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Lula's Legacy, Brazil's Future

By: 
Sue Branford
Date Published: 
December 1, 2010

On 3 October, Brazilians went to the polls to vote for a successor to Luis Inácio Lula da Silva, its first working-class president. With no candidate winning a majority of votes, a runoff election was held on October 31 and Worker’s Party candidate, Dilma Rousseff, claimed victory with Lula’s full backing. Rousseff, A former activist who fought against and was imprisoned by Brazil’s military dictatorship, is the first woman to be elected president of the country.  Another important facet of the Brazilian presidential elections was the candidacy of Marina Silva of the Green Party. Silva, a renowned rainforest activist from the Amazonian state of Acre who stressed systemic change and the critical issue of environmental protection in the country, won a sizable 20 percent of the ballots from the initial vote.  As Brazilians look to the future, Sue Branford reflects on the presidency of Lula and asks what he has delivered in the eight years of his government*. 

It is difficult to remember nowadays, with Brazil riding high on a wave of international prestige, that the atmosphere was very different when Lula came to office in January 2003. Fearful of the prediction made by financier George Soros that Brazil would face “chaos” under Lula, bankers had pulled $60 billion out of the country. The national currency, the real, had lost 30 percent of its value and some credit rating agencies were putting “Brazil risk” at more than 1,300 points, one of the highest rates in the world. Fear that the country would be forced to follow Argentina into default was visible in Lula’s tense body language. His anguish was evident to his close aides. 

Now, almost eight years later, Lula is a different person. Relaxed and self-assured, he is clearly very happy with his achievements. Indeed, the numbers speak for themselves. The purchasing power of the monthly minimum wage, the benchmark by which all wages are set, has increased by more than half. Some 12 million new jobs have been created. About 20 million Brazilians have been lifted out of absolute poverty. The country’s foreign reserves have risen to $239 billion, a very comfortable level compared with its position in December 2002, when Brazil had to ask the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for the largest stand-by credit it had ever supplied, $30 billion, to avoid default. 

Lula is scarcely able to contain his delight that all this has happened on his watch. “Just think of it,” he joked last year. “Brazil used to be in debt to the IMF and we had to adhere to all those conditions they imposed. But now it’s us who are bailing them out with a $10 billion loan!” 

Back in 1941 the Austrian author Stefan Zweig, who was living in Rio de Janeiro, wrote a book praising Brazil as “the country of the future.” This led Brazilians to joke that “Brazil is the country of the future and always will be.” Not any more, it seems. Brazil’s time has come. 

Poverty, inequality and violence 

But what, from the point of view of the left, does this mean? The Lula government has not fundamentally changed the model of development. Brazil’s obscenely high level of income inequality has declined somewhat (from 0.53 to 0.49 on the Gini index) but this is not because wealth has been redistributed from the rich to the poor. Instead, the Lula government has introduced social welfare policies that have meant that, while incomes for all Brazilians have grown, those of the very poor have grown the fastest. 

Even so, the poverty, inequality, and violence encountered daily in Brazil’s mega-cities, where 40,000 people are murdered each year, mostly by the police, remain the country’s most serious problems. Yet these issues were scarcely been discussed in the electoral campaign, not even by Dilma Rousseff. 

The concentration of land ownership, one of the most extreme in the world, has actually increased under Lula. It is now worse than it was back in the 1920s, just three decades after slavery was abolished. With generous government support, agribusiness has flourished, with a massive expansion in soy and sugar cane plantations. More than ever, Brazil’s global success stems from its export of commodities, above all to China. 

The share of primary products in exports has leapt from 23 percent in the first half of 2000 to 43 percent in the same period in 2010, with a concomitant decline in the share of manufactured goods, from 74 percent to 54 percent. Many economists are worried that this return to heavy dependence on primary products bodes badly for Brazil’s long-term future, but the Lula government is confident that food crops, minerals and renewable energy (particularly ethanol from sugar cane) are fast emerging as some of the hottest tradable goods on the world market. 

What is clear, however, is that agrarian reform, strongly promoted by Lula before he gained office, has taken a back seat. His government has not settled any more families on land than did his predecessors, and three-quarters of the land given to landless families is located in the remote (and often ecologically fragile) Amazon region. Indeed, the government has pushed ahead with disastrous old-style development policies in the Amazon basin, with the continued destruction of the rainforest to build roads and hydroelectric power stations that will largely benefit big companies and agribusiness. The administration is refusing to listen to the growing number of scientists who are warning that such devastation will do irreversible damage to Brazil’s rainfall patterns (and thus to the much-acclaimed agricultural exports). 

Lula’s development policies have been strongly resisted by some indigenous groups and fishing communities in the Amazon, who believe that their way of life is being destroyed by the kind of development that is being promoted in the region. The latest controversy concerns the Belo Monte hydroelectric power station, to be built on the Xingu river in the heart of the Amazon basin. With an installed capacity of 11,200 megawatts, it will be the third largest hydroelectric dam in the world (after China’s Three Gorges Dam and the Brazil- Paraguay joint venture, Itaipu). 

The dam involves the flooding of over 190 square miles of forest and the weakening of river f low, which will disrupt the lives of the many people in the region who depend on fishing for their livelihoods. Environmentalists are campaigning to stop the project. “Belo Monte represents an outdated Brazil, imprisoned to old energy models that benefit few but possess an enormous capacity for social and environmental destruction,” said Beatriz Carvalho, assistant campaigns director for Greenpeace. 

“At the heart of the discussion about Belo Monte lies the fundamental question: what model of development do we want for Brazil, today and in future decades?” Their strongest allies are indigenous groups, particularly the Kayapo, who have said that they will wage war if the project goes ahead, turning the Xingu into a “river of blood.” 

Combating neoliberalism 

Still, it would be a mistake to see Lula’s program as the mere continuation, with a more humane face, of the neoliberal policies implemented by his predecessor, Fernando Henrique Cardoso. Credit must be given to Lula and his foreign minister, Celso Amorim, for their fierce opposition to the US attempt to turn the whole of the Americas into a single free trade area—the Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA)— by 2005. Without their determined stance, this might have actually happened, and one only has to look at Mexico today to realize what a disaster this would have been for the whole region. 

Since Mexico joined the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) in 1994, the country has been reeling. Its family farms have been all but wiped out by the unceremonious “dumping” of surplus US crops, particularly corn, on its market; there has been a substantial increase in social inequality, with the country having the dubious honor of being the first developing country in the world to produce the world’s richest man (Carlos Slim, the telecoms tycoon); and there has been a big rise in violence, much of it drug related. 

Lula has also been clear-sighted in his determination to reverse the extraordinary wave of privatizations carried out by Cardoso, under which many large and viable state companies were sold for a song to multinationals. To head the country’s powerful Brazilian Development Bank (BNDES, in Portuguese), Lula appointed the economist Luciano Coutinho, who favors the development of “Brazilian champions”—powerful national companies, the equivalent of South Korean chaebols and Japanese keiretsu. Disbursing a huge amount of money over the past two years—$110 billion, more than the combined amount lent during the period by the World Bank, the Inter-American Development Bank, and the US Eximbank—the BNDES has funded mergers and takeovers and invested heavily in roads, railways, and hydroelectric power stations, all seen as crucial for national development. 

Under BNDES stewardship, JBS-Friboi, the largest Brazilian multinational in the food industry, has taken over all of Argentina’s largest beef producers and the beef division of Smithfield, the world’s largest pork producer and processor. It is now the world’s largest producer of beef. Companies such as Odebrecht, Camargo Correa, and Andrade Gutierrez, which used to be large domestic construction firms, have grown into gigantic, diversified conglomerates, with investments in a whole range of activities in many countries. Because of this massive consolidation, big Brazilian companies are no longer vulnerable to old-style takeovers by multinationals. Royal Dutch Shell, the world’s largest private sector oil company, will shortly be announcing a tie-up with Cosan, Brazil’s largest sugar and ethanol producer. And because Cosan is so clearly a world leader in its own right, this is a marriage of convenience between partners of comparable clout, each with separate areas of expertise. 

Concern on the Left 

But what does this add up to? There is concern on the left in Brazil. Fernando Cardim, from the Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, said recently that, while it was true that the Lula government had brought back the old concern for development, something that had been abandoned by Cardoso, it was not development for the people but to strengthen large national monopoly conglomerates. 

This is clearest of all perhaps in the Amazon basin. Local hamlets such as the hundred-year-old fishing communities in Mangabal along the Tapajos River are being evicted to make way for a hydroelectric power station to provide energy at highly subsidized prices for smelters to produce aluminum for export. And the BNDES is funding giant plantations of genetically modified eucalyptus in eastern Amazonia, instead of helping the region’s small rural communities to farm the land sustainably. 

Other critics fear that Brazil is turning into a regional superpower, just as ruthless and exploitative as the old imperial powers. This seems, however, a partial and inadequate interpretation of what has been happening. Under Lula, the Brazilian state has gained greater control over the country’s and South and Latin America’s destinies. With Brazil’s support, the Union of South American Nations (Unasul, in Spanish) and Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC, in Spanish) were born, both autonomous regional organizations without the participation of the US and Canada. Together they spell the end of the Organization of American States, the old regional body that has long been an arm of US foreign policy. 

According to João Pedro Stedile a leading political analyst and a part of Brazil’s Landless Workers Movement (MST, in Portuguese), “The Lula government adopted a progressive foreign policy.” “Compared with Cardoso’s neoliberal policies, which were totally subservient to the interests of imperialism,” he says, “this is an enormous advance, because we now have a sovereign policy, decided by us.” 

For this reason that Stedile spoke of a crucial difference between the two front-runners in the Brazilian election, José Serra and Dilma Rousseff. ‘Serra represents the interests of the international bourgeoisie, the financial bourgeoisie, the industries of São Paulo, the backward landowners and sectors of the ethanol agribusiness. Dilma represents the sectors of the Brazilian bourgeoisie that decided to ally themselves with Lula, the most independent-minded sectors of agribusiness, the most aware sectors of the middle class and almost all the forces of the organized working class.’ 

Stedile has no illusions as to what can be expected over the next few years. 

“The world is dominated by 500 big internationalized companies that control 52 percent of the global GNP and employ only 8 percent of the working class. The consequences on a global level are disastrous, because all national populations and governments have to be subordinate to these interests.” 

There is no sign yet, he says, of an end to the prolonged crisis that has affected the global left. “We are living through a period of ideological and political defeat. It is a period of reflux for mass movements,” he continues. “But it is a period, a wave. Soon we will be entering a new phase.” 

Within this fairly gloomy prognosis, he is cautiously optimistic about what can be achieved under Dilma Rousseff, perhaps because of her past as a committed left-winger. “In this situation we think that a Dilma victory will allow a more favorable correlation of forces for us to make social conquests, including changes in agricultural and agrarian policies.” 

A long-time journalist, Sue Branford has been living in and writing about Brazil since the 1970s. She is author of Lula and the Workers Party in Brazil and Cutting the Wire: The Story of the Landless Movement in Brazil among other books. 

*Thanks to Red Pepper, an independent left magazine of the UK that originally published a version of this article.