearly twice China's), Brazil has impressive power resources. In 2007, the discovery of massive offshore oil reserves promised to make Brazil a significant power in the energy arena as well.

Brazil, like the other BRIC countries, also faces a serious number of problems. It ranks 75th out of 180 countries on Transparency International's corruption perceptions index (compared to 79th for China, 84th for India, and 146th for Russia). The World Economic Forum ranks Brazil 56th among 133 countries in terms of economic competitiveness (compared to 29th for China, 49th for India, and 63rd for Russia). Poverty and inequality remain serious problems. Brazil's Gini coefficient is 0.57 (1.0 is perfect inequality, with one person receiving all income), compared to 0.45 for the US, 0.46 for China, 0.37 for India and 0.42 for Russia.

So, how seriously should analysts take the term BRIC? As an indicator of economic opportunity, they should welcome it, though it would make more sense if Indonesia replaced Russia. In political terms, China, India, and Russia are competitors for power in Asia, and Brazil and India have been hurt by China's undervalued currency. Thus, BRIC is not likely to become a serious political organization of like-minded states.


 


Posted on June 5th, 2010

Terrible Twins: Turkey, Brazil and the Future of American Foreign Policy


These days, there's an unusual spectacle in world affairs.  The United States has relatively good relations with the major powers: China, the EU states, India and even Russia are all more or less working together.  But two middle powers, Turkey and Brazil, are not only asserting themselves more effectively than in the past; they have chosen to do this is ways that run counter to US policies.  In particular their united and coordinated opposition to US policy on Iran has raised eyebrows and significantly complicated what was already a very difficult situation for American diplomacy.  More recently, the strong reaction in Turkey to the Israeli interception of a convoy organized by Turkish groups with aid for Gaza underlines the possibility that Turkey is moving decisively away from its longtime partnership with the United States.

The new bout of activism by these middle powers is a harbinger of things to come, not only in Turkish and Brazilian foreign policy but it the policies of a number of other middle powers that can be expected to become more assertive going forward.  They are going to enjoy tacit and sometimes overt support from some of the great powers who would also like to see us taken down a peg or two.  The American establishment by and large was taken by surprise by the new and more difficult Brazilian and Turkish foreign policies; it's worth looking a little deeper to see what is behind this and see what lessons if any there are for the future.

Turkey and Brazil are very different places, but in some key ways their situation is very similar.  First, they are ambitious powers who live in what, during the Cold War, was an American sphere of interest where the options of smaller powers were limited.  In both cases, the post Cold War world has gradually opened up fresh avenues for foreign policy.  For both Turkey and Brazil, the first step to recovering more independence and playing a wider role is to complete the liquidation of the Cold War order, which they both interpret as freeing themselves of their foreign policy dependence on Washington.  For Turkey and Brazil to become the kind of powers they want to be, American power must be reduced.

Second, in both countries new forces are rising to political power.  Formerly both Turkey and Brazil were formally democratic but in practice power was held by a relatively small and well connected elite: international businessmen, elite opinion leaders and a small military and civilian foreign policy elite.  In both countries, that is changing.  Brazil's Lula was long a radical and unacceptable figure to the Brazilian establishment; his entry into power meant that a new kind of Brazilian (poorer, less well educated, more internally focused, often darker skinned and left leaning) was coming on scene.  In Turkey, the victory of the AK Party was also a kind of domestic revolution, overturning the old west-leaning, cosmopolitan and secular Kemalist establishment that had ruled the country ever since the 1920s.  The new powers in Turkey are more religious, more inward-looking, more based in Anatolia than in cosmopolitan central Istanbul.

Both Turkey and Brazil are now more democratic, but that democracy does not translate into pro-American or pro-globalization.  In both cases, the democratization of national life means greater power for those who feel different from and alienated by the world order that the United States is trying to build.   In both cases there is a kind of intersection between realpolitik, the interests of the state, and the politics of civilization.  The old cosmopolitan elites were relatively westernized and globalized in their assumptions; the new, more broadly based ones are not.  In Brazil they share the historic Latin suspicion of and hostility to 'Anglo-Saxon capitalism' and a world order based on it.  In Turkey, the new powers are much more likely to see the West as a rival and even an oppressor rather than, as in the Kemalist days, a goal and a destination.


If you combine the geopolitical and cultural realities, you see two countries whose interests are diverging from those of the United States and are also increasingly shaped by cultural forces that oppose the historical American project of building a global liberal capitalist order.  That is a powerful combination of forces, and no one should think that the recent foreign policy conflicts with the United States are small things.  Something fundamental is changing here, and we, the Turks and the Brazilians will only slowly come to understand what has happened and what it means.

That is not all.  Both Turkey and Brazil are at a point in time when both their external and internal situations favor anti-US foreign policy moves.  In the Middle East, taking an anti-American line builds Turkish influence and opens doors across the region.  Fading Russian and European power in the Middle East creates a vacuum which a newly ambitious Turkey can hope to fill; anti-American and anti-Israel policies win friends and supporters for Turkey as it flexes its regional muscles.  (Fading Russian power also makes Turkey less afraid of its northern neighbor; Turkey feels increasingly confident that it can manage its relationship with Russia without an American big brother to protect it.)  In Latin America, strategic neglect and strategic failure by three American administrations (Clinton, Bush, Obama) have left the United States with fewer friends, more enemies, and less leverage than at any time since World War Two.  Argentina, Brazil's historical rival in South America, is confused and distracted with a weak political establishment and weak economy; alienated from the United States and concerned with internal economic issues, Argentina is in no position to undercut Brazil's latest attempt to establish itself as the leading power in South America.  By playing an anti-American card, Lula builds support for his vision and his party in Brazil, even as he relegates Venezuela's Hugo Chavez to the second division in Latin America.  In the short run, the Brazilian economy has managed the global downturn well; in the long term, the continuing rise of India and China mean that there will be more foreign consumers for Brazil's exports and investors in its enterprises.  Add to that the impact of massive off-shore oil discoveries, and it is not surprising that Brazil is feeling feisty.

So we have two countries who increasingly want to defy the United States, are able to do so, and find at least in the short term that an anti-American stance enhances their political prospects.  Under these circumstances, we ought not to be surprised by the new directions in Turkish and Brazilian foreign policy.

The first question for the United States is what this means; the start is to clean out some of the intellectual deadwood that prevents us from seeing the world as it is.  Presidents Clinton, Bush and Obama all came into power with One Big Idea; it is President Obama's unhappy fate to be in office when all three Big Ideas that have shaped American foreign policy since 1993 came unglued.  They are all forms of the persistent American faith in progress: the idea that social, political and economic development will lead to the establishment of a harmonious world system made up of peaceful democracies.  Perhaps, in the very long run, this will turn out to be true, but it is certainly not the case today.

The Clinton administration's foreign policy centered on the idea that globalization would create a new and peaceful world.  The Bush administration believed that advancing democracy would bring peace and stability.  And President Obama appears to believe that the rest of the world is naturally disposed to cooperate with America's global project, and that America's job is to be something like the coach of Team World as we go about settling various problems on the basis of consensus.

The first message of Brazil and Turkey is that there is no team, there is no consensus, and a great many countries and peoples around the world do not like the kind of world that America is trying to make.  President Obama can be polite and considerate (as when he made a speech in Istanbul to reach out to the Islamic world) or he can be abrasive and rude (as when he flew to Copenhagen in the failed attempt to deprive Lula of the honor of hosting South America's first Olympic games) but it doesn't make much difference.  Brazil and Turkey believe they have interests and goals which require the frustration of President Obama's plans and they have no hesitation in acting to thwart him.  It is actually an enormous form of American vanity to assume that what we want is so right, so good for everyone and so manifestly the best possible road forward that the world will willingly follow our lead.

But if Brazil and Turkey torpedo one of Obama's core ideas, they are also living contradictions of President Bush's belief that the advance of democracy in the developing world would advance America's foreign policy interests.  In both countries it is forces newly empowered by democracy that are opposing the American attempt to stop the Iranian nuclear program.  If the old elites were still securely in place, Turkey and Brazil would be less difficult and more predictable players on the international stage.  As countries become more democratic, they become more responsive to cultural and economic interests that resent the world's power structure and seek ways to change it.  It is possibly true that after a period of settling down and trial and error democratic publics will make shrewder choices, but this can take decades and generations.  One must also note that democracies do not always side with democracies against dictators; democracy is not a magic bullet that will give the present generation of policymakers a quieter life.

And finally, these developments in Turkey and Brazil expose the flawed thinking behind the Clinton administration's belief that the promotion of globalization would unleash the kind of economic development that would consolidate a peaceful world under American leadership.  Few countries have benefited more from globalization than these two dynamic economies, but that economic development has not led (and is unlikely to lead anytime soon) to the kind of foreign policy cooperation Washington wants.  This is partly because success makes leaders feisty; they believe that their rapidly increasing economic clout should give them more political say in the way the world works.  Development also empowers more voices in society to speak up: in Thailand as well as in Brazil and Turkey, rapid economic growth supports the rise of new groups of interests and actors in domestic politics with interests and outlooks very different from those of the old elites.

In other words, many of the core policies which Americans have pursued in the hope of achieving stability while consolidating American leadership are making American leadership increasingly difficult in an increasingly unstable world.

At the moment, Brazil and Turkey are more annoyance than threat (though geography and culture makes Turkey the more serious of the two for the moment).  And the efforts the administration is making to improve relations with the really big powers will make it harder for the middleweights to have as much effect as they hope.  But if the American foreign policy establishment can't liberate itself from some of the Whig fantasies that currently envelope liberals, neo-conservatives and realists alike, we are going to face much greater problems as reality stubbornly refuses to follow our script.

For President Obama, the hardest part may be to give up on the dream of global multilateral solutions to the world's big problems.  Not everyone is going to go along with him on global warming and nuclear proliferation.  There are powers out there who are consciously out to frustrate, block and if possible defeat the United States on important international issues — even when we are, in our own eyes at least, the 'good guys'.  They don't oppose us because President Bush offended their moral sense and alienated their affections; they are serious adult people who believe that greater American power and success is a threat to their own security and well being and who are ready, willing and even eager to do business with dark forces in pursuit of a common agenda to frustrate the United States.  They aren't terrorists and in most cases they don't sympathize with terrorists; they simply represent elements in the international system whose interests and in some cases vision is opposed to our own.

This means that President Obama is going to have to use power to get his way rather than relying on sweet reason and the power of his ideals.  He's going to have to persuade countries that going along with the United States is better than defying us, and to do that he's going to have to think about how to make people pay when they make the wrong choice.  Otherwise his great ideals will not come to fruition.  He can kiss non-proliferation goodbye, for starters, if he can't stop Iran from getting the bomb.

None of this means that America is losing its power in the world, but it does mean the end of the dream that our immediate goal is the abolition of foreign policy and the society of states.  We are not going to replace the Westphalian order with the Parliament of Man anytime soon.  Instead, foreign policy is going to be about warding off threats, dealing with opponents, building coalitions and advancing our commercial interests where we can.  Globalization and democracy aren't (thank goodness) going away, but neither will they make our problems disappear.

Hang onto your seats, friends.  The world is getting more complicated — and more dangerous — all7 the time.


 


Lula's Candidate Surges in Brazil

08/06/2010

By ROGERIO JELMAYER and JOHN LYONS

SÃO PAULO—Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva's hand-picked successor has surged against her rival in a series of new polls, increasing the chances that the leftist Workers Party will remain in power after October elections.

Dilma Rousseff, Mr. da Silva's former chief of staff and the Workers' Party presidential candidate, rose five percentage points since a similar poll was taken in April. She is now tied at 37% with opposition politician José Serra, a former São Paulo governor, according to the Ibope research firm.

Mr. Serra's tally of likely voters fell by three percentage points in the poll released over the weekend. Other recent polls show similar results.

While presidential campaigns in this soccer-crazed nation don't kick into gear until after the World Cup concludes in July, Ms. Rousseff appears to have notched early momentum. One explanation may be an economic forecast of 6% growth this year, as well as expanded government aid for low-income families, some analysts say.

Another advantage Ms. Rousseff is exploiting is the popularity of President da Silva, who is ineligible to run after two terms. Mr. da Silva defeated Mr. Serra in 2002. Despite protests that such activities go against electoral rules, Mr. da Silva appears with Ms. Rousseff at public events.

A onetime Marxist guerrilla, Ms. Rousseff has worked to disarm critics who say she will steer the nation sharply to the left.

During a recent speech to investors in New York, for example Ms. Rousseff said she is committed to preserving a floating exchange rate, fighting inflation and maintaining the government's hands-off policy toward central-bank rate decisions.

Some Brazilian brokers say they doubt Ms. Rousseff's commitment to pro-market economics.

Her radical background appears unlikely to spook international investors, in part because similar warnings eight years ago about Mr. da Silva turned out to be unfounded.


 


Why Beer Can Shortage Means Meirelles Will Boost Brazilian Rate

June 08, 2010, 12:43 AM EDT

By Carla Simoes and Iuri Dantas

June 8 (Bloomberg) -- Brazil is running out of beer cans and farmers are leaving crops in the field as surging demand and Chinese-like growth leads to shortages in Latin America's biggest economy. Cia de Bebidas das Americas, the region's largest brewer, had to import beer cans for the first time in its 125-year history after local supplies were exhausted. Acucar Guarani SA, the country's third-biggest sugar producer by market value, left 10 percent of its crop sitting in the fields an extra 40 days because of a shortage of tires for its harvesters, even after the commodity hit a 29-year high in February.

"We had some machines standing by just waiting for tires," said Jaime Stupiello, agricultural director for Acucar Guarani, in a June 1 phone interview from Sao Paulo. "We tried to buy directly from China, but they didn't have tires for delivery either." The shortages are one result of economic growth forecast to quicken to 6.6 percent this year, the fastest pace in two decades. That expansion, in excess of the economy's potential of 4.5 percent, is forcing central bank President Henrique Meirelles to raise interest rates to control inflation above the government's target since January, said Elson Teles, chief economist at Maxima Asset Management SA in Rio de Janeiro.

'Chinese Pace'

"National demand is growing at a Chinese pace," said Teles in a telephone interview. "That's why the central bank will keep raising the Selic and the Finance Ministry is trying to reduce pressure on the bank by cutting spending." Brazil's gross domestic product may have expanded 8.5 percent on an annual basis in the first quarter, according to the median estimate in a Bloomberg survey of 41 analysts. Brazil reports first quarter GDP at 8 a.m. New York time. China's GDP climbed 11.9 percent in the first quarter, the most in almost three years.

Inflation quickened to a 12-month high of 5.26 percent last month and may reach 5.64 percent this year, according to a central bank survey of about 100 economists published June 7. The government targets inflation of 4.5 percent. Brazilian policy makers became the first in Latin America to raise borrowing costs when they increased the benchmark interest rate to 9.5 percent in April from a record low of 8.75 percent. The bank will raise the rate another 0.75 percentage point June 9, according to 40 of 44 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg. Two analysts forecast a full percentage point increase while two see the bank raising by half a point.

'Tightening Mood'

Brazil's economy is "overheating" and policy makers are in a "tightening mood," Meirelles, 64, said in a June 4 interview with Bloomberg Television in Busan, South Korea. The government is cutting spending by 10 billion reais ($5.3 billion) to cool the economy before the interest rate increases take hold, Finance Minister Guido Mantega said May 13. Across the nation, companies are struggling to keep up with demand that's been rising as unemployment hovers near a record low 6.8 percent, salaries rise and the 30 million Brazilians who have left poverty since President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva took office in 2003 increase spending. Retail sales rose 15.7 percent in March from a year earlier, the highest on record.

Ambev, the maker of Antarctica and Brahma beers, has so far resisted passing on to consumers higher costs for freight and a tightening job market because of competitive pressures, said Nelson Jamel, the company's financial director. The company began importing cans after first quarter profit rose 3.9 percent to 1.65 billion reais, more than the 1.48 billion reais forecast in a Bloomberg survey. The company plans to double its annual investments to 2 billion reais to expand production, Jamel said.

Good Problems

"To keep growing we have to confront some good problems now," Jamel, 38, said in a June 2 phone interview. "There are some cost pressures that come with meeting this demand." Delivery of heavy trucks is being delayed by up to 60 days, said Ricardo Pamplona, president of Gotemburgo Veiculos Ltda, a Volvo retailer with nine stores in northeastern Brazil, traditionally Brazil's poorest region. Sales are up 40 percent so far this year and the company expects to sell 1,200 trucks by the end of December, 66 percent more than in 2009, he said, thanks to demand from civil construction, retail and agricultural users.

The truck shortage is pushing up the costs of shipping goods from the industrial heartland in Brazil's southeast to other parts of the country, Sussumu Honda, head of the national supermarkets association, said in an interview. In response to the shortages, Brazil reduced import tariffs on 16 products, including sardines, palm oil, beer cans and beer labels, over the past year, according to Trade Ministry figures.

Roubini Speech

Even with a financial crisis in Europe that will depress exports, the outlook for Brazil's economy is "very positive," Nouriel Roubini, the New York University professor who predicted the global financial crisis, said in a May 31 speech in Sao Paulo. Roubini, 52, recommended that Brazilian policy makers take steps to limit the appreciation of the real, including the "judicious" use of capital controls. The currency has gained 4.4 percent against the dollar over the past 12 months.

Stronger Real

To be sure, the stronger real has made exports more expensive in dollar terms, and the economy could be hit by a fall in commodity prices, which are likely to decline over the next 6 months to 12 months because of a possible double-dip recession in Europe and a U.S. slowdown, Roubini said. Exports account for 10 percent of Brazil's GDP compared with about 33 percent for Chile and 17 percent for Argentina, meaning that any slowdown in Europe is unlikely to significantly impact growth, Bank of America said in a May 28 report.

"What makes Brazil unique is the strength of domestic demand," said Neil Shearing, an emerging markets economist at Capital Economics Ltd., in a phone interview from London. "If this isn't a V-shaped recovery, I don't know what is."


 


Latam Watch: Market Expects High Brazil Growth & Inflation, 75 bps Rate Hike

June 07, 2010

Brazil's Central Bank Monetary Policy Committee (Copom) will see two big releases before its decision Wednesday: first quarter GDP Tuesday, and May IPCA inflation Wednesday morning.

Estimates for first quarter GDP growth vary, but nearly all analysts expect a number far above what is considered Brazil's 4-5% limit for sustainable growth.

Finance Minister Guido Mantega has said the economy may be growing at a 10% annualized rate, while Brazil's largest private sector bank, Banco Itau, is forecasting 3% quarter over quarter growth, for a 12.6% annualized rate.

Although this spurt is expected to slow as the year goes on -- Banco Itau expects a 4.5% average growth rate for the next three quarters -- monetary policy will have to help cool off the economy.

On Sao Paulo futures markets, the overwhelming majority of bets are that policymakers will raise the Selic overnight rate 75 basis points to 10.25% this week.

The Central Bank's "Focus" survey of local financial institutions shows the same expectation among economists and analysts, who also project May inflation of 0.45% -- a rate above policymakers' 4.5% annual target -- though June inflation is expected to fall to 0.28%.

How much of recent inflation has been seasonal -- driven especially by food prices -- is a matter for debate among analysts, who also disagree as to how much the economy will cool on its own.

Still, with fiscal policy continuing expansionary, and Central Bank President Henrique Meirelles eager to leave office with his legacy of price stability intact, the majority bet is for Copom to keep hiking the Selic in 75 bps increments until the overnight rate reaches 11.75%.

For the market to change this consensus expectation, analysts say, policymakers will have to hint at a changed scenario either in their statement Wednesday, or their minutes the week after.

Possible reasons for a more benign inflation scenario in Brazil come from the international scenario, which makes a spike in commodity prices -- cited as a risk in past Copom minutes -- less likely, while Brazil's currency has remained strong.

Source: LatamWatch


 


La gran brecha económica, telón de fondo de las pujas con Brasil

08/06/10 | PorAlcadio Oña


Cuanto menos muy ambiciosos, son algunos de los objetivos que la ministra de Industria se plantea alcanzar en la relación con Brasil. Según sus palabras, "reequilibrar el desarrollo industrial y equiparar la balanza comercial" .

En esos términos Débora Giorgi presentó las conversaciones que ella y Amado Boudou mantendrán, esta semana, con los ministros brasileños de Economía, Guido Mantega, y de Industria, Miguel Jorge. El encuentro fue convenido por Cristina Kirchner y Lula da Silva después del cruce por las trabas al ingreso de alimentos y, como se advierte, no participará Guillermo Moreno.

Ya significará todo un trabajo achicar el déficit comercial, y uno bastante mayor equiparar la balanza. En cambio, suena a casi imposible reequilibrar el desarrollo industrial. Simplemente, porque cosas semejantes no se logran con diálogos bilaterales, sino, en gran medida, a través de políticas y estrategias propias de mediano y largo plazo.

En los cinco primeros meses de este año, según cifras oficiales de Brasil, la Argentina acusó un déficit de 919 millones de dólares en el comercio bilateral. Y es un dato nada menor que haya sido consecuencia de un aumento de las importaciones del 62 %, contra una suba de las exportaciones del 37 %.

La Argentina tuvo épocas de superávit, antes y en el pasado reciente, como entre 2000 y 2003: algunas veces porque le vendía mucho trigo; otras, porque importaba desde otros lugares del mundo. Pero en los últimos cinco años registró un desequilibrio de US$ 17.000 millones , según el INDEC.

Una primera lectura que surge de esas cuentas es que cuando la economía argentina crece, aumentan las compras a Brasil. Y otra, ya más estructural, revela que la industria local es muy dependiente de los bienes brasileños: el grueso son vehículos, autopartes, electrónicos, maquinarias y productos para la siderurgia.

Está claro que si vienen de allí es porque aquí no se lo fabrica. Dicho de otra manera, falta producción nacional capaz de sustituir aquellas u otras importaciones. Y así es, aun cuando la disparidad relativa de los tipos de cambio favorezca a la Argentina, tal cual sucedió en los últimos cinco años.

Es cierto que si la economía brasileña crece, como ahora, también crecen las exportaciones argentinas. Justamente, esa demanda alimenta parte de la actual reactivación. En el trasfondo de la brecha comercial y de las pujas constantes anida una muy desigual estructura productiva. Para empezar, el Producto Bruto brasileño, el tamaño de su economía, es entre 3,5 y 4 veces más grande que el argentino . Y el PBI industrial, 4,3 veces mayor : esto da una idea de lo que aquí pretenden reequilibrar.

Algunos datos si se quiere micro, extraídos de un trabajo de la consultora abeceb.com, son parte de lo mismo: En un buen número de sectores industriales la producción brasileña es más de 10 veces la argentina. Entre otros: químicos; maquinaria para oficinas; componentes eléctricos; bebidas gaseosas, cerveza, jugos; motores; productos de caucho y juguetes.

En un grupo también importante, la diferencia a favor de Brasil está entre 5 y 10 veces . Allí entran: motocicletas, bicicletas; fabricación de calzado; autopartes, piezas y accesorios para automotores y motores; fabricación de autos; muebles y ropa de vestir. Y en otro, la brecha va de 2 a 5 veces . En este lote hay: maquinarias; receptores de radio y tevé; cocinas, calefones y artefactos eléctricos y carrocerías, remolques y semirremolques.

Algunos de estos bienes son considerados "sensibles" por las autoridades argentinas, como juguetes, calzado, muebles o ropa. Representan fuente de controversias recurrentes y son controlados a través de cupos de importación. La lista sacude, pero aún así resulta incompleta. Revela desarrollo productivo y a la vez inversión tecnológica. Brasil no es una potencia exportadora de bienes industriales: el punto está en la relación de fuerzas .

Y eso se nota, bien claro, en el balance comercial de productos industrializados: Brasil tiene un superávit anual con la Argentina de alrededor de US$ 3.000 millones. Precisamente, en una actividad que ocupa mucha mano de obra y mide, como pocas, el despliegue relativo alcanzado por uno y otro país. El acceso al crédito de largo plazo y el costo del financiamiento son otros factores que hacen una diferencia enorme . En Brasil, eso se llama BNDES.

Entre marzo de 2009 y el mismo mes de este año, el Banco de Desarrollo brasileño desembolsó préstamos a tasas de interés subsidiadas por el equivalente a US$ 78.000 millones . Un 45 % fueron para planes de inversión industriales: químicos, petroquímicos, en alimentos y bebidas y material de transporte, entre otros. Y un 35 % para proyectos de infraestructura.

Para acercar esos 78.000 millones, vale un ejemplo. Todas las reservas del Banco Central suman US$ 48.800 millones . Según se ve, parece imposible reequilibrar el desarrollo industrial, más cuando la brecha en vez de achicarse va en aumento . Y sería inútil intentar equiparar la balanza comercial con el arbitrio de trabar compras de bienes industriales brasileños: habría que traerlos de otros países, porque aquí no se fabrican.

Está demasiado claro que nada de todo esto se resuelve con conversaciones, aunque sean útiles.


 


Ministros de Argentina y Brasil avanzarán en ampliación del comercio

Buenos Aires 07 Jun ABN.- Los ministros de Economía y de Industria de Argentina, Amado Boudou y Débora Giorgi, se reunirán esta semana en Buenos Aires con sus pares de Brasil, Guido Mantega y Miguel Jorge (Desarrollo) para discutir medidas que amplien el comercio, informó el gobierno argentino.

"Nuestro objetivo es trabajar en medidas que nos permitan reequilibrar el desarrollo industrial de ambos países y equiparar la balanza comercial, que por ahora resulta desfavorable para Argentina", dijo Giorgi en un comunicado, reseñó la agencia AFP.

La reunión fue acordada durante el encuentro que mantuvieron en Rio de Janeiro, la presidenta argentina, Cristina Kirchner y su par de Brasil, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva el pasado 28 de mayo durante el Encuentro Mundial de Civilizaciones celebrado en Brasil.

En su visita a Rio, Kirchner remarcó que no habrá restricciones y sí una produndización de las relaciones comerciales, un aumento del intercambio con Brasil.

En 2009, el intercambio comercial entre Brasil y Argentina fue de 24 mil 066 millones de dólares, sensiblemente menor que en 2008 cuando se elevó a 30 mil 864 millones.

La agenda de la reunión ministerial abordará la profundización del sistema de pago en monedas locales, la integración de cadenas productivas, el financiamiento de las exportaciones con fondos del Banco Nacional de Desarrollo de Brasil (BNDES) y eliminación de las barreras de acceso al mercado brasileño.

segunda-feira, 7 de junho de 2010

Clipping Internacional, 07 de maio de 2010


G-20 Nears Deal On Capital Rules

07/06/2010

By MICHAEL M. PHILLIPS And ALEX FRANGOS

BUSAN, South Korea—The world's leading economic powers edged toward agreement on new rules to ensure that major banks keep enough money in reserve to insulate them against future crises.

Top finance officials from the Group of 20 major industrial and developing economies agreed over the weekend they would finish work on the tightened banking standards before their leaders meet for a summit in Seoul in November, ahead of their original year-end goal.

"It is critical that our banking regulators develop capital and liquidity rules of sufficient rigor to allow our financial firms to withstand future downturns in the global financial system," the finance ministers and central bankers said in a statement at the end of the two-day meeting Saturday on the Korean coast.

Amid these signs of progress, the G-20 remained at odds over another central policy goal: imposing a global levy on financial institutions, either to recoup public expenditures on bailouts or to raise money that might be used to address the next crisis.

The global financial crisis that began in 2008 focused international attention on the technical question of how much, and what kind, of capital banks should have on hand to protect against shocks.

American banks reeled when securities backed by failing home mortgages turned sour, leading to big government bailouts. Likewise, European banks now appear shaky because of their holdings of government bonds from Greece and other financially unstable nations.

Just a few months ago, talks dubbed Basel III, after the Swiss town where they take place, appeared in danger, with countries bickering over, among other issues, whether certain types of securities counted as a viable capital cushion.

U.S. officials said the talks gave more impetus than they had expected to the ground-level negotiations. Technical experts in the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision have the job of turning the general agreement into specific guidelines.

"Stronger capital and liquidity requirements and constraints on leverage are necessary to help ensure that global active financial institutions are better able to withstand future financial shocks and economic shocks," U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said.

The G-20 vowed to aim to implement the new rules by the end of 2012, but there has been discussion recently of pushing back that target for countries nervous about exposing weakness in their banks.

In fact, while they plan to announce a broad agreement at the November summit, G-20 members are still pondering how and when to reveal the specifics of what will constitute acceptable types and levels of capital.

European officials arrived in South Korea under pressure from some of their counterparts and from financial markets to explain just how they would use their new €440 billion ($527 billion) loan entity, part of a $900 billion rescue effort for troubled European Union member states.

Euro-zone governments are close to agreement among themselves on specifics for implementing their planned bailout for the Continent's struggling governments, and they could announce a formal accord as early as Monday, officials here said.

Mr. Geithner welcomed signs of accord within the euro zone. "That will be helpful," he told reporters. "I think people want to see what the details are."

On the G-20 agenda was the related matter of how to solve Europe's dilemma of needing to cut government borrowing at the same time that economies there are relying on state spending for growth and employment. Spending cuts on pensions and public-sector jobs could assuage financial markets in the near term but could also lead to slower growth, hurting countries' abilities to pay down debt.

"The recent events highlight the importance of sustainable public finances and the need for our countries to put in place credible, growth-friendly measures," said the statement at the meeting's end.


 


A War for Hearts and Minds, Economically Speaking

By DEVIN LEONARD | Published: June 4, 2010


A YEAR ago, Ian Bremmer was invited to the Chinese Consulate in New York, along with a group of economists and scholars, to discuss the financial crisis. Shortly after he arrived, Mr. Bremmer, a political risk consultant who has been widely published, was surprised to hear a Chinese diplomat ask them, "Now that the free market has failed, what do you think is the proper role for the state in the economy?"

Mr. Bremmer was at a loss for words. He didn't agree with the first part of the question. As for the second part, he felt strongly that the correct response was: "as minimal as possible."

But this was an inconvenient time to make such an argument. Only months earlier, President Obama signed the $787 billion stimulus spending bill. Clearly, in America at least, the free market wasn't doing so well.

Mr. Bremmer recounts this tale in the introduction of "The End of the Free Market: Who Wins the War Between States and Corporations?" (Portfolio, 230 pages) his well-crafted, thought-provoking book about the rise of state-controlled economies like China and Russia and the challenges they pose to American companies — and, ultimately, to the United States itself.

The author stops short of calling this a new cold war — well, just barely. The way he sees it, China and Russia are using what he calls "state capitalism" to advance the interests of their companies at the expense of their American rivals. But that is not the only battle he describes in his book. The other is the struggle for the hearts and minds of emerging-market giants like Brazil and India that are leaning toward the free market, but still haven't fully embraced it.

The stakes could be enormous. Mr. Bremmer argues that if the United States and its allies can prevail, their leading businesses will have access to natural resources and growing numbers of middle-class consumers in these nations. But if they fail, the West could be shut out of the very markets where much of the world's economic growth is expected to occur in the next few years.

The problem, Mr. Bremmer says, is that state capitalists are in a very strong position at the moment. He's right. The world blames the United States — as it should — for hatching and exporting the 2008 financial crisis. And as the global economy finally recovers, guess which nation is leading the way? Not America, but China — where the economy is still tightly controlled by the Communist Party.

"The lesson that many emerging-market governments took from the crisis is that free-market capitalism had ignited a wildfire," Mr. Bremmer laments, "and that those who depended on it most had suffered the worst burns."

You probably won't be surprised to hear that a free-market evangelist like Mr. Bremmer isn't a liberal. He praises Margaret Thatcher of Britain for privatizing a slew of government-owned businesses. And he thinks China should take such steps, too. He feels the same about Russia, which privatized many of its state-run businesses in the 1990s only to reassert more control after the rise of Vladimir V. Putin.

But neither is Mr. Bremmer a doctrinaire conservative. Refreshingly, he argues that the United States needs to stand shoulder to shoulder with its capitalist allies in Europe against the threat he sees. He doesn't deny that there are differences between American capitalism and the Scandinavian variety, to say nothing of the French, which the American right never tires of bashing. Yet he argues that the United States and Europe share a core assumption that the private sector, not government, should be a primary engine of growth.

This, he says, is what the creation of the European Union creation was all about. "It's the attraction of the free market that has brought Europe together as never before," he writes.

The same cannot be said of the practitioners of state capitalism. Mr. Bremmer argues that the ruling elites of countries like China, Russia, Saudi Arabia and Venezuela use state-owned companies to further political agendas.

Often, he writes, leaders of some state-capitalist nations use profits of these businesses to dole out social-welfare goodies and thus stay in power. Sometimes, he says, they use the companies to make life hard for neighbors — as Russia did when Gazprom, its state-controlled natural gas company, cut off supplies to Ukraine in 2006. Ukraine's offense had been to cozy up to the West and adopt a smattering of free-market measures.

Mr. Bremmer's biggest fear is that the so-called BRIC nations — Brazil, Russia, India and China — will do more business with one another, leaving the United States out in the cold. That would be devastating for the American economy. And it's not a paranoid fantasy, either. Last year, the four countries' leaders met in Russia and discussed ways to reduce dependence on America.

What is to be done? The author makes a curious suggestion: that the United States raise military spending and act as the world's cop — which no BRIC is yet equipped to do. That may seem a bit shortsighted. In many ways, American mistakes in the Iraq war were an invaluable gift to our state-capitalist foes who have used them, fairly or unfairly, to paint America as a rogue state.

Luckily, this isn't his only suggestion. He warns American politicians not to pander for votes by pushing anti-free-market initiatives like protectionism. He says many emerging-market nations — like India, Brazil, South Korea, Turkey and South Africa — have one foot in the free market and the other in state capitalism. They could go either way.

Mr. Bremmer says their leaders are watching to see what the West truly believes when it comes to the economy. In other words, if we are going to preach free-market capitalism, we'd better practice it ourselves.


 


Clinton Warns Of Iran "Stunt" Ahead Of Latam Visit

By REUTERS | Published: June 6, 2010

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton warned on Sunday of Iran "stunts" ahead of a visit to Latin America where regional powerhouse Brazil opposes the U.S. drive for new U.N. sanctions over Tehran's nuclear program.

Clinton said she fully expected Iran to "pull some stunt" in the coming days to try to divert pressure for sanctions, but predicted this would fail.

"I think we'll see something coming up in the next 24 to 48 hours," Clinton told reporters aboard her plane before departing. "I don't think anybody should be surprised if they try to divert attention once again from the unity within the Security Council ... but we have the votes," she said.

Clinton's trip takes her to Peru for a meeting of the Organization of American States (OAS), followed by stops in Ecuador, Colombia and Barbados.

The Obama administration has battled perceptions in Latin America that early vows of close cooperation have failed to materialize along with pledges to liberalize treatment of Cuba and to review immigration laws.

"The expectations in the region ran way ahead of reality and there is a certain disappointment and cynicism that has set it," said Eric Farnsworth, vice president of the Washington, D.C.-based Council of the Americas.

"Some of these things are devilishly difficult and it is not going to happen overnight," he said. "The secretary is going to try to put this in a broader context."

U.S.-Brazil ties have been strained by possible new U.N. sanctions on Tehran, which Washington has said it hopes to put to a U.N. Security Council vote this week. Brazil, along with Turkey, wants more time for diplomacy.

Both sides say the Iran issue is only one part of a broad and growing U.S.-Brazil relationship. But the dispute has set the United States publicly at odds with Latin America's fastest rising power as it stakes out a spot on the world stage.

DISAGREEMENT ON HONDURAS

Clinton's trip, her second to the region in three months, is aimed at reaffirming Washington's commitment to Latin America on everything from the battle against drug trafficking to promoting regional trade.

But differences could erupt at the OAS meeting in Peru, particularly over the question of whether to readmit Honduras after a 2009 coup toppled President Manuel Zelaya.

The United States helped to broker November elections that put President Porfirio Lobo in power and says his administration deserves OAS recognition. Brazil and Argentina oppose it, arguing his government still has roots in a coup.

"There still are some countries that believe that Honduras should take additional steps, which is a position that's different from that of the United States," Assistant Secretary of State Arturo Valenzuela said at a briefing.

In Colombia, Clinton will meet the country's two presidential candidates, due for a June 20 run-off, as well as signal U.S. support for its closest regional ally despite a planned $55 million cut in aid.

She also will make a quick visit to Ecuador, whose leftist President Rafael Correa has ties with a regional bloc that also includes Bolivia's Evo Morales and Venezuela's Hugo Chavez, who is a loud critic of U.S. policy.

"We don't want Correa to go the way of Chavez and he has done some pretty quirky things," said Johanna Mendelson Forman, a Latin America expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a Washington think-tank. "This is to show we are not isolating them."

IRAN ISSUE LOOMS

Despite the Latin America focus, Iran looks certain to push its way onto Clinton's agenda.

The United States is pushing hard for new U.N. sanctions, saying Iran's violations of its nuclear obligations leave no doubt it seeks atomic weapons -- a charge Tehran denies.

But Brazil and Turkey, both now nonpermanent members of the council, have sought to revive a proposed atomic fuel deal for Tehran, declaring that sanctions should be avoided.

The United States has built a fragile consensus with the four other veto-wielding permanent Security Council members, Britain, France, Russia and China, and says the fuel deal idea fails to address core concerns over Iran's nuclear ambitions.

But the Security Council showdown with two of the developing world's most influential countries over Iran could underscore the limits of U.S. influence over even friendly emerging powers like Brazil.

"The United States has still not factored in the inescapable conclusion that Brazil today is on an irrevocable path toward independent foreign policy," said Larry Birns, director of the Council on Hemispheric Affairs in Washington.

(Editing by Bill Trott and Eric Walsh)


 


With Drilling Stopped, Losses Could Multiply

By TOM ZELLER Jr. | Published: June 4, 2010


Chett Chiasson, the executive director of Port Fourchon in Louisiana, has a message for President Obama — and any Americans who have applauded the administration's decision to halt deep-water drilling in the Gulf of Mexico: You just don't get it.

"I don't know that this country realizes the cascading impacts of this moratorium," said Mr. Chiasson, whose estimates that his port handles 90 percent of the traffic servicing the deep-water oil and gas industry in the gulf. "It's going to have an impact for years to come."

The Interior Department's six-month moratorium on deep-water drilling most directly affects 17 oil companies, including multinational giants like BP, Exxon Mobil, Shell and Chevron. The order, issued May 27, forced 33 rigs to shut down operations.

Every one of those rigs is serviced out of Port Fourchon, according to Mr. Chiasson, so the drilling ban could end up slashing the incomes of thousands of other workers — from welders and divers to caterers and drivers — who depend on the industry.

One oil industry group, the Louisiana Mid-Continent Oil and Gas Association, has estimated that each exploration and production job represents four supporting jobs in and around the region. If that is the case, thousands of jobs — and millions of dollars in wages — could be affected by the work stoppage, the group said.

With that in mind, a growing chorus of residents, business owners and local politicians in the gulf region are imploring the Obama administration to reconsider the deep-water drilling ban.

"We need to know what you are prepared to do to prevent catastrophic damage to our battered economy," said an editorial addressed to the president that appeared in The Times-Picayune of New Orleans on Friday. "It is not clear, Mr. President, why it will take six months to determine what went wrong on Deepwater Horizon and how to remedy safety deficiencies."

In a separate letter Wednesday to Mr. Obama and Interior Secretary Ken Salazar, Gov. Bobby Jindal of Louisiana said: "During one of the most challenging economic periods in decades, the last thing we need is to enact public policies that will certainly destroy thousands of existing jobs while preventing the creation of thousands more."

During a visit to Louisiana on Friday, Mr. Obama said he is sympathetic to the concerns and has urged his bipartisan commission investigating the spill to take less than six months to make their recommendations, if at all possible. However, the president added, "I'm not going to cut corners on it."

"If we don't do it right, then what you could end up seeing is an even worse impact on the oil industry down here, which is so important to so many jobs," Mr. Obama said.

Under a legislative proposal put forth by the White House, workers who lose their jobs as a result of the moratorium would be eligible for unemployment assistance, and new jobs would be created in cleanup, restoration, renovation and recovery.

But for Mr. Chiasson and the myriad businesses clustered around Port Fourchon, that is likely to be cold comfort.

"I have 37 employees, and I have to look at how I'm going to protect those jobs," Mr. Chiasson said.

When the Deepwater Horizon exploded April 20, releasing a still-continuing torrent of oil into the gulf, representatives from at least 13 different companies were on board. Besides high-level engineers and managers from Transocean, which operated the rig, and BP, which held the lease on it, the workers included cooks, tank washers and laundry workers employed by a medley of subcontracted companies.

A long-term pause in deep-water work could be devastating to local economies already struggling with fishing restrictions, frightened tourists and other effects of the spill.

The biggest concern, said Larry Wall, a spokesman for the regional oil and gas group, is that rig owners and operators will ultimately cancel their contracts and move operations to the coastal areas of Africa, Brazil or other points abroad, rather than let rigs sit idle.

Should that happen en masse, it is unlikely that deep-water work in the gulf would resume quickly even after the moratorium is lifted, given the time and expense involved in relocating rigs.

"The owner of the rig, once he goes overseas, it's two years minimum before he comes back," Mr. Wall said. "And there's a fixed number of those things in the world. If they keep moving, we're going to have a big problem in the gulf."

In some instances, oil companies are invoking what is known a "force majeure" clause in their drilling contracts with rig owners. Typically used in the event of hurricanes or other natural disasters, it allows the operator a way out of its contract when a major, unexpected event occurs.

Anadarko, one of the oil companies affected by the moratorium, said on Thursday that it had notified three of its drilling companies — Noble, Transocean and Diamond Offshore Drilling — of its plan to invoke the clause.

Diamond said that a different oil company also canceled a contract to use another one of its rigs, the Ocean Monarch.

Larry Dickerson, the president and chief executive of Diamond, said in an e-mail message that the future of that rig was "uncertain, with a move to international waters the most likely outcome."

Mr. Dickerson said that while his company had not yet reduced staff, if the rig were forced to relocate, it would normally use local workers. "I am sure our roustabouts and floor hands are worried," he said.

Michael A. Pontiff, the sales manager for Gator Equipment Rental in Houma, La., a company that rents welding machines and air compressors to offshore drilling companies, said that he was not waiting for the worst, and that he had written letters to state leaders and Mr. Obama.

"I'm a simple person," Mr. Pontiff said. "I just want to know that our politicians are doing the right thing and that they know a lot of people's lives and livelihoods depend on it."

Jackie Calmes, Rob Harris and Robbie Brown contributed reporting.


 


Ahmadinejad's Sugar Daddy

How Brazilian ethanol could help Iran outwit American sanctions.


Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva has been spending a lot of time with his Iranian counterpart Mahmoud Ahmadinejad lately, to the consternation of the former's supporters at home and friends elsewhere in the West. Brazil, currently a member of the U.N. Security Council, has been unapologetic about its newfound relationship with Iran, which produced a dubious nuclear fuel-swap deal last month; it defends Iran's right to enrich uranium and rejects any idea of tough economic sanctions. The budding friendship has baffled Washington: Why would this Latin American country, otherwise a U.S. ally, insist on cozying up to Iran to the detriment of its relations closer to home?

There are several possible explanations. Brazil has long harbored its own nuclear aspirations, and increasingly seeks to define its own foreign policy and emerge as an independent global power. But Lula's motives may be less complicated than all that: There are also $10 billion in Brazilian-Iranian trade deals to be had. Perhaps the most intriguing, and strategic, aspect of those trade relations has to do with sugar.

Brazil is the world's largest sugar grower. This year it experienced a bumper crop, with output growing 16 percent from a year earlier. But due to a global glut, sugar prices have plunged 57 percent since February. Because sugar cane is a perishable crop that cannot be stored, the best way for Brazil to generate value from its undervalued surplus is by converting it into ethanol, of which Brazil is already the second-largest producer (after the United States) and a major consumer (for years Brazilians have driven mostly flex-fuel cars, which can run on any combination of gasoline and ethanol). The country's ethanol production is expected to rise 19 percent to 8 billion gallons this year.

For Tehran, Brazil's surplus ethanol could be a strategic savior. Iran is a major exporter of crude oil, but lacks the refinery capacity to process most of it; as a result, the second-largest oil producer in OPEC depends on other countries' exports of refined gasoline. A conference committee in the U.S. Congress is hammering out legislation that aims to exploit this weakness by imposing sanctions on foreign companies that supply refined petroleum products to Iran. Tehran has been bracing for these sanctions for a while, taking measures to address its Achilles' heel: building seven new refineries, expanding existing ones, converting cars to run on natural gas (of which Iran has the world's second-largest reserves), and securing alternative gasoline supplies from China and Venezuela.

But none of these efforts would give Iran the immediate injection of motor fuel it needs as swiftly as Brazil's ethanol. Brazil could replace most of the 5.8 million gallons of gasoline that Iran imports daily (a conventional internal-combustion car engine can handle up to 20 percent ethanol in its fuel blend without damage to the engine; in the United States most cars already run on 10 percent). Doing so would pull the teeth out of the gasoline sanctions legislation, rendering it useless before it even reaches President Barack Obama's desk.

If this were to happen, however, Congress and the Obama administration would have only themselves to blame. For years, Brazil has been clamoring to export its surplus ethanol to the United States, only to be blocked by lawmakers beholden to powerful American agricultural lobbies. If not for a prohibitive 54-cent-per-gallon import tariff on Brazilian ethanol -- not to mention a sugar quota and tariff system that restricts imports and keeps sugar prices in the United States much higher than the world price -- the fuel could have ended up in American gas tanks rather than reducing the country's leverage with Tehran.

But American lawmakers seem less afraid of a nuclear Iran than they are of angry American corn farmers and ethanol producers -- or, at least, want to have it both ways. Many champions of the Iran Refined Petroleum Sanctions Act, as the proposed legislation is called, are also defenders of the tariff. In the Senate, all but two of the nine co-sponsors of recently introduced legislation to extend the tariff -- which is due to expire next year -- by an additional five years are also co-sponsors of the Iran sanctions bill. Thirty-six supporters of the same sanctions act in the House of Representatives are also co-sponsors of the tariff-protecting Renewable Fuels Reinvestment Act.

The tariff on Brazilian ethanol has been a lingering source of tension between Brazil and the United States for years. Both Presidents George W. Bush and Obama, in their meetings with Lula, rejected his request to eliminate the tariff. Now Lula is taking his revenge, and it's surely a sweet one.


 


Brazil, North Korea: Brothers in trade

Jun 3, 2010 | By Bertil Lintner

BANGKOK - For more than a decade, the world around North Korea has been shrinking. In the wake of its missile and nuclear tests and recent accusations that it torpedoed a South Korean naval vessel, the list of internationally imposed sanctions and trade restrictions aimed at isolating the reclusive state has grown ever longer.

But the North Koreans, who have been in a state of war for more than half a century, have often found ingenious ways around those restrictions and added pressures from the United States, Japan and other countries, most visibly seen in the string of front companies and bank accounts it maintains across Asia.

Recent indications are that Pyongyang has sought willing trade partners outside of Asia and its new closest commercial ally appears to be Brazil. Relations between the two countries have warmed considerably since leftist Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva became president in January 2003.

The official Chinese news agency Xinhua reported in October 2004 that North Korea planned to open an embassy in Brasilia, its fourth in the Latin and South American region after Havana, Cuba, Lima, Peru and Mexico City. On May 23, 2006, the official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) and the Brazilian media reported that the two countries had signed a trade agreement.

More recently, the KCNA reported last December that a "protocol on the amendment to the trade agreement" had been signed in the capital Pyongyang. "Present at the signing ceremony from the DPRK [Democratic People's Republic of Korea, or North Korea] side were Ri Ryong Nam, minister of foreign trade, and officials concerned and from the Brazilian side Arnaldo Carrilho, Brazilian ambassador to the DPRK, and embassy officials," according to the news report.

China's role in facilitating trade between Brazil and North Korea remains a matter of conjecture, but it is significant that the state mouthpiece Xinhua has eagerly reported on the warming of relations between the two countries. China remains Pyongyang's most important base for all kinds of foreign trade - legitimate as well as more convoluted business transactions through front companies in Beijing and elsewhere.

But North Korea also needs more discreet trading partners, as China is often criticized in international forums for its close relations with the North Korean regime and is undoubtedly closely watched by Western intelligence agencies. And it is hardly surprising that Brazil, which is known to harbor its own nuclear ambitions, albeit for stated peaceful purposes, has emerged as such a friendly nation to Pyongyang.

Significantly, Brazil has established what appears to be an understanding with another aspiring nuclear power: Iran. "Also like Iran, Brazil has cloaked key aspects of its nuclear technology in secrecy while insisting the program is for peaceful purposes, claims nuclear weapons experts have debunked," according to an April 20, 2006 Associated Press report.

While Brazil is more cooperative than Iran on international inspections, some worry its new enrichment capability - which eventually will create more fuel than is needed for its two nuclear plants [1] - suggests that South America's biggest nation may be rethinking its commitment to nuclear non-proliferation.

''Brazil is following a path very similar to Iran, but Iran is getting all the attention,'' said Marshall Eakin, a Brazil expert at Vanderbilt University in the United States. ''In effect, Brazil is benefiting from Iran's problems.''

In September 2009, Lula declared before the United Nations General Assembly: "Iran is entitled to the same rights as any other country in its use of nuclear energy for peaceful purposes." He added to reporters outside the UN General Assembly, "I defend for Iran the same rights with respect to nuclear energy that I do for Brazil." He added: "If anyone is ashamed of having relations with Iran, it's not Brazil."

But it is Lula's budding cooperation with North Korea that is especially worrying to some Western observers. According to one longtime observer of the North Korean scene, "Both nations have long-standing ambitions to develop a nuclear capability as well as missiles and space-launched vehicles. Both have been the subject of intense US political pressure at times, Brazil on-and-off, North Korea all the time. And Brazil has access to technology that North Korea can only dream about."

Because Brazil is not on any international sanctions list, it is easier for it to obtain dual-use materials. It remains to be proven, however, that Brazil has served as a conduit for such goods ultimately destined for North Korea.

According to official trade statistics, available at www.stat-trade.com, North Korea's largest trading partner in 2009 was China, with two-way commerce totaling US$2.67 billion. That was followed by South-North Korean trade worth $1.68 billion. A surprising third on the list was Brazil with US$221 million in two-way trade, well ahead of Singapore, Hong Kong and North Korea's other traditional Asian trading partners.

The nominal figure may not be impressive in an international context, but it is substantial for North Korea, a country with an estimated total gross domestic product of about $22 billion. North Korea's trade with Brazil has recently increased almost at the pace it has decreased with Thailand, from where it previously sourced dual-use chemicals, raw materials and machinery. Thailand no longer figures prominently in recent trade statistics, which is noteworthy given that their two-way trade reached a record US$331 million in 2004.

Those deals were done under the government of Thaksin Shinawatra, who at one point even proposed signing a full-blown free-trade agreement with North Korea. In August 2005, the former Thai premier was formally invited by North Korean leader Kim Jong-il to visit Pyongyang. The visit never materialized, however, and when Thaksin was ousted in a September 2006 military coup, Thai-North Korean relations began to deteriorate. By 2008, bilateral trade between Thailand and North Korea fell to $76 million and in 2009 dipped further to $47.1 million.

Among North Korea's more remarkable export items before the September 2006 coup in Thailand were 1.3 tons of gold and 10 tons of silver. Another pre-arranged shipment of 12 tons of silver arrived in Bangkok in October of that year. However, business is now reportedly sluggish at the two main trading companies that North Korea is known to maintain in Bangkok, Star Bravo and Kosun Export Import.

Successive Thai governments that have ruled the country since Thaksin's overthrow are believed to have complied more strictly with international pressure to restrict dealings with North Korea. In Brazil, however, North Korea has a long history of involvement with various leftist groups, the distant offshoots of which are now in power in Brasilia.

North Korea expert Joseph S Bermudez wrote in his 1990 study "Terrorism: The North Korean Connection":

From 1968 to 1971 the DPRK provided financial and military assistance to several leftist organizations in Brazil, most notably to Carlos Marighella's National Liberating Action (Acao Libertadora Nacional - ALN) and the Revolutionary Popular Vanguard (Vanguarda Popular Revolucionaria - VPR). By November 1970, the DPRK established a training base in the Porto Alegre area, where a small number of guerrillas were given guerrilla warfare, small arms, and ideological training. A small number of ALN and VPR personnel is believed to have also received training within the DPRK.

Marighella - a Marxist, writer and founder of the ALN - was the leader of a militant movement that fought against Brazil's US-supported, authoritarian right-wing governments in the 1960s. In September 1969, the guerrillas even managed to kidnap US ambassador Charles Burke Elbrick for 78 hours. After his release in exchange for 15 imprisoned leftists, Elbrick remarked, "Being an ambassador is not always a bed or roses." Two months later, Marighella was killed in an encounter with Brazil's police. But on November 4, 2009, the 40th anniversary of the death of Marighella, Lula declared him a "national hero".

Although ideology may be less important than profits in today's capitalist world, there are old emotional bonds between North Korea and Brazil under Lula that should not be entirely discounted. Brazil may be among the countries which have condemned North Korea's nuclear program, as was shown when, in May 2009, the Brazilian government called on North Korea "to sign the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty and to strictly observe the moratorium on nuclear tests".

But bilateral trade between the two sides is nevertheless - in relative terms - now booming. In May last year, North Korea's Foreign Affairs Minister Pak Ui-chun arrived in Brazil to meet with his Brazilian counterpart, Celso Amorim. Pak expressed Pyongyang's interest in receiving assistance in its deep-water oil prospecting efforts from PETROBRAS (Brazilian Petroleum Corporation), while Amorim said his country was reportedly interested in exporting what he referred to as "farm" machinery.

So far no military hardware, or material that could have military applications, is known to have changed hands between North Korea and Brazil. But Pyongyang has found at least one new trading partner which could potentially replace some of its former business allies in Asia. It's a budding relationship that will be closely monitored by North Korea watchers in Japan and the West.

Note
1. According to the World Nuclear Association, construction on a third plant is "imminent", with a 66-month completion date.

Bertil Lintner is a former correspondent with the Far Eastern Economic Review and the author of Great Leader, Dear Leader: Demystifying North Korea under the Kim Clan. He is currently a writer with Asia Pacific Media Services.


 


Central banks look to tackle range of problems

By Jack Farchy

Published: June 7 2010 03:00 | Last updated: June 7 2010 03:00

Monetary policy will be in the spotlight this week, as central bankers in Europe and emerging economies face up to starkly different problems.

In Europe, where the European Central Bank as well as the Bank of England hold rate-setting meetings on Thursday, the focus is likely to be on the debt crisis causing turmoil in markets.

But emerging economies such as China and Brazil are struggling with inflationary pressures. In the case of China in particular, markets will be watching for any sign of overheating, indicating that a more aggressive policy crackdown may be in store.

The world's fastestgrowing large economy is due to release a slew of data this week. Figures on industrial production, fixed-asset investment and money supply for May will give an indication of whether the cooling measures the Chinese government has taken are having an effect. All three indicators are forecast to dip slightly from April.

"The ongoing unwinding of the stimulus package and the capacity reduction on energy-intensive sectors implies a likely moderation in investment," said economists at HSBC.

But they added that they did not expect a significant slowdown.

Chinese consumer price inflation is expected to continue to rise, hitting the government's target 3 per cent level for May from 2.8 per cent in April. That is likely to raise fears in the market of further tightening measures.

"Inflation is set to rise further in the coming months, outweighing growth risks as the top concern," HSBC said.

The UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation said last week that it expected the global cost of food imports to rise 11.5 per cent this year, driven by rising costs of high-value foods such as meat and dairy products, which Chinese consumers are eating in greater quantities. Chinese food inflation was at 5.9 per cent in April.

The Brazilian central bank, also facing rising inflation, is expected to hike the benchmark Selic rate by 75 basis points to 10.25 per cent this week.

Meanwhile, the ECB and the Bank are expected to keep rates on hold at 1 per cent and 0.5 per cent respectively, and analysts expect little move on rates for some time.

That is in spite of some positive economic data: April industrial production for Germany, released tomorrow, is expected to have risen 0.6 per cent from a month earlier, while orders are also expected to remain strong.

In the US, data on the strength of the consumer recovery is expected to be strong - although, after the non-farm payrolls report disappointed expectations last week, some of those predictions may be less confident.

A 0.2 per cent month-on-month rise is forecast for retail sales, while the University of Michigan's consumer confidence index is expected to rise to 75.0 in June from 73.6 in May.


 


Crop squeeze to boost orange juice price

By Jonathan Wheatley in São Paulo

Published: June 7 2010 03:00 | Last updated: June 7 2010 03:00

The price of orange juice will rise in coming months as Brazil's citrus crop, the largest, sees its worst harvest in seven years due to bad weather and diseases, according to Cutrale of Brazil, the leading orange juice producer.

Orange juice is a $20bn (£14bn) industry with prices affecting farmers in São Paulo and Florida, processors, trading houses and bottlers such as Coca-Cola and PepsiCo.

Carlos Viacava, Cutrale chief executive, said contracts being signed with orange producers this year in Brazil, which accounts for roughly half of the world's orange juice output, include price rises of 50 to 60 per cent.

"Some of the producers we were paying R$5 (£1.85)

a box are now getting R$14 or R$15 a box," he told the Financial Times, although he said the average increase was smaller.

Oranges are sold in boxes weighing 90lbs (40.8kg).

In New York, frozen concentrate of orange juice futures traded last week at 136 cents per pound, down from a two-year high of 153 cents set in March.

FCOJ prices have risen 95 per cent since January 2009 on the back of lower crops.

The rise comes as Cutrale forecasts orange output in 2010-11 in Brazil's citrus belt at 286m boxes, down 6.2 per cent from 2009-10 and the smallest since 2003-04.

Prices could be further affected if the harvest in Florida, the second-biggest producer, is hit by hurricanes this summer, with meteorologists forecasting one of the most active storm seasons.

The crop is already expected to be low due to frost this year and the impact of the so-called greening disease.

The US Department of Agriculture forecasts Florida's crop at 136m boxes in 2009-10, the lowest in more than a decade and down 15 per cent from 2008-09.

François Sonneville, an orange juice analyst at Rabobank, said the supply concentration in Brazil and the US has led to economies of scale and made orange juice more affordable but "the drawback is that it has also made the supply vulnerable to the impact from diseases and extreme weather events".

The warning of higher prices comes as the Brazilian orange industry consolidates, with the merger of number-two Citrosuco and number-three Citrovita.

After the combination, the company would be the largest juice processor, controlling 25 per cent of supplies and displacing Cutrale to second position.

Louis Dreyfus, the French trading house, would be the third largest processor.


 


Economic Outlook: Central banks in spotlight

By Jack Farchy


Published: June 6 2010 20:23 | Last updated: June 6 2010 20:23

Monetary policy will be in the spotlight this week, as central bankers in Europe and emerging economies face up to starkly different problems.

In Europe, where the European Central Bank as well as the Bank of England hold rate-setting meetings on Thursday, the focus is likely to be on the debt crisis causing turmoil in markets.

But emerging economies such as China and Brazil are struggling with inflationary pressures. In the case of China in particular, markets will be watching for any sign of overheating, indicating that a more aggressive policy crackdown may be in store.

The world's fastest-growing large economy is due to release a slew of data this week. Figures on industrial production, fixed-asset investment and money supply for May will give an indication of whether the cooling measures the Chinese government has taken are having an effect. All three indicators are forecast to dip slightly from April.

"The ongoing unwinding of the stimulus package and the capacity reduction on energy-intensive sectors implies a likely moderation in investment," said economists at HSBC.

But they added that they did not expect a significant slowdown.

Chinese consumer price inflation is expected to continue to rise, hitting the government's target 3 per cent level for May from 2.8 per cent in April. That is likely to raise fears in the market of further tightening measures.

"Inflation is set to rise further in the coming months, outweighing growth risks as the top concern," HSBC said.

The UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation said last week that it expected the global cost of food imports to rise 11.5 per cent this year, driven by rising costs of high-value foods such as meat and dairy products, which Chinese consumers are eating in greater quantities. Chinese food inflation was at 5.9 per cent in April.

The Brazilian central bank, also facing rising inflation, is expected to hike the benchmark Selic rate by 75 basis points to 10.25 per cent this week.

Meanwhile, the ECB and the Bank are expected to keep rates on hold at 1 per cent and 0.5 per cent respectively, and analysts expect little move on rates for some time.

That is in spite of some positive economic data: April industrial production for Germany, released tomorrow, is expected to have risen 0.6 per cent from a month earlier, while orders are also expected to remain strong.

In the US, data on the strength of the consumer recovery is expected to be strong – although, after the non-farm payrolls report disappointed expectations last week, some of those predictions may be less confident.

A 0.2 per cent month-on-month rise is forecast for retail sales, while the University of Michigan's consumer confidence index is expected to rise to 75.0 in June from 73.6 in May.


 


Sugar volatility

By Sophia Grene

Published: June 6 2010 08:33 | Last updated: June 6 2010 08:33

A good example of the vagaries of the soft commodities market is the recent history of sugar prices.

Global sugar prices hit a three-decade high earlier this year, only to fall back by nearly 50 per cent (to a one-year low) when news broke that the Indian sugar harvest would beat expectations.

India's output swings move the country from exporter to importer. As the largest consumer of sugar and second largest producer (after Brazil), the presence of Indian demand or supply in the global market is a significant driver of the price.

India is a very opaque place, says Tobin Gorey, a commodities analyst at JPMorgan. This means harvest expectations, based on reports of what has been planted and what weather is forecast, can be badly out of line with reality.

This year, for example, the January/February crop was forecast to be around 4.5m tonnes, some 8m short of expected consumption. Instead it was 8.5m, leaving a much smaller shortfall to be made up.

"At the start of the year, the forecast was for sugar to be at one of the tightest levels for 50 years, so the price went a fair way," says Mr Gorey.

"With February expectations, you were looking at two years to recover to balance inventories. Now you can get most of the task done in the first year."

Exaggerating the wild swings in prices was the presence of a large number of buyers, who may have driven the price higher than the fundamentals called for, and then pushed it sharply lower as they scrambled to get out of a trade they no longer liked.

The International Sugar Organisation said last month that, after a deficit of about 8.5m tonnes in 2009-10, the global market could swing to a surplus of 2.5m in 2010-11, which would be likely to drive prices lower.


 


Clinton seeks better LatAm ties despite friction

By Lachlan Carmichael (AFP) – 1 day ago

WASHINGTON — US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was set to leave Sunday on a tour for stronger security and trade ties with Latin America despite US friction with powerful Brazil over Cuba, Honduras and Iran.

The chief US diplomat will first hold a full day of talks in Lima on Monday with officials of the 33 active members of the Organization of American States (OAS) before traveling on to Ecuador, Colombia and Barbados.

It was not clear whether rows or differences between Washington and Brasilia, the Western hemisphere's main powers, would stay under the surface or burst into the open and hurt the overall OAS meeting.

With security the main theme this year, the OAS General Assembly's agenda lists plans to tackle regional arms sales, crime and Argentina's claim of sovereignty over Britain's Falkland Islands.

Clinton's top diplomat for the region, Arturo Valenzuela, said the United States does not support the Argentine claim. "Our position has always been that this is a matter for both countries to address," he told reporters Friday.

Peruvian President Alan Garcia seeks to limit arms sales and avert an arms race amid what analyst Michael Shifter says is his concern over purchases by Brazil, Chile, Colombia and Venezuela.

But Shifter, president of the Inter-American Dialogue in Washington, told AFP he doubts the proposal will go far amid lack of interest from Brazil and the United States as well as other countries.

Valenzuela, the US assistant secretary of state for the Western Hemisphere, dismissed fears of an arms race. "There has actually been a significant decline in expenditures on armaments in most countries of the region," he said.

Though it may not be on the agenda, there may be debate over US-backed efforts to readmit Honduras to the OAS following its suspension in June last year over the coup that toppled president Manuel Zelaya.

OAS Secretary General Jose Miguel Insulza said Honduras will come up in a free session on Monday but a Peruvian government source said some states prefer to avoid such debate for fear it could degenerate into an ideological row.

For many Latin American countries, Honduras cannot return to the OAS unless Zelaya is allowed to return peacefully from exile, according to Insulza.

Shifter said there remained a "sharp difference" over readmitting Honduras to the OAS between the United States and Brazil, which sheltered Zelaya in its embassy in Tegucigalpa during a long stand-off following the coup.

Analyst Christopher Sabatini, an executive at the New York-based Americas Society and Council of the Americas, told AFP it might be possible for the OAS to reach a consensus on a "process" for readmitting Honduras.

A similar compromise was tailored for Cuba to save last year's OAS assembly when a dispute emerged with the United States opposing efforts by Venezuela, Brazil and others to readmit Havana to the pan-Arab grouping.

Apart from US-Brazilian differences over Honduras, those over Iran and Cuba can also bubble to the surface, Shifter said.

US officials declined to say whether Clinton would meet on the margins of the OAS with Celso Amorim, the Brazilian foreign minister, as Washington pushes next week for a UN Security Council vote on new sanctions against Iran.

Brazil, a non-permanent council member, has opposed sanctions while pushing a deal opposed by Washington to ship low-grade nuclear fuel to Turkey so that it can be further enriched and returned to Iran for medical purposes.

Shifter said Cuba could come up again as many Latin American countries feel little has been done in the last year to readmit Cuba.

On Tuesday, Clinton will fly to Quito for talks with Ecuador's leftist President Rafael Correa and for a speech laying out the broad outlines of President Barack Obama's policies toward Latin America.

"The idea now is to set forth a more cooperative agenda," Sabatini said of the speech.

"This administration wants to feel it is leaving a mark on Latin American policy," he said, noting it has suffered a number of "fits and starts" in improving ties with a region that has long distrusted the United States.

Clinton will visit Colombia on Wednesday and Barbados on Thursday before returning to Washington. She has made around half a dozen tours of Latin American countries since she became secretary of state.


 


Crowded agenda awaits Clinton in Latin America

By MATTHEW LEE (AP) – 1 day ago

WASHINGTON — Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton travels to Latin America and the Caribbean with a crowded agenda awaiting: lingering tensions over last year's coup in Honduras, U.S. immigration policy, security issues and concerns over Iran and the Middle East.

Clinton was to depart Sunday on her seventh trip to the region as the top U.S. diplomat, with a schedule that included an Organization of American States meeting in Peru as well as later stops in Ecuador, Colombia and Barbados.

At all points, officials say, she will stress the Obama administration's commitment to the Western Hemisphere and support for democracy.

The most contentious topic facing the OAS — whether to readmit Honduras to the regional bloc — isn't on the agenda at Monday's annual OAS General Assembly in Lima. But it will loom large over the discussions, with the U.S. at odds with numerous other member countries on the matter.

The U.S. wants Honduras allowed back into the organization following elections that brought the current president, Porfirio Lobo, to power after the June 2009 coup that ousted his predecessor, Manuel Zelaya. Other governments, notably Brazil, Venezuela and Nicaragua, are opposed and insist that Zelaya be allowed to return home first.

"There still are some countries that believe that Honduras should take additional steps, which is a position that's different from that of the United States," said Arturo Valenzuela, the assistant secretary of state for Western Hemisphere affairs.

"We believe that, in fact, Honduras has taken important steps to overcome the crisis," he told reporters Friday. "Although, we are also mindful of the fact that there are continuing concerns over human rights violations in Honduras and that certain steps still need to be taken in order to bring about a process of national reconciliation."

Also of great concern in Latin America is Arizona's new immigration law, which some believe will lead to racial profiling. While this, too, is not on the formal agenda, Clinton probably will get an earful about it from her colleagues even though President Barack Obama has said the law is "poorly conceived" and "not the right way to go."

The law requires that police conducting traffic stops or questioning people about possible legal violations ask them about their immigration status if there is "reasonable suspicion" that they're in the United States illegally. Reasonable suspicion is not defined.

The law, which takes effect July 29 unless blocked by a court as requested under pending legal challenges, also makes it a state crime to be in the U.S. illegally or to impede traffic while hiring day laborers, regardless of the worker's immigration status. It would become a crime for illegal immigrants to solicit work.

OAS Secretary-General Jose Miguel Insulza has called the law "an issue of concern to all citizens of the Americas, beginning with the citizens of the United States." Other nations have complained loudly about it.

In separate talks on the sidelines of the Lima meeting, Clinton is expected to press for support for new U.N. penalties against Iran over its nuclear program. Brazil recently worked with Turkey to broker an agreement with Iran that would avert fresh penalties.

Brazil, which opposes U.N. penalties against Iran, is an elected member of the U.N. Security Council, where the U.S. hopes to bring a fourth sanctions resolution to a vote in the coming days.

From Peru, Clinton travels to Ecuador for talks with President Rafael Correa and to deliver a speech outlining the administration's broad policy toward the region, which has a heavy emphasis on fighting the narcotics trade.

In Colombia, a major ally that had been the recipient of massive U.S. aid to combat drug trafficking, she will see the departing president, Alvaro Uribe.

She plans to meet with the two candidates to succeed Uribe: former defense minister Juan Manuel Santos, who helped craft the current president's popular security policies, and rival Antanas Mockus, the ex-two-time mayor of Bogota who has promised clean government and a tax increase. The candidates are in a June 20 runoff election.

Clinton will close out the trip in Bridgetown, Barbados, where she will see foreign ministers from Caribbean island nations to discuss endemic crime, violence and narco-trafficking.


 


Ministros de Argentina y Brasil discutirán en Buenos Aires temas comerciales

(AFP) – hace 16 horas

BUENOS AIRES — Los ministros de Economía y de Industria de Argentina, Amado Boudou y Débora Giorgi, se reunirán esta semana en Buenos Aires con sus pares de Brasil, Guido Mantega y Miguel Jorge (Desarrollo) para discutir medidas para ampliar el comercio, informó el domingo el gobierno argentino.


"Nuestro objetivo es trabajar en medidas que nos permitan reequilibrar el desarrollo industrial de ambos países y equiparar la balanza comercial, que por ahora resulta desfavorable para Argentina", dijo Giorgi en un comunicado. La reunión fue acordada durante el encuentro que mantuvieron en Rio de Janeiro, la presidenta argentina, Cristina Kirchner y su par de Brasil, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.

El encuentro se produce tras la advertencia de Brasil de imponer represalias de reciprocidad si Argentina restringe la importación de alimentos desde el vecino país, medida que según informaciones de prensa, Argentina tendría bajo estudio.

"En este contexto de déficit parece increíble que sigamos escuchando algunas voces relacionadas con la importación, que agitan fantasmas en la relación comercial, que si bien es profunda también debe recorrer el camino de la equiparación del desequilibrio comercial", dijo la ministra argentina.

En su visita a Rio, Kirchner remarcó que "no habrá restricciones y sí una produndización de las relaciones comerciales, un aumento del intercambio" con Brasil. En 2009, el intercambio comercial entre Brasil y Argentina fue de 24.066 millones de dólares, sensiblemente menor que en 2008 cuando se elevó a 30.864 millones.

La agenda de la reunión ministerial abordará la profundización del sistema de pago en monedas locales, la integración de cadenas productivas, el financiamiento de las exportaciones con fondos del Banco Nacional de Desarrollo de Brasil (BNDES) y eliminación de las barreras de acceso al mercado brasileño.


 


Argentina y Brasil buscarán "equilibrar" la relación

Lunes 7 de junio de 2010 | 10:00 hs

Los ministros de Economía, Amado Boudou, y de Industria, Débora Giorgi, se reunirán esta semana en Buenos Aires con sus pares brasileños de Hacienda, Guido Mantega, y de Desarrollo, Miguel Jorge, para trabajar en el desarrollo de herramientas que permitan equilibrar la balanza comercial entre ambos países.

Fuentes de la cartera de Industria comentaron que aún no se fijó el día de la reunión porque "estamos esperando el regreso del ministro Boudou de Corea del Sur para ajustar las agendas con los funcionarios brasileños".

La reunión surgió del encuentro que mantuvieron a fines del mes pasado en Río de Janeiro los presidentes de la Argentina, Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, y de Brasil, Luiz Inacio Da Silva, en el marco de los reclamos de industriales brasileños por la eventual aplicación de restricciones a las importaciones de alimentos provenientes del vecino país.

En esa oportunidad, la mandataria aseveró que "no hubo ni habrá restricciones a las importaciones" que vienen de Brasil.

Giorgi explicó a través de un comunicado que en la agenda de trabajo se encuentra la necesidad de profundizar el sistema de pago en moneda local, la integración de cadenas productivas, el financiamiento de las exportaciones con fondos del Banco Nacional de Desarrollo de Brasil (Bndes) y eliminación de las barreras de acceso al mercado brasileño. Agencia DyN


 


CFK agreed to set up meeting with Lula da Silva
Giorgi, Boudou to meet with Brazilian ministers, discuss commerce

Monday, June 07, 2010 | 09:59 ET

Argentina's Economy and Production Ministers, Amado Boudou and Débora Giorgi, will meet this week in Buenos Aires with their Brazilian counterparts, Guido Mantega and Miguel Jorge to discuss measures to widen commercial opportunities, according to the Argentine government.

"Our goal is to work on measures that will allow us to balance out industrial development from both countries and help the commercial balance which is, at the moment, unfavorable for Argentina," said Giorgi through a press release.

The meeting was set during a previous meeting between President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner and Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.


 


Brasil

Lunes 7 de junio de 2010

Los ministros de Industria, Débora Giorgi, y Economía, Amado Boudou, se reunirán a mediados de semana con sus pares de Brasil, Miguel Jorge y Guido Mantega, para buscar medidas que tiendan a equilibrar la balanza comercial entre ambos países, con las trabas informales a las importaciones dispuestas por Argentina semanas atrás como telón de fondo. Giorgi afirmó que, entre otros temas, Argentina pedirá trabajar sobre la eliminación de barreras para ingresar al mercado brasileño.


 


 


Las elecciones presidenciales en Brasil debilitarían aún más al real, hasta tocar las 2 unidades por dólar

BLOOMBERG San Pablo ()

Lunes 7 de junio de 2010

Las turbulencias financieras del último mes han hecho del real brasileño la moneda de peor desempeño en América Latina con perspectivas de extenderse, según apuntaron Bank of America y Barclays. Para estas entidades financieras, además, las inversiones disminuirán antes de las elecciones presidenciales que se llevarán a cabo en octubre para reemplazar a Luis Ignacio Lula da Silva.

Los dos bancos redujeron sus pronósticos del tercer trimestre sobre el real más de un 2,5% en las últimas cinco semanas, lo que bajó a su vez la previsión consensuada para fin de año en un sondeo de Bloomberg un 1,1% a 1,77 por dólar. Las reducciones contrastan con el aumento de los pronósticos del peso mexicano y el peso argentino.

"Mientras el real bajó un 5% el mes pasado según la crisis de la deuda de Europa socavaba la demanda de activos de mayor rendimiento de los mercados emergentes, los descensos de aquí en adelante dependerán de las declaraciones de los candidatos en sus campañas para la elección de octubre", arriesgó Roberto Melzi, estratega de mercados latinoamericanos en Barclays. "Habrá un poco de ruido sobre lo que los candidatos hacen, no hacen, a quién nombran", adelantó Melzi en una entrevista telefónica el 2 de junio desde Nueva York. "Puede haber incertidumbre, volatilidad y cierta presión depreciatoria durante la campaña", agregó.

Barclays, en tamaño el tercer operador de divisas del mundo según Euromoney Institutional Investor, bajó su pronóstico de septiembre el mes pasado a 2 reales por dólar desde la previsión previa de 1,95. Bank of America, con oficinas centrales en Charlotte, Carolina del Norte, redujo su pronóstico del tercer trimestre a fines de abril un 9,5% a 1,9 reales por dólar.


 


Brasil pondrá freno a la suba del gasto público

Lunes 7 de junio de 2010

Brasil planea limitar los salarios de funcionarios públicos y los gastos estatales para contener el aumento del presupuesto federal, dijo el secretario del Tesoro Arno Augustin, en una entrevista publicada ayer por el diario O Estado de S. Paulo.

El gobierno no ve necesidad de más aumentos a salarios de trabajadores públicos tras haber subido recientemente algunos sueldos y vetará "cualquier exceso" aprobado por el Congreso que pudiera crear riesgos a la política fiscal de Brasil, sostuvo Augustin.

El funcionario indicó que una propuesta en el Congreso para aumentar los salarios de bomberos y oficiales de la policía es particularmente preocupante y un enorme problema que podría llevar a la quiebra a algunos estados y municipalidades.

Pese a incertidumbres del mercado sobre la postura de Brasil para controlar costos, Augustin dijo que el gobierno cumplirá su meta del 2010 para el superávit primario del presupuesto - que excluye pagos de deudas - del 3,3% del Producto Interno Bruto (PIB).

El gobierno podría también aumentar el tamaño de su fondo de riqueza soberano para absorber fondos públicos en un intento por desacelerar el crecimiento de la economía, aunque todavía no se ha tomado ninguna decisión sobre el tema, agregó.

El ministro de Finanzas brasileño, Guido Mantega, develó el mes pasado recortes de gastos de 10.000 millones de reales (u$s 5.400 millones) para el presupuesto 2010, además de 21.500 millones de reales rebajados del presupuesto en marzo, a fin de enfriar la expansión que ha avivado la inflación.


 


DICEN QUE LAS FRECUENCIAS AL EXTERIOR AUMENTA SUS PÉRDIDAS
Crece la pelea entre Aerolíneas, LAN y las líneas brasileñas por vuelos internacionales
A comienzos de año, la compañía administrada por el Estado incrementó la oferta de tramos internacionales largos y regionales, que tienen precios desregulados

EL CRONISTA Buenos Aires ()

Aerolíneas Argentinas y Austral, que juntas dominan el mercado de cabotaje argentino, se propusieron este año competir fuerte en el mercado internacional, donde las tarifas son libres y cobra mayor importancia el segmento de pasajeros de las clases premium, que buscan la comodidad que compensa los efectos de los trayectos largos. Austral mantuvo su histórico enfoque en los vuelos internos, mientras que Aerolíneas anunció en febrero un incremento del 75% en las frecuencias semanales de los viajes regionales (hasta 161) y un 11% a los internacionales de tramos extensos, incluyendo un aumento del 75% en las frecuencias a Miami (64% más de asientos).

La competencia con las compañías aéreas internacionales recrudeció no sólo por la ampliación de su oferta, sino también porque comenzó a utilizar Aeroparque para los vuelos regionales (a Brasil, Paraguay y Chile), algo que inmediatamente pidieron también la filial de la chilena LAN y las brasileñas GOL y TAM. Operar en Aeroparque implica que los pasajeros reduzcan de cuatro a una hora y media los lapsos de conexión cuando vienen del interior.

La respuesta desde el mercado de aerolíneas internacionales no se hizo esperar y comenzó a circular en ellas un informe según el cual el 70% de las pérdidas de Aerolíneas Argentinas se genera en sus rutas al exterior. De acuerdo con el trabajo, en 2009 Aerolíneas facturó u$s 386 millones por vuelos internacionales y sus costos operativos en ese mismo segmento ascendieron a u$s 623 millones, lo cual se tradujo en una pérdida en su resultado operativo de u$s 237 millones. Los gastos de estructura producidos por atender ese mercado serían de u$s 88 millones y las pérdidas totales, por lo tanto de u$s 325 millones, es decir, el 70% del rojo.

En cambio –de acuerdo con el informe– las ventas por pasajes de tramos domésticos ascendieron a u$s 409 millones y sus costos operativos fueron de u$s 483, es decir, la pérdida se limitó a u$s 74 millones. Los gastos de estructura, en este caso, serían de u$s 68 millones y las pérdidas totales, de u$s 142 millones (el 30% del déficit).

"Los resultados oficiales del primer bimestre de 2010 muestran pérdidas 32% superiores a las del primer bimestre de 2009", concluye. "La pérdida operativa del negocio internacional implica una subvención de u$s 268 por pasajero", añadió.

El relevamiento incluye como crítica que sólo el 5% de la oferta de Aerolíneas –medida en "asientos-kilómetros disponibles"– es en destinos sociales, mientras que el 38% es en internacional de larga distancia, donde hay competidoras que pueden brindar el servicio. Otro 18% es en plazas sudamericanas, donde, se afirma, también hay otras firmas que pueden hacer esos vuelos y el 39% restante en el doméstico.


 


Au Brésil, le secteur financier connaît un formidable essor

07/06/2010

par Virginie Mairet, à Rio de Janeiro

Peu touché par la crise financière de ces dernières années, le secteur bancaire brésilien surfe sur la vague des crédits aux particuliers, après une série de rapprochements et de développements à l'étranger.

Lorsque, en 2002, quelques semaines avant l'élection présidentielle, Goldman Sachs invente le «Lulometro», chargé de mesurer le risque qu'impliquerait pour les marchés l'élection de Luiz Iñacio Lula da Silva, la banque d'investissement est loin d'imaginer que, huit ans plus tard, les banques brésiliennes seraient les premières gagnantes des deux mandats de l'ex-ouvrier métallurgiste. Au sein des Amériques, le Brésil est désormais le seul pays à concurrencer les Etats-Unis. En 2009, la banque latino-américaine la mieux placée était le Banco do Brasil (BB), une institution publique, au septième rang, avec 407 milliards de dollars d'actifs, devançant Itau-Unibanco (349 milliards), qui vient de rentrer dans le Top 10 mondial des capitalisations boursières des banques.

En revanche, côté rentabilité, les Brésiliens détrônent désormais leurs voisins du nord : selon Economatica, un groupe de conseil financier de São Paulo, en 2009 le retour sur fonds propres (ROE) du BB était de 34,74 %, le plus élevé des Amériques, suivi par Itau-Unibanco (24,19 %) et Bradesco (23,82 %). Le premier groupe américain, Goldman Sachs, n'arrive qu'en quatrième position, avec un ROE de 19,82 %.

« C'est d'abord le différentiel de taux d'intérêt qui est à l'origine de cette forte rentabilité », explique Einar Rivero, analyste d'Economatica. Lula a repris à son compte l'orthodoxie monétaire de ses prédécesseurs, en augmentant le taux de base de la Banque Centrale (Selic), par crainte de l'inflation. Même en 2009, quand la politique monétaire s'est faite plus accommodante, pour éviter la récession, le taux réel atteignait encore 5 % - il était nul aux Etats-Unis.

Au contraire de ce qui s'est passé aux Etats-Unis et en Europe, le secteur bancaire a relativement peu souffert de la crise, du fait d'une réglementation plus restrictive, interdisant l'acquisition d'actifs douteux. En novembre 2008, Itau et Unibanco ont fusionné pour créer le premier groupe bancaire d'Amérique latine. Dans la foulée, BB a racheté d'autres institutions régionales, comme Banco do Estado de Santa Catarina (Besc), récupérant ainsi sa position de leader.

Les étrangers à l'affût

L'autre action cruciale du gouvernement pendant la crise a été d'engager les organismes publics (BB, Caixa Economica et la banque d'investissement BNDES) à une politique agressive de crédit aux entreprises et aux particuliers. Avec le retour de la croissance ? 7 % prévus cette année ?, c'est au tour du privé de surenchérir, pour rattraper le terrain perdu.

Enfin, le Brésil assiste à un mouvement de bancarisation accélérée, incluant les familles modestes et les villes de l'intérieur. Bradesco a ainsi annoncé en novembre être présente sous forme d'agences ou de correspondants bancaires dans 100 % des 5.560 municipalités brésiliennes. Dernière tendance : les groupes brésiliens se tournent vers l'étranger. C'est le cas d'Itau-Unibanco, déjà installé en Argentine, au Chili et en Uruguay.

 
 

à l'inverse, les groupes étrangers aimeraient leur part du gâteau brésilien. L'espagnole Santander, installée depuis 13 ans dans le pays, est devenue, à force d'acquisitions, la quatrième banque locale. En septembre dernier, elle a levé 14,1 milliards de reais lors de son entrée en Bourse, la plus importante de l'histoire du marché de São Paulo.

 « Pour de nouveaux venus, c'est un marché difficile à pénétrer, du fait de la réglementation, et la forte concentration », prévient Einar Rivero. La Santander compte profiter de l'opportunité pour se renforcer au Brésil. Son président mondial, Emílio Botín a déjà annoncé que la filiale brésilienne dépasserait la maison mère dans un futur très prochain. n


 


Le G20 plaide pour la rigueur en zone euro

07/06/2010

SÉBASTIEN FALLETTI ENVOYÉ SPÉCIAL À BUSAN

Les pays émergents se rangent dans le camp de la rigueur, majoritaire au sein du G20. La pression monte sur les Européens, priés d'intensifier leurs efforts de réduction des déficits.

FINANCES PUBLIQUES Purger l'économie européenne sans briser la reprise mondiale. C'est la délicate équation que tente de résoudre ce week-end le G20, à Busan, le grand port sud-coréen. Les ministres des Finances des vingt plus grandes économies du monde ont donné la clé de l'énigme hier soir, lors de leur première réunion depuis le plan de sauvetage de 750 milliards d'euros déclenché par l'Europe le 9 mai.

JO YONG-HAK/REUTERS Guido Mantega (ministre des Finances du Brésil), Kevin Warsh (gouverneur de la Réserve fédéral des États-Unis), Timothy Geithner (secrétaire au Trésor américain), Elena Salgado (ministre de l'Économie de l'Espagne), Kim Choong-soo (gouverneur de Bank of Korea), Yoon Jeung-hyun (ministre des Finances de la Corée du Sud) et Christine Lagarde, hier, à Busan (Corée du Sud).

Pour eux, l'assainissement des finances publiques dans la zone euro passe avant la stimulation de la croissance. « Il y a un courant majoritaire qui veut faire de la consolidation budgétaire la priorité numéro un », reconnaissait hier Christine Lagarde, ministre de l'Économie, à l'issue du dîner à huis clos des grands argentiers de la planète.

Un appel à la rigueur qui a mis sous pression les Européens, priés d'intensifier leurs efforts pour remettre leurs comptes en ordre. Et qui ont reçu la leçon des pays émergents, en particulier asiatiques, comme la Corée du Sud, qui ont assaini drastiquement leurs finances publiques à l'issue de la crise de 1997, pour mieux redécoller ensuite. À l'heure où leurs économies repartent sur les chapeaux de roues après la crise de Wall Street en 2008, ces nouvelles puissances ne veulent pas payer une seconde fois pour les errements de la zone euro. « Nous devons favoriser la reprise économique, mais, dans le même temps, nous ne pouvons renoncer à la prudence en matière budgétaire », a prévenu le ministre indien, Pranab Mukherjee.

 Une piqûre de rappel

Cet appel à la discipline donne des ailes à l'Allemagne dans son combat pour imposer l'austérité dans la zone euro face aux velléités de la France et des pays méditerranéens.

En route pour le pays du MatinCalme, le ministre allemand, Wolfgang Schäuble, n'a pas manqué de renouveler la pression sur ses partenaires européens en rappelant que « les marchés avaient toujours des doutes quant à savoir si les accords négociés seraient réellement appliqués ». Une piqûre de rappel qui venait à point nommé, alors que le commissaire Olli Rehn et le président de la BCE, JeanClaude Trichet, ont dû se fendre d'un exposé détaillé à Busan pour convaincre leurs homologues du G20 de la crédibilité du plan de sauvetage européen de 750 milliards d'euros. Berlin a reçu l'appui du nouveau chancelier de l'Échiquier britannique, George Osborne, qui a appelé les membres de l'eurozone à faire le ménage dans leurs comptes.

Mais, pour sa première sortie internationale, le nouveau chancelier a également rappelé l'importance de soutenir la fragile croissance mondiale pour éviter une rechute. Un appel qui a fait écho au secrétaire d'État américain, Timothy Geithner, qui a plaidé pour des mesures de consolidation budgétaire « compatibles » avec la croissance, prenant ses distances avec le refrain de la rigueur. Une perche saisie par Christine Lagarde, qui a souligné la nécessité de « ne pas étrangler la croissance » , alors que Paris cherche à Washington un allié pour contenir la pression de Berlin.

En attendant le sommet de Toronto fin juin, le camp de la rigueur apparaît nettement majoritaire au sein du G20 comme de l'Eurogroupe, alors que la taxe bancaire défendue par Européens et Américains suscite l'opposition des émergents, du Canada et de l'Australie.


 


Brésiliens, Mexicains ou Russes achètent des châteaux
La plupart des étrangers sont respectueux des biens acquis en France

07/06/2010

On leur prête des acquisitions coûteuses et des restaurations parfois excentriques. Mais difficile, de nos jours, de savoir avec précision ce que représente la part des investisseurs étrangers s'offrant des châteaux en France. Ce qui est certain, c'est que leur achat ne passe pas inaperçu, s'accompagnant parfois d'anecdotes et de mini-scandales.

Ainsi, tout récemment, l'acquisition à Paris de l'hôtel Lambert par le frère de l'émir du Qatar a fait couler de l'encre. Un parking sous la cour de ce monument classé avait suscité un tollé avant que le projet soit abandonné. Récemment, dans le nord du pays, un riche propriétaire russe qui a fait l'acquisition d'un château aurait fermé la porte au nez d'un architecte des Bâtiments de France venu vérifier que les travaux avaient été réalisés dans les règles de l'art. Peu regardants sur les dépenses, certains n'hésiteraient pas à assouvir quelques caprices, quitte à écorner le patrimoine.

Mais, pour tous les professionnels de la vente, ces quelques dérapages ne font pas loi. La plupart des étrangers sont respectueux des biens acquis. «Ce sont des achats coup de cœur, et les restaurations sont très bien réalisées», indique-t-on chez Mercure, où l'on estime à 20 % la clientèle étrangère. Un pourcentage qui, il y a trois ans, atteignait les 30, voire 40 %, avant que la crise n'ébranle ce marché. Ce dernier reprend aujourd'hui timidement. «Les Anglais reviennent un peu, mais avec des budgets divisés par deux par rapport à 2007», indique Anne de La Sauzay, directrice du groupe immobilier international Mercure, où l'on voit arriver une nouvelle clientèle exotique : des Chinois ou encore des Brésiliens.

Prix moyen de 700 000 euros 

«On vend à nouveau mieux : 50 châteaux par an au lieu de 25 environ. Mais les transactions se font à des prix inférieurs. De l'ordre de 700 000 euros en moyenne au lieu de 1,5 million d'euros», explique Bertrand Le Nail, gérant associé du cabinet Le Nail, spécialisé dans la vente de châteaux, et qui constate un taux de rotation important. «Les domaines changent de main plus rapidement», confirme Stéphane Salin chez Barnes. Un phénomène qui touche autant les étrangers que les Français et qui est le signe parfois que la vie de château est plus compliquée qu'on ne le croit. «C'est un lourd vaisseau coûteux», selon Bertrand Le Nail, qui redoute les conséquences d'une récente disposition.

Depuis 2009, pour bénéficier d'un régime fiscal avantageux, obligation est faite pour le propriétaire de conserver le bien immobilier durant 15 ans. «Si on s'en sépare avant, il faut rembourser l'économie fiscale réalisée. Comment peut-on aujourd'hui s'engager sur une si longue période ? À 80 %, les détenteurs de châteaux sont des héritiers, et la majorité rencontre actuellement de vraies difficultés économiques», souligne Bertrand Le Nail. Cette mesure va-t-elle dissuader les Français d'acheter des châteaux ? Si c'est le cas, les acquéreurs étrangers n'en auront que plus de choix.


 


La taxe bancaire mondiale - une nouvelle fois recalée

Les ministres des Finances du G20, qui se sont réunis pendant deux jours à Pusan, en Corée du Sud,

07/06/2010

MICHEL DE GRANDI

au début du week-end, ne sont pas parvenus à s'entendre sur la mise en place d'une taxe qui serait prélevée sur le système bancaire pour couvrir les coûts d'un éventuel défaut de paiement d'un établissement.

DE NOTRE CORRESPONDANTA TOKYO.

Le Canada soutenu par le Japon, l'Australie et les principaux pays émergents comme le Brésil et l'Inde ont marqué un point : la réunion des ministres des Finances du G20, vendredi et samedi à Pusan, en Corée du Sud, n'est pas parvenue à imposer une taxe mondiale bancaire. Au motif que leurs banques n'ont pas eu besoin de fonds publics pendant la crise déclenchée sur le marché des « subprimes » en 2007, ces pays ont empêché un consensus de poindre. Le débat n'est pas clos pour autant. La ministre de l'Economie française, Christine Lagarde, a concédé que« tout le monde ne sera pas au rendez-vous de la taxe bancaire ». Mais« de nombreux pays sont d'accord pour examiner le principe de taxation, qui devrait être accepté à la prochaine réunion »à Toronto, selon elle. Le communiqué final des ministres du G20 reconnaît que le secteur financier« devrait contribuer de manière équitable et substantielle »à toute crise à venir nécessitant une intervention de la puissance publique. A cette fin,« reconnaissant qu'il existe diverses approches possibles », les ministres se sont entendus pour« mettre en place des principes afin de protéger les contribuables, réduire les risques du système financier, protéger les flux de crédit ».

Un rapport du FMI fin juin

Dans ce cadre, le Fonds monétaire international est chargé de rendre, lors du sommet des chefs d'Etat des 26 et 27 juin à Toronto, un rapport final sur ce sujet. En avril, le FMI avait proposé l'instauration d'une taxe, assise soit sur les actifs des établissements, soit sur les revenus de leurs activités financières. A ce stade, les experts du fonds privilégieraient la première approche. Les établissements financiers devraient s'acquitter d'une taxe similaire à une« prime d'assurance »sur les actifs risqués pour couvrir les coûts d'un éventuel défaut de paiement. Pour le FMI, cette taxe devrait être perçue avant qu'une autre crise financière ne voie le jour. Le fonds ne tranche pas sur la destination du produit de la taxe, à savoir son intégration au budget des Etats ou son versement à un fonds dédié. Les arguments du FMI n'ont pas porté auprès des pays qui n'ont pas connu de crise bancaire. Pas mécontent qu'une partie du G20« ne soutienne pas le concept d'une taxe universelle », Jim Flaherty, le ministre canadien des Finances, a regretté que ce débat« nous ait distraits des problèmes de fond ». Soucieuse de ne pas refermer définitivement la porte, Christine Lagarde a admis que« si certains jugent que ce n'est pas nécessaire car il n'y a pas de risque systémique, on verra en temps voulu ».C'est aussi le discours tenu par le FMI, pour qui le besoin d'un tel mécanisme peut aussi être ressenti à l'avenir par les pays qui jusque-là n'en ont pas eu besoin.« Même si de bonnes réglementations ont été adoptées, on peut s'attendre à de nouvelles défaillances d'institutions. Tout comme l'existence d'un code de la route et de mécanismes pour le faire respecter n'a jamais empêché que des accidents puissent se produire », a expliqué un responsable du fonds.

Bâle 3 : le calendrier est confirmé  

Redéfinition.  Le calendrier de la réforme du Comité de Bâle sur les exigences en matière de fonds propres et de liquidité est maintenu. A Pusan, les ministres des Finances et les gouverneurs des banques centrales ont confirmé que la réforme menée par les 27 régulateurs bancaires du Comité de Bâle sera présentée en novembre, lors du G20 à Séoul, et mise en place avant la fin 2012. En dépit de l'opposition de certains, le Canada en particulier, de retarder le mouvement. La réforme concerne la redéfinition du cadre réglementaire du secteur bancaire pour aboutir aux accords de Bâle 3. « J'espère que nous resterons dans le calendrier. Il n'y a aucune raison de l'allonger »,a indiqué Christine Lagarde, tout en reconnaissant qu'il s'agit d'un dossier« extraordinairement technique ».Ce sont des matières« trop compliquées pour être bâclées », a-t-elle ajouté.


 


Petrobras découvre un nouveau gisement au large du Brésil

07/06/2010

La compagnie pétrolière brésilienne Petrobras a annoncé vendredi la découverte d'un nouveau gisement de pétrole estimé à 380 millions de barils, en eaux très profondes. Ce gisement est situé sur le champ de Marlim, à 170 km au large des côtes de l'Etat de Rio de Janeiro, à 4.460 mètres de profondeur. Actuellement, la production du géant latino-américain est de 2,5 millions de barils par jour, un niveau que la direction espère doubler d'ici à 2020 à la suite des importantes découvertes de ces dernières années. La compagnie détient des réserves estimées à 14 milliards de barils.


 


Brésiliens, Mexicains ou Russes achètent des châteaux
La plupart des étrangers sont respectueux des biens acquis en France

07/06/2010

On leur prête des acquisitions coûteuses et des restaurations parfois excentriques. Mais difficile, de nos jours, de savoir avec précision ce que représente la part des investisseurs étrangers s'offrant des châteaux en France. Ce qui est certain, c'est que leur achat ne passe pas inaperçu, s'accompagnant parfois d'anecdotes et de mini-scandales.

Ainsi, tout récemment, l'acquisition à Paris de l'hôtel Lambert par le frère de l'émir du Qatar a fait couler de l'encre. Un parking sous la cour de ce monument classé avait suscité un tollé avant que le projet soit abandonné. Récemment, dans le nord du pays, un riche propriétaire russe qui a fait l'acquisition d'un château aurait fermé la porte au nez d'un architecte des Bâtiments de France venu vérifier que les travaux avaient été réalisés dans les règles de l'art. Peu regardants sur les dépenses, certains n'hésiteraient pas à assouvir quelques caprices, quitte à écorner le patrimoine.

Mais, pour tous les professionnels de la vente, ces quelques dérapages ne font pas loi. La plupart des étrangers sont respectueux des biens acquis. «Ce sont des achats coup de cœur, et les restaurations sont très bien réalisées», indique-t-on chez Mercure, où l'on estime à 20 % la clientèle étrangère. Un pourcentage qui, il y a trois ans, atteignait les 30, voire 40 %, avant que la crise n'ébranle ce marché. Ce dernier reprend aujourd'hui timidement. «Les Anglais reviennent un peu, mais avec des budgets divisés par deux par rapport à 2007», indique Anne de La Sauzay, directrice du groupe immobilier international Mercure, où l'on voit arriver une nouvelle clientèle exotique : des Chinois ou encore des Brésiliens.

Prix moyen de 700 000 euros 

«On vend à nouveau mieux : 50 châteaux par an au lieu de 25 environ. Mais les transactions se font à des prix inférieurs. De l'ordre de 700 000 euros en moyenne au lieu de 1,5 million d'euros», explique Bertrand Le Nail, gérant associé du cabinet Le Nail, spécialisé dans la vente de châteaux, et qui constate un taux de rotation important. «Les domaines changent de main plus rapidement», confirme Stéphane Salin chez Barnes. Un phénomène qui touche autant les étrangers que les Français et qui est le signe parfois que la vie de château est plus compliquée qu'on ne le croit. «C'est un lourd vaisseau coûteux», selon Bertrand Le Nail, qui redoute les conséquences d'une récente disposition.

Depuis 2009, pour bénéficier d'un régime fiscal avantageux, obligation est faite pour le propriétaire de conserver le bien immobilier durant 15 ans. «Si on s'en sépare avant, il faut rembourser l'économie fiscale réalisée. Comment peut-on aujourd'hui s'engager sur une si longue période ? À 80 %, les détenteurs de châteaux sont des héritiers, et la majorité rencontre actuellement de vraies difficultés économiques», souligne Bertrand Le Nail. Cette mesure va-t-elle dissuader les Français d'acheter des châteaux ? Si c'est le cas, les acquéreurs étrangers n'en auront que plus de choix.


 


Le G20 se veut optimiste sur la croissance à venir

07/06/2010

M. DE G.

A défaut d'un accord sur la taxe bancaire, le G20 des ministres des Finances s'est montré plus optimiste sur la croissance et a insisté sur les besoins de politiques nationales différenciées, adaptées aux capacités de chacun.

 La récente crise de l'euro, alimentée en fin de semaine par les craintes pour l'économie hongroise, a modifié le calendrier des ministres des Finances et des gouverneurs des banques centrales du G20, réunis en Corée du Sud. Ils ont insisté sur la nécessaire remise en ordre des finances publiques et tenu à rassurer sur la croissance.« L'économie mondiale continue de croître plus vite que prévu », ont-ils précisé dans le communiqué final, tout en avertissant que cette reprise demeure fragile, inégale et mérite d'être consolidée.« La récente volatilité des marchés nous rappelle que des défis gigantesques demeurent », ont prévenu les grands argentiers à l'issue de deux jours de discussions. Sans désigner explicitement la zone euro, le G20 constate que les récentes crises budgétaires, qui ont secoué les marchés financiers, rendent nécessaires« la mise en place de mesures crédibles, favorables à la croissance, pour parvenir à des finances publiques viables ».A trois semaines de la réunion des chefs d'Etat et de gouvernement à Toronto, le G20 rappelle que« les pays en proie à de sérieuses difficultés budgétaires doivent accélérer le rythme de la consolidation ». Mais tout en s'engageant à assainir leurs finances publiques, les dirigeants insistent sur la nécessité de« sauvegarder la reprise économique ». Pris entre deux feux, celui de la rigueur budgétaire et celui du soutien à l'économie, ils font face au dilemme le plus difficile qu'ils auront à résoudre au cours des prochains  trimestres.

Discussions très animées

C'est pourquoi ils estiment que les remèdes proposés pour sortir de la crise ne doivent pas être les mêmes pour tous :« En fonction de leurs capacités, les pays accroîtront leurs sources de croissance intérieure, tout en préservant la stabilité macroéconomique. »Bien loin d'imposer une recette unique, le G20 préconise des mesures« différenciées et adaptées à chacune des circonstances nationales ».Avant l'ouverture du sommet, le secrétaire américain au Trésor, Tim Geithner, avait plaidé pour une stimulation globale de la demande intérieure et s'était étonné de sa faiblesse dans certains pays comme le Japon et l'Allemagne. En écho, Masaaki Shirakawa, le gouverneur de la Banque du Japon, s'est félicité d'une reprise plus forte que prévu dans l'Archipel et s'est dit confiant dans le redémarrage de la demande intérieure. Pour l'Allemagne, que le secrétaire américain qualifie« d'économie européenne excédentaire », c'est la chancelière Angela Merkel, qui, en marge d'une visite du président russe Dimitri Medvedev à Berlin, a rappelé son engagement à réduire ses déficits publics et à inscrire la première économie européenne dans une croissance durable. Comme chaque fois, Tim Geithner a pointé du doigt la Chine, qui doit, selon lui, aller vers un système de change plus flexible, élément clef d'une croissance mondiale plus homogène. Il a été rejoint sur ce point par le Fonds monétaire international (FMI).« Le FMI continue de penser que le renminbi est encore réellement sous-évalué. Même un réajustement de 20 à 25 % ne va pas réduire les déséquilibres. Il faut faire davantage », a déclaré Dominique Strauss-Kahn, son directeur général. Entre juillet 2005 et juillet 2008, la parité de la devise chinoise par rapport au dollar est passée de 8,28 à 6,83.Interrogé sur le climat des discussions durant ces deux jours, le vice-ministre coréen des Finances, Shin Je-yoon, a indiqué à  l'issue de la rencontre :« Les discussions ont été animées, très animées…