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Private sector responses to economic liberalization policies in Brazil: a look within São Paulo’s capital goods sector

Respostas do setor privado para as políticas de liberalização econômica no Brasil: uma olhada no setor de bens de capital de São Paulo * * I would like to thank the Study Abroad Office and the Institute of Latin-American Studies, both of the University of Texas at Austin, for helping make this research possible by providing essential funding. I also want to thank the Fundação Getúlio Vargas in São Paulo for generously inviting me as a Visiting Researcher, and the Centro Brasileiro de Análise e Planejamento for their help with this research.

ABSTRACT

The tendency to concentrate solely on the analysis of macroeconomic indicators when studying economic liberalization in Latin America has led to an extremely homogenizing view of the experiences of economic actors and to a mitigation of the effects of liberalization on political representation. There is also a general tendency to assume that every business class supports these policies. This study tests these assumptions by examining the effects of trade liberalization on the capital goods industry in Brazil, from the late 1980s to 1994. Policy responses to liberalization are also examined. In general, the data demonstrate a widespread agreement in relation to liberalization policies, although nuanced by a reformist trend that seeks to make the new Brazilian economic paradigm more palatable to industry interests. The selective response model is proposed as a theoretical framework to study the dynamics and multifaceted behavior of the private sector during periods of profound economic and political changes, as is the case today in Brazil.

KEYWORDS:
Globalization; liberalization; political economy

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E-mail: cecilia.heise@bjpe.org.br