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Monday, 13 June 2011 13:55
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What Brazilians say about the Forestry Law
Ever since the National Congress started reviewing the laws governing forestry and deforestation a year or so ago, Brazil's chattering classes have been in a huff.  Green groups charge the politicians with sacrificing the world's largest rainforest on the altar of agribusiness, while farmers and ranchers protest that environmentalists would sooner cripple the economy and criminalize honest work than see a single tree felled. But what do the Brazilians think?
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Tuesday, 02 November 2010 15:47
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THE ELECTRONIC VOTING MACHINES were not even cold from Sunday's balloting when Brazilian president-elect Dilma Rousseff unveiled her agenda. The bold to-do list included eradicating absolute poverty, trimming (not slashing) the budget, and safeguarding freedom of the press. She was equally bold about what she wouldn't do: tackle social security reform. And that gives the bean counters gray hair.
Time bomb? Slowmo tsunami? Pick your doomsday metaphor. Economists and policy types eschew sensationalist language, but you don't need an advanced degree in math to see this is an unsustainable arrangement.
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Monday, 01 November 2010 15:02
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In Brazil, Ex is Forever

With the ballots counted and outgoing president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva's anointed successor Dilma Rousseff safely elected, a major question looms over Brazil: What now Lula?
Brazil being Brazil, a land where the next campaign begins the nanosecond the last one ends, speculation is already rife.
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Wednesday, 27 October 2010 10:27
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Much has been said about Brazil's rise from underachieving developing world economy to emerging market powerhouse. It's easy to forget now how the country achieved stability, growth and now glory. National Public Radio recently posted a podcast, How Four Drinking Buddies Saved Brazil, on the country's new found prosperity and the unlikely path Brazil took to get there.
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