CEPR has been examining economic and political changes in Brazil since the early 2000s, when the country began to challenge policies advocated by Washington-based institutions and began to pursue a different set of economic and foreign policies.
El CEPR ha estado examinando los cambios económicos y políticos en Brasil desde principios de la década del 2000, cuando el país comenzó a desafiar las políticas defendidas por las instituciones con sede en Washington y empezó a aplicar una política económica y exterior distinta.
CEPR has been examining economic and political changes in Brazil since the early 2000s, when the country began to challenge policies advocated by Washington-based institutions and began to pursue a different set of economic and foreign policies.
El CEPR ha estado examinando los cambios económicos y políticos en Brasil desde principios de la década del 2000, cuando el país comenzó a desafiar las políticas defendidas por las instituciones con sede en Washington y empezó a aplicar una política económica y exterior distinta.
· Op-Ed/Commentary
ArgentinaBoliviaBrazilEconomic GrowthLatin America and the CaribbeanWorld Escaping Economic Orthodoxy in Latin AmericaDan Beeton / March 04, 2015
· Op-Ed/Commentary
BrazilHondurasLatin America and the CaribbeanWorld President Obama’s New Policy on Cuba Could Be a Good StartMark Weisbrot / December 28, 2014
· Op-Ed/Commentary
BrazilLatin America and the CaribbeanWorld The Police and the Massacre of Afro-Brazilian YouthCEPR / December 12, 2014
· Op-Ed/Commentary
BrazilLatin America and the CaribbeanWorld Questões Econômicas Favorecem DilmaCEPR / October 30, 2014
· Op-Ed/Commentary
BrazilLatin America and the CaribbeanWorld Economic Issues Could be Decisive in Brazilian Presidential ElectionMark Weisbrot / October 24, 2014
· Op-Ed/Commentary
BrazilLatin America and the CaribbeanWorld “Dilma’s loss would be a loss for the world’s working class”: An Interview with Luis Gonzaga “Gegê” da SilvaCEPR / October 24, 2014
· Op-Ed/Commentary
BrazilLatin America and the CaribbeanWorld How Many Extra Votes Does Brazilian Opposition Candidate Aécio Neves Get from Media Bias?Dan Beeton / October 23, 2014
· Op-Ed/Commentary
BrazilLatin America and the CaribbeanWorld Why Dilma Rousseff Could Win Brazil’s Presidential ElectionMark Weisbrot / October 02, 2014
· Op-Ed/Commentary
BrazilEconomic GrowthLatin America and the CaribbeanWorld Marina and Dilma: Different Visions for the Brazilian EconomyCEPR / October 02, 2014
· report
BrazilLatin America and the CaribbeanWorld The Brazilian Economy in Transition: Macroeconomic Policy, Labor and InequalityMark WeisbrotJake Johnston / September 29, 2014