Brazil beams with pride over sixth-place economic ranking
RIO DE JANEIRO, Dec 27, 2011 (AFP) - Brazil beamed with pride Tuesday
on news that it has powered past Britain to become the world's sixth
biggest economy but officials say it will take another 20 years before
the country can match the Europeans' standard of living.
"From a psychological standpoint, this is a fanstastic year-end
victory," Ricardo Teixeira, an administration professor at the
prestigious Getulio Vargas foundation in Rio, told AFP.
Major Brazilian newspapers hailed Monday's report by the London-based
Center for Economics and Business Research (CEBR) that Brazil has
overtaken Britain to rank sixth among top economic powers behind the
United States, China, Japan, Germany and France.
But Brazil's per capita GDP and the standard of living of its people
remain far below those of its US and European rivals.
Latin America's booming economic powerhouse will close the year with
a GDP of $2.5 trillion, behind fifth-place France with $2.8 trillion and
ahead of Britain with $2.48 trillion.
But Brazil trails in per capita GDP with a mere $12,916, compared
with $48,147 for the United States, $44,400 for France and $39,604 for
Britain, according to International Monetary Fund data. A simulation
conducted by the Brazilian agency Austin Rating suggests that Brazil's
per capita GDP, under an optimistic growth scenario, would match
Britain's in 2028.
Experts stress that the country still has major challenges to
overcome in the areas of education, health and extreme poverty, which
still affects 16 million out of the country's 190 million people.
"This announcement illustrates the greatness of Brazil and shows that
the country is today a major economic power, this improved GDP is a
consequence of all the measures implemented since the launch of the
country's Real economic stabilization plan" in 1994, said Alex Agostini,
chief economist at Austin Rating.
And economist Jose Marcio Camargo told the O Globo News daily that
the country's improved statistics were partly due to "its economic
expansion but was also a consequence of the stronger national currency
(real) and of the eurozone debt crisis."
He pointed out that Europe would experience a decade of low or zero
growth like Japan.
But Agostini said Brazil had a lot more to do and would need "20, 30
years of adjustments to reduce its social inequalities."
"Brazil has a very high tax burden, that of a developed country, but
it provides society with public services such as health and education
that are at the level of an underdeveloped country," he added. AFP
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