BRAZIL TO SPEND $66BN ON NEW INFRASTRUCTURE
In the first
of what are expected to be a series of announcements in the coming weeks, Ms
Rousseff said the government would sell concessions in nine highways and 12
railways before moving onto other areas of infrastructure.
"We are
starting with railways and roads but obviously we will take care of airports,
ports and waterways," Ms Rousseff told a gathering of politicians and
leading businessmen in BrasÃlia.
Brazil's
economy has slowed to a crawl over the past 12 months as inadequate
infrastructure including roads and ports and a shortage of skilled labour has
raised costs and stifled industry.
The economy
expanded 7.5 per cent in 2010, the fastest pace in more than two decades, but
last year slowed to 2.7 per cent and this year is expected to grow 2 per cent
or less.
Among the
initiatives, the government will sell rights for private companies to operate
7,500km of roads and 10,000km of railways.
The measures
would double the capacity of the country's main highways, transport minister
Paulo Passos said at the event.
Of the total
investment, R$79.5bn would be spent within five years and the remainder over 25
years. Funding would be largely at favourable terms from the state development
bank, BNDES.
Bret Rosen,
senior credit strategist for Latin America at Standard Chartered, said the move
was a step in the right direction, with infrastructure bottlenecks posing one
of the biggest obstacles to faster growth in Brazil.
But he
added: "The easy thing is making the announcements, the harder thing is
execution, and the track record not just of Brazil but of Latin American
countries in general is pretty poor on infrastructure."
The cost of
exporting a container from Brazil is more than double that of China and 1.5
times that of India while the country's ports are notorious for delays.
But other
analysts hailed it as the start of a new era for Brazil. "With a
government willing to make politically difficult decisions ... this downturn
may end up being a boon for Brazil in its quest for global economic
status," Stratfor, the political intelligence agency, said.
The
centre-left coalition government led by Ms Rousseff's Workers' party has
traditionally been opposed to privatizations.
But she has
proven pragmatic in the face of infrastructure bottlenecks.
Earlier this
year, her government awarded projects to redevelop and operate three major
airports to private sector-led consortia in a bid to speed up preparations for
the soccer World Cup in 2014 and the Olympics two years later.
"Since
last Sunday, we have been an 'Olympic country'," Ms Rousseff said on
Wednesday. "We are in a countdown to the games in 2016."
Economists
warned, however, that the infrastructure measures announced on Wednesday would
have little short-term impact on the economy.
"This
is a plus for the long-term but it doesn't improve the growth prospects in the
short-term," said David Beker, Brazil economist with Bank of America
Merrill Lynch.
Culled from cnn.com
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