DOING BUSINESS IN BRAZIL. CESAR CUNHA CAMPOS DIRECTOR, FGV PROJETOS

Similar documents
BRICs: actual growth and cooperation perspectives. International Advisory Council 3 rd Metting August 15, Luciano Coutinho President

Development and investment prospects for Brazil. Brazilian American Chamber of Commerce Washington, October 10 th 2014

BRAZIL MEANS BUSINESS. Presentation by: Igly Serafim Senior Commercial Specialist São Paulo, Brazil

OVERVIEW. Doing Business in Brazil Practical Business and Legal Considerations. Fabiano Gallo September, 2016

Interesting times for Brazil:

BRAZIL MACROECONOMIC OUTLOOK January, 2018 Economic Research Department

Investing in Brazil Trade and Promotion Department. Consulate General of Brazil in Chicago

AGENDA. The Role of ABVCAP The Brazilian Private Equity Ecosystem Brazil from a Global Fundraising and Investing Perspective

A-level ECONOMICS 7136/3

Brazil s economic growth and use of the BNDES financing for strategic infrastructure projects. Tokyo June 21, Luciano Coutinho President

BRAZIL MACROECONOMIC OUTLOOK November, 2017 Economic Research Department

Exchange rate in Brazil: a macroeconomic assessment on the first ten years of free floating policy during the Plano Real

Latin American Economic Outlook 2008

$100bn forecast in new investment following privatization of infrastructure assets for highways, railways, ports and airports

Global Economy is Expected to Grow by 3.4 % in 2016 GDP growth in 2016, %

Climate Change Reporting

BUSINESS MEETING BRAZIL - CHINA. Brazilian Association of Infrastructure and Basic Industries. São Paulo May 13, 2011

Otaviano Canuto Vice President & Head of Network Poverty Reduction and Economic Management The World Bank

Brazilian Economic Outlook Guido Mantega Minister of Finance

UK ECONOMY SITUATION & PROSPECTS

FMConsulting CEO Peter Heidinger gives a presentation on "Market Entry in Turkey" in Investing in Romania, Poland, Turkey and China Conference, Italy.

REPUBLIC OF TURKEY PRIME MINISTRY

Latin American Economic Outlook 2008

$3.56 trillion. $2.216 trillion

Nicaragua. 1. General trends. 2. Economic policy. The economy grew by 4.5% in 2010, after shrinking by 1.5% in 2009, indicating that Nicaragua

The Brazilian Regime of Export Processing Zones - EPZ

Latin American Economic Outlook 2008

Contents. HSBC Group in the world. HSBC in Brazil. New Economic Scenario / Macroeconomic Forecasts

CANADA SAUDI ARABIA SAUDI ARABIA S PROFILE NOTES. Florian Richard

Trade trends and trade policy developments. Ian Ascough Head of Bilateral Trade Negotiations BIS/DfID Trade Policy Unit

P R O J E T A THE ECONOMIST

Ministry of Finance. Brazilian Economic OUTLOOK

DOING BUSINESS IN INDIA

CANADA SPAIN SPAIN S PROFILE NOTES. Florian Richard

FOREIGN TRADE INDICATOR - ICOMEX

Stylized Facts of Commodity Production and Trade in LAC

LUXEMBOURG: YOUR RELIABLE PARTNER DECEMBER 17, 2014

Yukon s Merchandise Trade with the World

Economic Outlook January, 2012

Panel on Brazilian Economy

BRAZILIAN ROLE IN THE GLOBAL VALUE CHAINS

G20 COMPACT MOROCCO AFRICA WITH. Investment Opportunities G20 Compact with Africa

G20 COMPACT MOROCCO AFRICA WITH. Investment Opportunities G20 Compact with Africa

Accessing the Indian Market

The Political Economy of Brazilian Local Government Taxation: changing the rules without changing the law for efficiency

CANADA S MERCHANDISE TRADE WITH THE WORLD

Brazil s Moment in the Sun

VIETNAM BRIEF ABOUT THE COUNTRY AND OPPORTUNITIES IN DOING BUSINESS

Azerbaijan Country Presentation

Japan's Balance of Payments for August 2009 International Department Bank of Japan

Monthly Rolling Economic Electronic Presentation August 2017

Brazilian Health Devices in Holland. June 2016

India Growth Story. Steel Market Asia Conference Ashok Bhardwaj. 19 th -20 th November Intercontinental Grand Stanford - Hong Kong

Monetary Policy: A Key Driver for Long Term Macroeconomic Stability

THE OECD SELECTION. Construction, sales, trade and transport. Economic activity in foreign countries Business and consumer

Two tales of development

THE INDUSTRIAL EQUILIBRIUM EXCHANGE RATE

EUROPEAN UNION SOUTH KOREA TRADE AND INVESTMENT 5 TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE FTA. Delegation of the European Union to the Republic of Korea

CANADA SAUDI ARABIA COUNTRY PROFILE NOTES. Michaël Lambert-Racine

Item

HONDURAS. 1. General trends

Minister of Finance. Brazilian economic. challenges ahead. Guido Mantega

BATUMI BUSINESS TOUR 27 SEPTEMBER - 01 OCTOBER 2016 BUSINESS TOUR

CANADA UNITED KINGDOM

Country Profile: Brazil. Commercial Trust Limited Country Profile Brazil v12.01

REPUBLIC OF TURKEY PRIME MINISTRY

CANADA EUROPEAN UNION

Monthly Market Review Macroeconomy Equity Fixed Income

Internationalization of Asian MNCs in

Review of the Economy. E.1 Global trends. January 2014

Brazil s economic growth

Investor Presentation

Report on Finnish Technology Industry Exports

CANADA GERMANY GERMANY S PROFILE NOTES. Dylan Gowans

China, People s Republic of

Brazil: A New Horizon?

Doing Business: Regional Competitiveness In Latin America

MACROECONOMIC OUTLOOK

Brazil A COUNTRY OF CONTRASTS. May 19th, Sunrise in Amazon / Amazônia

No. 78 Third Quarter 1393

México and NAFTA. CSG WEST Annual Meeting (AFBF) Vail, Colorado July 31th 2015

Investor Presentation

WELCOME LETTER. Kirill Dmitriev Co-CEO. Hu Bing Co-CEO

Turkey: Recent Developments and Future Prospects. ISBANK Economic Research Division October 2018

Construction and Mining Technique

LUXEMBOURG: YOUR RELIABLE PARTNER APRIL 4, 2014

BRAZIL. 1. General trends


From Recession to Struggling

CANADA UKRAINE UKRAINE S PROFILE NOTES. Florian Richard

CURRENT ACCOUNT DEFICIT

International Trade: Theory and Evidence

Y qué está pasando en Brasil?

Brazil. Poverty profile. Country profile. Country profile. November

Coping with Global market commodity Price Fluctuations: Impact on Fiscal and Debt Management in case of Mongolia

Banco do Brasil. 2Q10 Conference Call

GUATEMALA. 1. General trends

International Monetary Fund Washington, D.C.

Opportunities for Engagement

International Taxation of Cross- Border Trade and Investments in BRICS: the Brazilian Experience. Prof. Dr. Luís Eduardo Schoueri

Transcription:

DOING BUSINESS IN BRAZIL CESAR CUNHA CAMPOS DIRECTOR, FGV PROJETOS diretoria.fgvprojetos@fgv.br Greece, September 2014 1

ABOUT FGV AND FGV PROJETOS Fundação Getulio Vargas (FGV) was founded in 1944 FGV is the leading Think Tank in Latin America and Top 25 in the world Mission: boost the socioeconomic development of Brazil and increase its important role in the international scene FGV s technical advisory unit to public, private and third-sector institutions in Brazil and abroad Develops projects in different areas: economics, administration, and public policy 30 years experience Over 1300 projects developed 2

AGENDA 1. INVESTMENT CLIMATE BRAZIL OVERVIEW GLOBAL COMPETITIVENESS TAXATION TRADE PROFILE BRAZIL 2. TRADE: BRAZIL, EUROPEAN UNION AND GREECE BRAZIL - EUROPEAN UNION BRAZIL - GREECE 3. CONCLUSION WHY DOING BUSINESS IN BRAZIL GOVERNMENT SUPPORT PARTNERS 3

1. INVESTMENT CLIMATE 4

BRAZIL OVERVIEW GEOGRAPHY AND POPULATION 34 15 Total Population 196 M (85% Urban, 15% Rural) Largest City: São Paulo (20 M) 2nd Largest City: Rio de Janeiro (12 M) Capital: Brasília (3.7 M) Official Language: Portuguese 78 60 Area: 8.516 (million sq km) Natural Resources: Minerals, Petroleum, Hydropower Currency: Real 95 5 Source: PNAD - National Survey by Household Samples and IBGE

BRAZIL OVERVIEW POLITICAL SYSTEM Democratic regime, federal republic; representatives elected by direct voting Composed of 3 independent branches: Executive, Legislative and Judicial The President heads the executive branch composed of 40 Ministers Legislative power is exerted by a National Congress consisting of Senate (81 senators) House of Representatives (513 representatives) Voting is compulsory from of 18 70 Main Ruling Parties: PT, PMDB, PSD, PSDB, PSB 6

BRAZIL OVERVIEW ELECTIONS 2014: MAIN CANDIDATES Candidates DILMA ROUSSEFF AÉCIO NEVES MARINA SILVA Party Strategic Outlook Economic Development with environmental sustainability Economic Development with environmental sustainability Focus on Sustainability Private investment 7 7 1st round, October 5th: All presidential candidates 2nd round, October 26th: If none of the candidates obtains majority (50%+1), then the top two candidates will run again in this round

BRAZIL OVERVIEW ELECTIONS 2014 VOTING INTENTION (2014, SEP) - IBOPE INSTITUTE 1 st ROUND 2 nd ROUND Marina Silva 46 Marina Silva (PSB) 33 39 14 15 7 47 34 5 19 SOURCE: IBOPE INSTITUTE (SURVEY: 2014 /SEPTEMBER,3 ); NA: NO ANSWER; BL/NL: BLANK/NULL 8

BRAZIL OVERVIEW ELECTIONS 2014 VOTING INTENTION (2014, SEP) - DATAFOLHA INSTITUTE 1 st ROUND 2 nd ROUND 35 41 Marina Silva (PSB) 34 Marina Silva 48 11 14 6 49 38 7 14 SOURCE: DATAFOLHA INSTITUTE (SURVEY: 2014 / SEP) NA: NO ANSWER; BL/NL: BLANK/NULL 9

BRAZIL OVERVIEW MACROECONOMIC International Reserves (US$ bi) Inflation - IPCA (% anual) 6.5% Source: BNDES Macroeconomic tripod Primary Surplus Floating Exchange Rate Inflation Targeting 10

BRAZIL OVERVIEW MACROECONOMIC Public Debt / GDP Decreasing 48% 34% Investment Rate 18% 16% 15% 17% Source: BNDES Stable 11

BRAZIL OVERVIEW SOCIAL Brazilian Social Pyramid A NEW MIDDLE CLASS: 60% OF THE POPULATION Source: BNDES A Gini of zero = perfect equality The closest to zero, the better inequality in the distribution of household per capita income has improved in Brazil 0.56 Gini Coefficient Gini worldwide (OECD Data, 2011) USA 0,4 UK 0,3 Greece 0,3 Total OECD 0,3 0.50 12 Source: IPEA

BRAZIL OVERVIEW ECONOMY 7th biggest economy in the World by GDP: US$ 2.2 Trillion (share of world total 2.83%) 55th biggest economy in GDP per capita: US$ 12 Thousand GDP Growth (2014 estimate): Unemployment rate: 5% 1.6% Full employment OCDE Percentage of GDP by sector *Commerce Finance Telecommunications * 13 Source: World Economic Forum 2013, World Bank, IMF, Brazilian Central Bank

BRAZIL OVERVIEW ESTIMATED INVESTMENTS Estimated Investment (2014-2017) 1.8 US$ Trillion Investments from BNDES by Sector Source: BNDES Unit: US$ billion current Source: BNDES 14

BRAZIL OVERVIEW ESTIMATED INVESTMENTS During the period from 2014 to 2017, infrastructure investments amounting to US$ 261.4 billion are expected, with the following distribution amongst sectors: Infrastructure Investment Forecasted for 2014-2017 The main energy-sector projects are hydroelectric plants, followed by nuclear and wind power In telecommunications, third-generation mobile service and broadband wireless internet are at the forefront Logistics investment is led by the railway segment followed by roadway and port projects Source: National Bank for Economic and Social Development (BNDES) 15

BRAZIL OVERVIEW ESTIMATED INVESTMENTS During the period from 2014 to 2017, investments amounting to US$ 524.5 billion are expected in the following sectors: oil & gas and industrial sector Estimated Investment 2014-2017 *Sugarcane industry, Textile and Clothing The Oil and Gas segment concentrates 42% of the estimated investment in infrastructure * Mining will be responsible for 5% Pulp and Paper segment concentrates 2% of the total Source: Ministério da Fazenda. 16

BRAZIL OVERVIEW ESTIMATED INVESTMENTS Pre-Salt t The discovery of new deepwater oilfields (pre-salt) has opened a new frontier for the oil and gas industries t Development of the pre-salt will bring Brazil to a new position in the oil market by increasing proven reserves and doubling the production capacity by 2020 t Pre-salt development also represents overcoming challenges related to technology, infrastructure and logistics, regulation, taxes and human capital SÃO PAULO RIO DE JANEIRO 300 KM PRE-SALT LAYER TOTAL INVESTMENT RELATED TO THE OIL AND GAS SECTOR IS ESTIMATED AT US$ 400 BILLION OVER THE DECADE. 17 ATLANTIC OCEAN

GLOBAL COMPETITIVENESS RANKING 2014-2015 (144 COUNTRIES) Brazil in the world Brazil and the BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa) 57th position Worldwide 18 Source: World Economic Forum, Global Competitiveness Report 2014-2015; *BRICS: Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa

TAXATION MAIN TAXES AND CONTRIBUTIONS Imports Products/Services II (Customs Duties) 0% - 35% IPI (Excise Tax) 0% - 330% ICMS (Value-added Tax on Sales and Services) 4%, 7%, 12% PIS/Cofins (Social Contribution on Gross Revenue) 0.65% or 1.65% ISS Service Tax 2% & 5% The rates depend on the tax classification of the product, the existence of trade agreements and, in the case of ICMS, the state where the imports will occur Companies with operations based in Brazil Same as above with the exception of II Additionally: - IRPJ (Corporate Income Tax) 15% and CSLL (Social Contribution) 9% & 15% - Taxes on Payroll (Social security 20%, occupational environmental risks 1% & 3% and social programs) 3.1%; - Taxes on property (real state tax and property transfer) 0.03% - 20% 19 ISS Service Tax 2% & 5%

TRADE PROFILE EXPORTS: BRAZIL 2O13 US$ 242 Bi Total Exports 20 Brazilian Ministry of Development, Industry and Foreign Trade (SECEX/MDIC) Note: % will not add to 100% because we are missing other countries; All numbers FOB: Free On Board

TRADE PROFILE IMPORTS: BRAZIL 2O13 US$ 240 Bi Total Imports 21 Brazilian Ministry of Development, Industry and Foreign Trade (SECEX/MDIC) Note: % will not add to 100% because we are missing other countries; All numbers FOB: Free On Board

TOP 10 BRAZILIAN EXPORT & IMPORT COMPANIES Exports Imports TOP 10 Brazilian Export Companies 2013 Sector US$ Bi TOP 10 Brazilian Import Companies 2013 Sector US$ Bi Metals & Mining 27 Oil & Gas 14 Oil & Gas 40 IT Solutions 4 Agribusiness, Food & Bioenergy 7 Petrochemicals 3 Food 5 Automotive 3 Beef, Lamb and Poultry processing 5 ICT 3 Agricultural processors 4 Aircraft 4 Food and Agriculture 4 Aircraft 3 Automotive 3 Automotive 2 Beef, Lamb and Poultry processing Oil & Gas (Platforms builder) 4 4 IT Solutions 2 Agribusiness 2 22 Source: Brazilian Ministry of Development, Industry and Foreign Trade (SECEX/MDIC). All numbers FOB: Free On Board

2. TRADE: BRAZIL, EUROPEAN UNION AND GREECE 23

TRADE PROFILE BRAZIL- EUROPEAN UNION (2000-2013) Commercial Trade: Brazil European Union US$ 51 Bi IMPORTS US$ 48 Bi EXPORTS Year COMERCIAL TRADE BALANCE 24 Source: Brazilian Ministry of Development, Industry and Foreign Trade (SECEX/MDIC). All numbers FOB: Free On Board

TRADE PROFILE BRAZIL-GREECE (2000-2013) Commercial Trade: Brazil Greece 1.1% OF BRAZILIAN SERVICES IMPORTS ORIGINATED FROM GREECE Mi US$ 151 Mi EXPORTS 0.06% of Brazil total exports US$ 115 Mi IMPORTS 0.05% of Brazil total imports Year COMERCIAL TRADE BALANCE 25 Source: Brazilian Ministry of Development, Industry and Foreign Trade (SECEX/MDIC). All numbers FOB: Free On Board

TRADE PROFILE MAIN IMPORTS/EXPORTS PRODUCTS BRAZIL-GREECE MAIN IMPORT GOODS FROM GREECE 2013 US$ Mi %TOTAL IMPORTS BRAZIL-GREECE 1 Naphtha for Petrochemical 80 70% 2 Marble and derivatives 6 5% 3 Razors Blades 3 3% 4 Virgin Olive Oil 2 2% 5 Aluminum plates sheets and strips 2 2% MAIN EXPORT PRODUCTS TO GREECE 2013 US$ Mi %TOTAL EXPORTS BRAZIL-GREECE 1 Coffee beans 59 40% 2 Sugar from Sugar Cane 22 15% 3 Tobacco 20 13% 4 Aluminium ore 10 7% 5 Other Sugars 6 4% 26 Source: Brazilian Ministry of Development, Industry and Foreign Trade (SECEX/MDIC). All numbers FOB: Free On Board

TRADE OPPORTUNITIES BRAZIL-GREECE IMPORT GOODS BRAZIL 2013 (TOP 5) US$ Bi CRUDE OIL 16 PASSENGER CARS 9 FUEL-OIL 8 MOTOR VEHICLES PARTS 8 MEDICINES 7 WE IMPORT MEDICINES FROM GERMANY, USA, SWITZERLAND; WHY NOT FROM GREECE AS WELL? EXPORTS GOODS GREECE 2013 (TOP 5) US$ Mi PETROLEUM OILS, OTHER THAN CRUDE 14 MEDICINES 1,3 FISH, FRESH OR CHILLED; OLIVE OIL AND ITS FRACTIONS ALUMINIUM PLATES, SHEETS AND STRIP 0,7 1,2 EXPORT GOODS BRAZIL 2013 (TOP 5) US$ Bi IRON ORES & DERIVATES 33 SOY 23 CRUDE OIL 13 SUGAR CANE 9 DRILLING & EXPLORATION PLATFORMS 8 WE EXPORT CRUDE OIL TO CHINA, USA, INDIA; WHY NOT TO GREECE AS WELL? IMPORTS GOODS GREECE 2013 (TOP 5) PETROLEUM OILS AND OILS OBTAINED FROM BITUMINOUS MINERALS, CRUDE OIL US$ Mi PETROLEUM OILS, OTHER THAN CRUDE 4,4 MEDICINES 3 PETROLEUM GASES AND OTHER GASEOUS HYDROCARBONS CRUISE SHIPS, EXCURSION BOATS, FER- RY-BOATS, CARGO SHIPS, BARGES 16 2 1,6 27 Source: Brazilian Ministry of Development, Industry and Foreign Trade (SECEX/MDIC). All numbers FOB: Free On Board

28 3. CONCLUSION

WHY DOING BUSINESS IN BRAZIL? 1. Stable democracy 2. Leading regional economy & global player 3. Strong financial system and largest stock market in Latin America 4. Gateway to Latin America: Mercosul & ALADI member 5. Safe investment environment: 5th in global FDI inflows (2013: US$ billion 64; 2.5 % of GDP) 6. Huge domestic market: large and fast growing consumer market 7. Infrastructure investments Source: Brazilian Investment Information Network (RENAI). 29

GOVERNMENT SUPPORT PARTNERS In Brazil Local Partners 30

INVITATION RIO OLYMPIC GAMES 2016 TOTAL INVESTMENT OF US$ 29 BILLIONS 31

THANK YOU CESAR CUNHA CAMPOS Director, FGV Projetos www.fgv.br/fgvprojetos 32