Using the theory of the Second Washington
Consensus, based on the opening of the
financial accounts and the growth cum
foreign savings strategy, this paper explains
why even after the Real Plan of 1994,
the Brazilian economy remained quasi-stagnant
with soaring debts and two balance of
payments crises. The paper discusses the
conditions under which foreign savings
are or are not favorable to growth, and
argues that if a country is already indebted
externally, and does not count with a
cluster of profitable investment projects,
capital inflows will just overvalue the
exchange rate, increase artificially real
wages, and cause increased consumption.
April 10, 2006.
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