Brazil Economy Minister speaks at a BTG Pactual event
Fernando Haddad, Brazil’s Finance Minister, is striking a balanced tone. He’s acknowledging the need to tidy up the country’s public finances: think of it as getting the national checkbook in order—but he’s also saying,
“Hey, let’s not get obsessed with just cutting costs and balancing budgets.”
His point is that economic growth isn’t some optional side dish; it’s the main course for making fiscal adjustments sustainable. Without growth, you’re just squeezing an already dry sponge.
At this BTG Pactual event, he’s signaling confidence in the government’s reform plans, hinting at a pipeline of “good proposals” ready for Congress to chew on.
It’s a pragmatic stance: keep fixing the fiscal mess, sure, but don’t let that choke off the momentum needed to get the economy humming.
He’s betting that growth and reforms together can pull Brazil out of its fiscal tightrope walk, rather than leaning hard into austerity alone—which, historically, hasn’t always worked out well for countries in Brazil’s shoes. Think of it as a dual-track strategy: patch the leaks while also fueling the engine.
The worst aspect about this administration is greed, without thinking of the consequences.
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