SOME IMPORTANT BASICS ABOUT BRAZIL Some basic demographic information: – 200 million people, 5 th in the world; birth rate of 2.19 per woman= 118 in world.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Daniel E. Goldfarb. Slow Transition Economic Globalization began after the cold war with more liberalized markets. “The sluggishness of the Brazilian.
Advertisements

Can It Work Better?.  We have spent the semester examining the policy-making process at the national level.  One lesson is obvious: it is extremely.
Democracy spreads to Latin America and Africa Enduring Understandings 1.Long-standing cultural and religious differences and conflicts are still evident.
Brazil – The Transition to Democracy, “The New Republic”
Governments and Economies of Africa
Short Paper #1 Due February 4 th !! - all materials for the paper can be found under the “Tutorial #2 folder” on MLS.
What is Democracy? Democracy in Theory vs Democracy in Practice Types of Democracy Democratization Why do States Democratize.
Weber’s ideal type of bureaucracy has all of the following features except? Hierarchical structure Task specialization Freedom of action Political neutrality.
Chapter 9: Executives. This Week… What is the executive branch? How is the Executive Organized? ▫Parliaments, Presidents and Mixed Systems Formal and.
Chapter 9 Political Parties and Electoral Systems Comparative Politics: Structures and Choices 2e By Lowell Barrington.
Nigeria By Savannah Phillips Mary Kate Higgins Jordan Laws.
WHY STUDY COLOMBIA? Surprisingly, it is longest running democracy in the region. It had the longest lasting (leftist) guerilla movements in the region.
Latin American Governments
Political and Economic Systems
Forms of Government. Confederation Loose union of independent states Each member of a confederation retains its sovereignty (exclusive right to exercise.
Political Institutions. Presentation Outline 1) Presidential Systems 2) Parliamentary Systems 3) Mixed Systems 4) Authoritarian Systems 5) Party Systems.
Ordem e Progresso or nem ordem, nem progresso?. Brazil Random Facts Portuguese Empire Almost 200 million Bigger than the lower 48 of the US Invented the.
Latin America Struggles for Democracy Important Leaders
Presentation by Dr. Kevin Lasher. Government Intervention in Economy Govt. Intervention in Personal Matters FOR AGAINST AGAINST FOR LIBERALS CONSERVATIVES.
C H A P T E R 10 Congress.
PRESIDENTIALISM AND REPRESENTATION INSTITUTIONS OF DEMOCRACY.
GOVERNMENT OF LATIN AMERICA
American Government: An Introduction. Compose a list of at least 5 items for the following question: – What should should be the function of government?
WHY STUDY VENEZUELA? Because it threatens our way of life? 27 million people; total GDP, including its oil = 360 b (about half of our typical defense budget.
GOVERNMENTS AND ECONOMIES OF AFRICA. Government of Kenya They currently have a democratic republic with an elected president and a one house (unicameral)
An Introduction to Democracy. Two key questions will guide our study of American democracy: Who governs? –Those who govern will affect us. To what ends?
Institutional Design: Electoral Systems and Executive- Legislative Relations Plan for Today 1. Understand the characteristics and democratic consequences.
Political Parties and their affect on political systems Political Party- a group of people with broad common interests who organize to win elections.
What does it mean to impeach a president
Stan West. Sole executive power is vested upon the President. President is elected by first past the post plurality for a six year term (sexenio) and.
Republic Of Chile “Por la razón o la fuerza” “By right or might”
Mexico Lendon Alexander, Rachael Zipperer, Melissa Cerqueira, Jake Taylor and Keith Llado.
BRAZIL. History The Brazilian Empire ( ) The Old Republic ( ) – decentralized The 1930 coup and Vargas ( ) – Centralized, statist.
WHAT MAKES THE ADVANCED DEMOCRACIES DIFFERENT FROM OTHER COUNTRIES? What makes them economically advanced? GDP at >$12K PPP, per cap; service-dominant.
Republic of Kenya and the Republic of South Africa.
Brazil, Mexico, & Cuba. Government Systems – Who has the power? Unitary--power is held by one central authority Confederation--association of independent.
Latin America Governments OF BRAZIL AND MEXICO. STANDARDS SS6CG2 THE STUDENT WILL EXPLAIN THE STRUCTURES OF THE NATIONAL GOVERNMENTS IN LATIN AMERICA.
The Spectrum of Government Power Many variations between two extremes:- Totalitarianism & perfect Democracy.
BRAZIL Chapter 9. THE MAKING OF THE MODERN BRAZILIAN STATE Copyright © 2016 Cengage Learning 2  Politics in Action  Brazil, the Olympics and the World.
 Authoritarian Developmental (AD)  Economic development  Improving citizen capability (human development)  Elite coalitions with local capitalists.
Major Types of Government All governments belong to one of four major groups.
Brazil: Model or Meltdown? Max Cameron Poli 332 March 31, 2016.
Nigeria. Country profile Former British colony (surrounded by former French colonies) Former British colony (surrounded by former French colonies) African.
Presidential Representative Democratic Republic. Brazil’s National Congress Building.
Constance Eldridge Jason Fu Michael Konek Rachel Perrotta SÃO PAULO’S “PREFEITURA”
Vice Nigeria video Why do you think the Niger Delta region is so poor, even if they have huge oil reserves? What steps should Nigeria take to address.
Presidential Representative Democratic Republic
WHAT MAKES THE ADVANCED DEMOCRACIES DIFFERENT FROM OTHER COUNTRIES?
BRAZIL.
WHY DO SOME DEVELOPING COUNTRIES BECOME AND STAY DEMOCRATIC
Presidential Representative Democratic Republic
Brazil: the 1988 Constitution
Presidential Representative Democratic Republic
Vice Nigeria video Why do you think the Niger Delta region is so poor, even if they have huge oil reserves? What steps should Nigeria take to address.
MAKING OUR DEMOCRACY WORK
MAKING OUR DEMOCRACY WORK
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT.
WHAT MAKES THE ADVANCED DEMOCRACIES DIFFERENT FROM OTHER COUNTRIES?
Presidential Representative Democratic Republic
POL 101: U.S. Government Dr. Kevin Lasher.
WHAT MAKES THE ADVANCED DEMOCRACIES DIFFERENT FROM OTHER COUNTRIES?
Isabel Brum Luis D. Molinaris Claudia Morales
Presidential Representative Democratic Republic
Kenya, Nigeria, and South Africa
Federal System Brazil has a federal system, which means that the national government and the state governments SHARE power. There are 26 states in Brazil.
Elections and Running for
Basics of American Government
WHY DO SOME DEVELOPING COUNTRIES BECOME AND STAY DEMOCRATIC
POLI 101: U.S. Government Dr. Kevin Lasher.
Presentation transcript:

SOME IMPORTANT BASICS ABOUT BRAZIL Some basic demographic information: – 200 million people, 5 th in the world; birth rate of 2.19 per woman= 118 in world – urban pop = 86%; White = around half – Life expectancy: female = 68, male = 75; 123 rd in the world – Literacy: 89%, Avg. years of schooling: 14 years Some basic economics – GDP $2 trillion (2009), 10 th largest in the world, 2007 = +6%, 2008, +5% – Per cap GDP (PPP) = $10.1K; 107 th in the world – A quarter of Brazilians live in absolute poverty; it is one of the most unequal countries in the world – Annual inflation 4-5% since 1994 – Most of its economic growth is internal; its exports are external; it is an agricultural power house. – World leader in ethanol production; has recently discovered vast oil reserves – Drug trafficking—Cocaine to Europe—is a problem, but not like in Mexico or the Andean countries.

WHY TALK ABOUT BRAZIL? It’s a good place to compare democratic consolidation internally because of its various regions Brazil may finally become “the country of the future”… It’s development model, oil, diplomacy, the new left, and the bolsa familiar It presents a unique place to study the dynamics of democratization: Lots of internal variation with fixed rules It may be able to tell us something about the legacies of soft authoritarianism and limited political competition for democracy (Like Mexico, civil society became democratic before mass electoral politics did) It may have some institutional design problems (multiparty pres./Open list PR), but lots of other things going for it. We can thus ask the question of how much institutions really matter for deepening democracy.

BRAZIL: SO BIG, SO UNEQUAL

BRAZIL TODAY: ECONOMIC GROWTH COMPARED TO THE BRIC

BRAZIL’S ECONOMIC TRADE

BRAZIL’S GOVERNMENT SIZE

WHAT KEY JUNCTURES MOST SHAPED PREDEMOCRATIC BRAZIL? Monarchy (and slavery) from : It’s stability was atypical of the region for the most part State-based oligarchy (Minas, Rio Grande do Sul, and SP) (think Chinese “democracy”) in the First Republic ( ): This is why federalism still matters in Brazil Getulio Vargas’s populist Estado Novo ( ): Populism and corporatism ala Peron but with less backlash & division The first shot at democratization with an open-list proportional representation electoral system ( ): Brasilia is built but…clientelism not parties organizes politics, leading to: chaos and finally a CIA-suppored military coup (1964) Bureaucratic authoritarian military rule ( ): The economic “miracle” (for some) soft repression for everyone else (e.g. allowed unions & civil society to stay). Bright spots: The military continued elections with the opposition Popular Democratic Movement party, leadership rotation, and made some good econ. investments

Things are getting better!

WHAT HAPPENS WHEN POOR PEOPLE VOTE?

WHY DID BRAZIL FINALLY BECOME DEMOCRATIC? The “abertura” and pacted democracy: Why did the military open things up? Is top-down democratization good? Direitas Ja! (1984) & the (fortunate?) death of the PMB’s Tancredo Neves (1985) José Sarney’s ( ) & rampant inflation – Did Sarney really fail as bad as it seems? (G. Washington as a measure) – How did inflation help democracy by delegitimizing the extremes, keeping the military out, and keeping govt. focused? Brazil’s 1988 Constitution: – Who should participate in writing a post-author constitution, and what should its scope be? – What should the model be?... External or internal – How detailed should these kind of documents be? How should rights & liberties be specified? – How easy should it be to amend? (Brazil = 60% majority of both chambers of Congress, with two separate votes) The impeachment of Fernando Collor de Mello (1992)

HOW IS POWER STRUCTURED IN BRAZIL? The multi-party presidential system: Is there a problem with presidents: Winner take all, so who wants him to succeed? And what if s/he doesn’t succeed? Coalitions can help Four-year term, one-time reelection, single national district with run-offs if no majority Very strong pres. power: Can initiate legislation and veto, but his legislative success requires congressional approval (vetoes overridden by a 60% majority of both houses… twice) Strong, but accountable, provisional decree powers (Expire after 60 days, unless modified). Impoundment powers. Brazilian presidents govern by coalitions, distributing patronage, and cabinet seats; party-switching laws make it easy to join the coalition A bi-cameral Congress: Strong, well-staffed committees with strong amendment powers Senate: 81 seats (3 for each state), eight-year staggered terms; elected using plurality (vs. majority), statewide elections, no runoffs. House: 513 seats; four year, non-staggered terms; elected by state- level OLPR elections involving hundreds of candidates, pop = # of reps in a state.

HOW IS POWER STRUCTURED IN BRAZIL? Cont. Robust federalism: Why do large countries like Argentina, Mexico, and Brazil have this feature? Brazil gives states and municipalities lots of resources Brazil’s system imposes identical accounting, election, and party rules on sub-natl. govts. Is this a good thing? The main parties: The Workers’ Party (PT), the Brazilian Democratic Socialist Party (PSDB); the Brazilian Democratic Movement Party (PMDB) Brazil has around 23 other parties including some hard- core leftist parties. (My research on women/min access)

HAS DEMOCRACY CONSOLIDATED IN BRAZIL? Fernando Henrique Cardoso’s ( ), The Plano Real helps democracy, but did his method of reelection create problems? The rise of the Workers’ Party (PT), Lula ( ), and now Dilma ( ) ? Is pretty clean better than squeaky clean? The health and vitality of subnational governments in Brazil: My own research What elites/people say & do about democracy now…Why is it ok that people are frustrated? Thinking about India, Brazil, and Mexico: Is there a reinforcing linkage between democracy and empowering poor people as equal citizens?

DOES BRAZIL HAVE BAD GOVERNMENT? DOES IT HAVE BAD DEMOCRATIC POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS? Is having government not work efficiently and in ways that are highly responsive all that bad? Much of what we read doesn’t talk about tradeoffs What challenges make multi-party, bicameral, presidential systems so hard to govern? – What’s wrong with presidentialism (vs. parlimentarism)? – Is two houses better than one? – How many “veto” points is ideal? How much strength for the judiciary What kind of voters are necessary to make democracy work well? What kind of leaders and politicians does OLPR lead to? (The voter’s dilemma) How well have democratic governments in Brazil (and elsewhere) addressed poverty and severe inequality? Is this kind of “responsiveness” ideal or is it is clientelism/populism? – A model for the world of “conditional cash transfers?” Bolsa familia: 46 million people now served How has rule under Lula’s government been different? Has a moderate, democracy-focused (vs. class warfare inclined) left helped democracy?

DOES BRAZIL HAVE BAD GOVERNMENT? DOES IT HAVE BAD POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS? Cont. Why does democracy seem to be doing OK in Brazil over the long run despite arguably bad institutions? – Elites from across the political spectrum want the system to work – Tri-level federalism with block grant funding and participatory mechanisms – Sovereignty: The military won’t govern and the debt is well under control. – Economic growth makes people patient. Even though they say they don’t like the way democracy always work, they see it as the best alternative – A dense civil society in a large population with good protections of civil rights in most places – An external focus and strong nationalism: Brazil’s desire to be a major power has changed something