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    Britain's Labour pitches itself against tax cuts for the wealthy

    LIVERPOOL, England (Reuters) -Keir Starmer, leader of Britain’s Labour Party, on Sunday pledged to reverse the abolition of the top rate of income tax, saying tax cuts for the wealthy wouldn’t create economic growth as he made a pitch for power at his party’s annual conference.Starmer, who has led Britain’s main opposition party for the past two years, said he would reintroduce the top rate of income tax to 45% after the government abolished the rate in a mini-budget.Labour suffered a crushing defeat in the last general election in 2019 and Starmer is under pressure to assert himself as the prime minister-in-waiting with clear policies to challenge the ruling Conservatives.The selection of Liz Truss as new Conservative leader on a tax-cutting agenda earlier this month has immediately widened the ideological gulf between Britain’s main parties.”I see a very big political divide,” Starmer told the BBC.”I do not believe in this theory that it’s only those at the very top, the very wealthy, that create and drive our economy. It’s the working people across the country.”Finance minister Kwasi Kwarteng last week unleashed historic tax cuts, ditched the cap on bankers’ bonuses and announced huge increases in borrowing in a fiscal statement which sent markets into a tailspin. Starmer said a move by Kwarteng to cut the top rate of tax was “hugely divisive” and unfair because it handed someone earning 1 million pounds ($1.09 million) a 55,000 pound tax cut and would not trickle down to the rest.”I would reverse the decision they made,” Labour leader Starmer said. “It is hugely risky, it is hugely divisive, and I would reverse it.” However, Starmer said a Labour government would not reverse the government’s decision to cut the basic rate of income tax to 19% from 20%, saying that tax cut would benefit working people.MORE TAX CUTSKwarteng said that he was focused on boosting longer-term growth, not on short-term market moves, when challenged over the sharp fall in sterling and bond prices. He said there will be more tax cuts in the future. “You don’t deal with people’s rising cost of living by taking more of their money in tax,” Kwarteng told the BBC.With the next election expected in 2024, Starmer is bidding to move his party towards the centre and preparing for a more ideologically-focused debate with Truss after his clashes with her predecessor Boris Johnson often focused on character.Starmer has been criticised by some in his party for not spelling out clear policies to challenge the Conservatives, who have been dealing with crises ranging from sleaze to the highest inflation in four decades.Labour is about 10 percentage points ahead of the ruling Conservatives in the opinion polls but with the next election due in two years, some lawmakers said the party should be further ahead.Andy Burnham, the mayor of Greater Manchester, earlier said Labour should oppose all the tax moves outlined by the new government.Starmer led Labour party members in tributes to the Queen and a rendition of the national anthem – the first time the song had been sung at the party’s conference in recent memory.Despite concern that the singing would be likely to attract protests, the speech and anthem passed without any dissent. Starmer said Labour was heading in the right direction, and that the hope that the party would win the next election had turned into a belief.”I’m very pleased with the progress that we’re making,” he said. “To now be in a position where there’s a belief that Labour will win the next general election is real progress for our party.”($1 = 0.9211 pounds) More

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    Lebanon's banks to reopen on Monday

    The association said in a statement on Sunday that the decision to reopen “was taken after consideration of the current difficult security conditions and the need to maintain the safety of customers and employees alike, in the absence of adequate protection by the state”.It added each bank would determine its own channels for banking operations with commercial and educational institutions, and the health care sector amongst others.A top Lebanese banker on Friday criticised politicians for failing to enact a capital control law, saying this was the way to avoid bank raids by savers demanding funds from frozen accounts and to stop banks’ “discretionary practices”.The holdups reflect savers’ desperation three years after Lebanon’s financial system collapsed due to decades of state corruption and waste, and unsustainable financial policies.The government has agreed neither a financial recovery plan nor enacted reforms deemed vital to get Lebanon out of the crisis. While the government says it is committed to reforms, the International Monetary Fund says progress remains very slow. More

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    IMF bailouts hit record high as global economic outlook worsens

    The IMF’s lending to economically troubled countries has hit a record high as the world’s lender of last resort battles simultaneous crises that have pushed at least five countries into default, with more expected to follow.The pandemic, Russia’s attack on Ukraine and a sharp rise in global interest rates have forced dozens of countries to seek IMF assistance. A Financial Times analysis of IMF data shows that at the end of August the volume of loans disbursed by the fund amounted to $140bn in 44 separate programmes. The figure, which is expected to grow further in the coming months as borrowing costs soar, is already higher than the amount of credit outstanding at the end of 2020 and 2021, when levels reached record annual highs.Experts predict that further large rate rises by major market central banks will push up borrowing costs around the world and risk triggering a severe recession. Some analysts say the IMF’s lending capacity could soon be stretched to its limits, as poor countries which are locked out of international debt market are forced to turn to the fund for support. The IMF’s total commitments, including loans agreed but not yet disbursed, already stand at more than $268bn.Kevin Gallagher of Boston University’s Global Development Policy Center warned that “only so many countries” could receive IMF support without “snapping the IMF balance sheet”.Gallagher is co-author of a report this week warning that 55 of the world’s poorest countries face debt repayments of $436bn between 2022 and 2028, with about $61bn falling due this year and in 2023, and almost $70bn in 2024.The fund downplayed the concerns. Its total commitments are “still a fraction of the [almost] $1tn that could be available”, said Bikas Joshi, division chief in the IMF’s strategy, policy and review department. “The amount of lending is rising commensurate with the increased risks faced by the countries turning to us for support.”The IMF is in negotiations with several countries about support packages which would increase its total commitments further. Zambia and Sri Lanka — which both defaulted in the pandemic along with Lebanon, Russia and Suriname — are negotiating IMF bailouts as part of efforts to restructure their debts. Ghana, Egypt and Tunisia are in early talks for similar support.The IMF approved a $1.1bn bailout for Pakistan at the end of August; Argentina is set to receive $3.9bn in the next few weeks as part of its $41bn programme.Under IMF rules, member countries can usually only get support equal to up to 145 per cent of their IMF quota, or shareholding, which is roughly in line with each country’s share of the global economy.This would leave $370bn available for low and middle income countries out of the IMF’s roughly $940bn total lending capacity.But that limit is often exceeded. Argentina’s support package — approved in March as a restructuring of debts from its record $50bn IMF bailout of 2018 — is equal to more than 10 times its quota. Analysts at Goldman Sachs expect Egypt soon to get a $15bn package, equal to nearly six times its quota.The IMF is making limited additions to its lending capacity. It traditionally lends from two main facilities, the so-called general resources account and the poverty relief and growth trust, which lends at lower interest rates to low-income countries. It recently set up a resilience and sustainability trust, designed to help countries deal with systemic challenges such as climate change, which Joshi said had received funding commitments worth $40bn, against a target of $45bn. A new food shock window, to help countries hit by soaring food costs, is likely to be approved by the IMF’s board before its annual meetings next month. More

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    IMF team heads to Ghana on Monday to discuss loan programme request

    Ghana turned to the IMF for help in July as its balance-of-payments deteriorated and hundreds took to the streets to protest against economic hardship. An IMF staff team briefly visited the country two weeks later.Reuters’ reported last week that an IMF team would visit Ghana this week. The IMF, in a statement on Sunday, said the team would arrive on Monday and stay until Oct. 7.The government of Ghana, a major gold and cocoa producer, has been struggling to tame galloping inflation, reduce public debt and shore up the local currency. Its balance-of-payments deficit swelled to nearly $2.5 billion by the end of June from around $935 million in March. A source with knowledge of the matter told Reuters last month that an eventual agreement between Ghana and the IMF will likely consist of $3 billion in financing over a three-year period, and contain elements of both Extended Credit Facility (ECF) and Extended Fund Facility (EFF) programmes. More

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    UK's Kwarteng says he is focused on growth, not market moves

    Kwarteng scrapped the country’s top rate of income tax and cancelled a planned rise in corporate taxes – all on top of a hugely expensive plan to subsidise energy bills for households and businesses.Sterling fell by more than 3% to its lowest since 1985 against the U.S. dollar on Friday, and weakened against the euro and Japanese yen as well, while government bonds recorded their sharpest daily sell-off in decades.On Sunday Kwarteng defended the measures as supporting the economy in response to the once-in-a-generation shocks of the COVID-19 pandemic and the rise in energy prices following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.”As chancellor of the exchequer, I don’t comment on market movements. What I am focused on is growing the economy and making sure that Britain is an attractive place to invest,” he told the BBC, defending the fiscal expansion despite the risks it fuels inflation further.”There’s no way that a government… shouldn’t respond in a fiscally expansive way (to) support the economy, support our people through these two unprecedented shocks.”Kwarteng said it was the responsibility of the Bank of England, and its governor Andrew Bailey, to deal with inflation.The BoE raised interest rates by half a percentage point to 2.25% on Thursday, the day before Kwarteng announced his package.”They’re tasked to deal with inflation… they don’t work in isolation, and that’s why I said that I will see the governor twice a week. And we share ideas, but of course, he’s completely independent,” Kwarteng said.Asked if he was worried about the level of inflation, Kwarteng said “I’m confident that the Bank is dealing with that, but also what perplexed me was the fact that you don’t deal with people’s rising cost of living by taking more of their money in tax.” More

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    Has eurozone inflation shot even higher?

    Has eurozone inflation shot even higher?Can inflation maintain its record-setting pace in the euro area even though the economy already seems to be contracting and economists are widely predicting a recession this winter?The latest test will come on Friday, when the European Commission’s statistics arm will release eurozone inflation data for September. Economists polled by Reuters expect consumer price growth to have hit 9.6 per cent on an annual base, up from the all-time high of 9.1 per cent set only in August.Prices of oil, steel, wood and many other commodities have fallen for several months. But this is being offset by persistently high energy costs, which are hitting both manufacturing and services companies and prompting them to raise prices.Another factor likely to lift inflation is the expiry this month of Germany’s temporary measures to cushion the impact of high prices, such as a fuel duty cut and a subsidised €9 monthly train ticket. Deutsche Bank economists forecast last week that eurozone inflation would peak at the end of the year around 9.5 per cent. Price pressures also keep rising as European wholesale natural gas prices remain about two and a half times higher than a year ago, even after a recent dip. The European Central Bank, which has already raised interest rates by 1.25 percentage points over the summer, will be watching the latest data carefully as it considers how high to lift borrowing costs to bring inflation back to its 2 per cent target.Isabel Schnabel, an ECB executive board member, underlined its concern last week, saying: “What we are seeing is that the inflationary pressures have become much more broad-based. They have somehow crept into all parts of the economy.” Martin ArnoldHow have higher interest rates affected the UK mortgage market?Rising interest rates are expected to continue to take the wind out of the UK housing market’s sails, as they make mortgages more expensive. Those increasing costs come just as the UK average house price has reached an all-time high, following the pandemic-induced housing boom and against a backdrop of falling real (inflation-adjusted) income.The Bank of England releases its latest credit and mortgage data for August on Thursday. Economists polled by Reuters forecast that UK mortgage approvals dropped to 62,000 last month from 63,770 in the month before and down from their peak of more than 100,000 in November 2020.Last week, the BoE announced another 0.5 percentage point increase in its key policy rate to 2.25 per cent, the highest since 2008, marking its seventh consecutive rate rise.Mortgage rates have risen as a result.“We expect that the sharp move higher in mortgage rates fuelled by the Bank of England tightening monetary policy will continue to weigh on mortgage approvals,” said Ellie Henderson, economist at Investec. In contrast, UK house price growth has remained solid, supported by a limited stock of properties. The downward trend in mortgage approvals will probably be affected by the stamp duty cut announced by the government on Friday, with no stamp duty to be paid on the first £250,000 of a property’s value, up from £150,000. The threshold is increased to £425,000 for first-time buyers.Rightmove housing expert Tim Bannister said that while activity has been softening Friday’s announcement could “lead to a big jump in prospective buyers competing for the constrained number of properties for sale”, resulting in higher house price growth. Valentina RomeiDid US consumer spending rise in August?US consumer spending is expected to have increased in August, with the commerce department’s personal consumption expenditures index forecast to post a monthly increase of 0.2 per cent, according to a Reuters poll. That follows a 0.1 per cent bump, which missed economist expectations for a 0.4 per cent increase. July’s cool spending reading was driven by a reduction in consumption of goods and a modest increase in spending on services.The shift towards spending on services could reverse a trend throughout much of the pandemic that fuelled rises in price for goods. That would be a welcome development for the US Federal Reserve as it attempts to tame inflation that has been hovering around its highest level in four decades.“Consumer spending is in the midst of an ongoing but still incomplete rotation back toward pre-pandemic patterns,” Fed vice-chair Lael Brainard said in a speech this month. “Even so, the level of goods spending remains 5 per cent above the level implied by its pre-pandemic trend, while services spending remains 4 per cent below its trend.”LPL Financial chief economist Jeffrey Roach said the Fed, through its primary monetary policy tool of interest rates, is targeting aggregate demand. “The Fed has zero power over any supply components of inflation,” he said, and although supply chain constraints had begun to ease, it would take time to filter through to retail consumer prices.Recent data showed that US retail sales in August unexpectedly increased 0.3 per cent, surpassing economist expectations for a flat reading. The figures are not adjusted for inflation, but the absence of a large drop suggests consumers overall are still spending.However, the retail control group, which excludes purchases of petrol, motor vehicles, building materials and food services, was flat. This group feeds into the official gross domestic product calculation. The soft figure resulted in the Atlanta Fed cutting its GDPNow tracking estimate for third-quarter GDP growth to 0.5 per cent from 1.3 per cent.Lydia Boussour, lead US economist at Oxford Economics, still expects modest growth in consumer spending in the third quarter.“Continued modest growth in consumer spending in Q3 should be followed by a significant slowdown in Q4 and some retrenchment in spending in the first half of 2023 as weaker labour market gains curb income growth.” Alexandra White More

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    Canada girds for long haul after historic storm Fiona ravages east coast

    STEPHENVILLE, Newfoundland (Reuters) – After powerful storm Fiona left a trail of destruction in Canada’s east coast on Saturday, the focus shifted to massive clean-up efforts, damage assessment and restoration of power and telecom services as officials warned of a long road to recovery.The historic storm slammed into eastern Canada with hurricane-force winds, forcing evacuations, uprooting trees and powerlines, and reducing many homes to “just a pile of rubble.”The Canadian Hurricane Centre estimated that Fiona was the lowest pressured land falling storm on record in Canada.Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Canadian armed forces will be deployed to help with the clean-up, adding that Fiona caused significant damage and recovery will require a big effort.Despite the intensity of the storm, there were no serious injuries or deaths, which government officials said was a result of residents paying heed to the repeated warnings.Still, thousands of residents across Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island (PEI) and Newfoundland were without power and dealing with patchy telecom connections, and government officials pleaded with residents for patience.They warned that in some cases it would take weeks before essential services are fully restored.”We do know that the damage is very extensive, quite likely the worst we have ever seen,” Dennis King, PEI premier, told reporters on Saturday.”Islanders … should know that our road to recovery will be weeks or longer. It will be an all-hands on deck approach,” he added.Several university students lined up for food outside convenience stores powered by generators due to the power outage caused by Fiona. The Canadian Red Cross has launched a fund raising drive to support the affected people.Government officials said the full-scale of the destruction will only be known in the coming days and weeks. But with the storm packing gusts of up to 170 km/hour sweeping away homes, bridges and roads, Fiona was reminiscent of the damage caused by other storms, including Hurricane Dorian in 2019, which is estimated to have had an insurance bill of C$105 million.For details of Canada’s worst natural disasters, click.Premiers of the affected provinces told the federal government they need long-term support around public and critical infrastructure after the storm tore off roofs of schools and community centers, as well as quick relief to businesses and families to get on with normal life quickly.The storm also severely damaged fishing harbors in Atlantic Canada, which could hurt the country’s C$3.2 billion lobster industry, unless it is fully restored before the season kicks off in few weeks.”Those fishers have a very immediate need to be able to access their livelihood once the storm passes,” Dominic LeBlanc, Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs of Canada, said on Saturday.”So this is exactly the kind of work that will accompany provincial authorities in the coming weeks and months,” he added. (Reporting John Morris in Stephenville; Additional reporting by Steve Scherer in Ottawa and Eric Martyn in Halifax; Writing by Denny Thomas; Editing by Daniel Wallis) More

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    Brazil’s election and the search for an economic revival

    Brazil’s ascendancy in the early years of the 21st century as an emerging market darling — the B in the Brics — ended with a thud in 2014.The nation had been riding a global commodities boom with increased exports of raw materials and foodstuffs, especially to a resource-hungry China. It then collapsed into a brutal recession from which the country has still not recovered.Since then, the economy has barely budged. Gross domestic product expanded just 0.15 per cent, on average, annually in the decade up to the end of 2021. Living standards have fallen in a country where the middle class had been expanding. And despite being one of the world’s foremost agricultural producers, food insecurity has risen. “Brazil’s growth underperformance since the end of the previous commodity supercycles in 2014 has surprised even those who were pessimistic,” says Marcos Casarin, chief economist for Latin America at Oxford Economics. “Per capita income is still 10 per cent below its 2013 peak and will take at least another four years to return to that level.”Political coverage in the build up to next week’s presidential election has been dominated by the controversies around the two leading candidates — whether incumbent Jair Bolsonaro will respect the result if he loses and the potential return to power of former leader Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva who spent time in jail on corruption charges.But as Brazilians prepare to vote on October 2, it is the widespread decline in quality of life that is at the forefront of their minds.São Paulo is facing a homelessness crisis. ‘If you walk through downtown São Paulo or other cities, you will see there are a lot of people going hungry,’ says Maria Isabel da Costa, who runs a restaurant in the city © Nelson Almeida/AFP/Getty Images“If you walk through downtown São Paulo or other cities, you will see there are a lot of people going hungry,” says Maria Isabel da Costa, who runs a restaurant in the city. “People are having a hard time maintaining themselves.”Bolsonaro and Lula have both promised a path to prosperity but espouse starkly different visions for reviving Latin America’s largest economy.Lula, a former trade unionist who governed Brazil between 2003 and 2010 at the height of the commodities boom, is leading in the polls by about 10 percentage points. He wants to put the state back at the centre of economic policymaking and use government spending, notably on infrastructure, to spur growth. Yet much of his rhetoric has focused on past achievements rather than fresh policy proposals.Under Bolsonaro, voters can expect a continuation of the free market, pro-business agenda of Paulo Guedes, his finance minister, who has focused on cutting bureaucracy, promoting privatisation and simplifying labour regulations. Although largely overlooked by wider society, many of the administration’s microeconomic reforms have been lauded by the country’s business community.Neither candidate, however, has focused on the difficult structural changes deemed necessary to improve productivity and generate long-term growth. These include an overhaul of Brazil’s notoriously complex tax system and the significant investments needed in infrastructure and education.This partly comes down to political priorities. But it also reflects how, under Brazil’s system of proportional representation, no candidate’s party ever wins a majority in Congress, the federal legislative body. Whoever is elected president will be forced to deal with the Centrão — literally, the “big centre” — a loose political bloc encompassing almost half of the lower house’s lawmakers, who lend support in exchange for funds to plough into their home constituencies.This pork barrel politics undermines growth by diverting precious government resources away from where they are most needed, critics say.“The Centrão will continue to be the most important political group in Congress and whoever is the next president will have to negotiate with them,” says Bruno Carazza, a professor at the Dom Cabral Foundation.Evandro Buccini, economist at Rio Bravo Investimentos, says growth will prove elusive without big reforms. “We have low investment rates, low saving rates, the deterioration of the demographic profile and, the most important one, a lack of productivity growth. In terms of productivity, Brazil has stagnated for the past 20 to 30 years,” he says.“If you want to talk about [improving] productivity, you need to talk about education and trade, neither of which are detailed in Lula or Bolsonaro’s plans.”Deeper need for changeThe Bolsonaro administration did not hide its glee when the latest growth figures were released this month. “Brazil is flying,” cheered Guedes, after data showed GDP expanded 1.2 per cent in the second quarter from the previous quarter. It was an unexpectedly buoyant result that prompted several investment banks to revise forecasts for this year upwards to more than 2.5 per cent. Services drove the recovery, complementing commodities exports, which have become a bedrock of the economy.“This year is much stronger than we imagined,” says Guido Oliveira, chief financial officer of shopping mall operator Iguatemi. “The population had pent up income.”It came on top of a reduction in unemployment, which has fallen below the double digits to the lowest point since 2015, and also falling inflation. Yet for all the government’s crowing in the run-up to the election, the longer-term horizon remains cloudy.Economists expect GDP growth to slow next year to less than 1 per cent as a confluence of high interest rates, an unfavourable global scenario and potential political uncertainty take a toll. The deeper issue though is that Brazil has struggled to find an effective and sustainable model for broad economic growth. In the years leading to the 2014 crash, Dilma Rousseff’s leftwing administration used spending to keep up momentum. This, combined with a simultaneous collapse in the price of commodities, eventually resulted in a fiscal crisis, which snowballed into the recession.“Brazil used to grow due to the influence of the public sector; the state and the state-owned companies were geared towards supporting economic growth,” says David Beker, chief Brazil economist at Bank of America in São Paulo. “Brazil needs to search for new engines of growth because the state cannot grow more.”Although agribusiness has surged in recent years and now accounts for more than 25 per cent of GDP, the gains have been offset by a long decline in industry.Industrial output shrank by about one-fifth in the 10 years to late 2021, according to the Brazilian Institute for Geography and Statistics.It is a phenomenon described as “premature” deindustrialisation, since the loss of manufacturing occurred earlier than would be expected given the country’s stage of development.Many blame what is known as the custo brasil: the combination of bureaucracy, a complex tax system and poor logistics infrastructure that elevates the cost of doing business in the country.For others, it is also a legacy of Brazil’s relatively closed economy and residue of protectionist policies, which they argue has resulted in a lack of competitiveness and dynamism.“Most of the industries in Brazil are far behind other countries. We need to reindustrialise,” says Luiz Tonisi, chief executive of semiconductor group Qualcomm in Brazil, who suggests homing in on sectors with the most potential. “We had a lot of chicken flights over the last years,” he adds, referring to short, limited periods of growth. “Why? Because we did not make the reforms, we did not do the infrastructure, we did not invest where we should have invested. If we want a decade of growth, we need to do all this.”‘Taxes are a mess’Guedes — educated at the University of Chicago under Milton Friedman, the father of the monetarist school of economics — came to office with a pro-business agenda.His successes include a landmark overhaul of pensions in 2019, helping secure the independence of the central bank, as well as a host of microeconomic reforms aimed at increasing the ease of doing business.“The attraction of investments into infrastructure has also been positive, with multiple concessions and the privatisation of [power utility] Eletrobras,” says Lucas de Aragão, a partner at Arko Advice, a political consultancy. “Media often overlooks these themes, since it is a government that generates a lot of controversy.”Most analysts expect a continuation of these economic policies if Bolsonaro wins a second term and Guedes has signalled he would stay on as finance minister.To date, however, his agenda of major structural reforms has mostly floundered. Paramount among them is a shake-up of the country’s byzantine tax system.“Taxes are really a mess and this drags us down in terms of consumption and investment,” says Tonisi. A midsized Brazilian company takes more than 1,500 hours to prepare and pay taxes, according to World Bank data — the highest in the world. By contrast, a US counterpart takes 175 hours and a UK business about 110 hours. Dealing with this was a central objective for Guedes but he has little to show for it. An attempt to pass a limited tax reform, which among other measures would have introduced a tax on dividends, is stuck in the Senate.Tax reform is a particularly knotty endeavour because of the plethora of competing interests, notably Brazil’s 27 states and thousands of municipalities, as well as influential corporate lobbies. Critics are sceptical that Guedes has the nous to guide such projects through Congress and win over the Centrão, which increasingly calls the shots in Brazilian politics.“Neither Lula nor Bolsonaro’s parties are close to reaching half plus one of the Congress [to pass legislation], let alone the two-thirds majority needed to approve constitutional amendments,” says de Aragão. Securing the Centrão’s support, he adds, means the “government often has to water down, or downright forget, proposals considered extreme or ideological”.Neglected infrastructureAnother widely acknowledged factor holding Brazil back is poor educational standards, leading to a skills shortage that weakens productivity.“There is a chronic deficiency in the quality of education. Brazil spends around 13 per cent of GDP on pensions and approximately 6 per cent of GDP on education. The solution involves directing these resources more efficiently,” says Buccini. Adjusting for inflation, government spending on education fell from R104bn ($20bn) in 2016 to R80bn last year, a 23 per cent drop. Defence spending remained stable in the same period.“Certainly one of Brazil’s biggest problems is its poor basic education and the main cause of this is the disregard of the elected authorities,” says Ana Maria Diniz, founder of the Peninsula Institute, an education-focused non-profit.Infrastructure is similarly plagued by a lack of investment. Poor quality roads and the absence of rail links dramatically increase logistics costs and reduce margins. In terms of sanitation, almost 100mn Brazilians lack wastewater services for the removal of sewage.Redirecting resources to these areas, however, is not straightforward. More than 90 per cent of the government budget is pre-assigned to mandatory expenses, mostly public sector salaries and pensions. Overhauling this system would require an administrative reform of the state, one likely to be bitterly contested by a multitude of vested interests, including the Centrão.For many investors with exposure to Brazil, the immediate post-election worry is the country’s approach to rectitude in the public accounts. Both Bolsonaro and Lula have demonstrated a propensity to spend when politically expedient. “Neither of the candidates’ proposals highlight a commitment to promoting a stable macroeconomic environment, rooted in low inflation, sustainable fiscal policy and predictability,” says Mariam Dayoub, chief economist at Grimper Capital. “They focus on proposals that increase spending [and] lack ideas on how to boost productivity.”Jair Bolsonaro greets economy minister Paulo Guedes during a meeting with businessmen promoted by the National Confederation of Industry last December in Brasília © Mateus Bonomi/Getty ImagesThe concerns centre on the future of the public sector spending ceiling implemented in 2016, known as the teto. By limiting growth in the budget to the rate of inflation, it is viewed as a key fiscal anchor. Ahead of the election, Bolsonaro has circumvented the cap in order to increase social welfare payments, while Lula has been open about his desire to abandon it altogether. This is the “biggest near-term risk,” says Jared Lou, a portfolio manager at William Blair Investment Management. “That’s the key thing to watch out for in this election.” The lure of Lula 2.0 Lula has made no secret of his plans to shift the centre of gravity in the economy. “The state needs to take the lead,” the former president said this month. “The state has to use all its powers of influence so that we can develop this country and convince businessmen and foreigners to invest in Brazil.”He has also spoken about a return to a greater role for the national development bank; suggested the government should take a firmer hand in the running of Petrobras, the state-controlled oil producer; and also enact legislation to better protect workers.The leftwinger also talks about reducing inflation — now at 9 per cent — and forging a more progressive tax system, although he has offered scant details on how he would do either.Lula insists his time in power is evidence of his fiscal responsibility. Critics, however, blame him for the start of a more interventionist approach embraced by his successor, Rousseff, who was impeached in 2016.Solar panels in Pirapora, Minas Gerais state. Almost 80 per cent of Brazil’s electricity comes from renewable sources © Carl De Souza/AFP/Getty ImagesElena Landau, an adviser to Simone Tebet, the fourth-placed candidate in the presidential election, argues Lula set the stage for the nation’s economic woes. “From an economic point of view, he left us in a very bad position. By the time he left, he had exacerbated countercyclical policies, fiscal spending and intervention in state-owned companies,” she says. Wagner Parente, chief executive of consultancy BMJ, adds: “Although Lula is unlikely to adopt the same economic policies as Rousseff, some specific goals — such as overturning the government spending cap — bring uncertainty to the private sector.”So far financial markets have been sanguine about a potential new Lula presidency, mostly owing to the fact that he is a known quantity who is perceived as moderate on economic policy.He also enjoys a better reputation among many western investors, who fretted over Bolsonaro’s at times authoritarian rhetoric and blatant disregard for the environment.The business elite believe Brazil could reap enormous dividends from “green” investments and combating climate change, if the next administration in Brasília shows more interest in protecting the Amazon. A preserved Amazonia rainforest area known as Transamazonica, crossing the indigenous community Aldeia Tenharin Marmelo, between the cities of Manicore and Humaita, Amazonas state © Michael Dantas/AFP/Getty ImagesDespite a surge in the destruction of the rainforest, Brazil still maintains 60 per cent of its native forests — a much higher level than western nations — and almost 80 per cent of its electricity comes from renewable sources. “Brazil has great potential to lead the decarbonisation agenda on multiple fronts, notably energy transition but also nature-based solutions — carbon capture via reforestation, for example. We also have the opportunity to lead on frontier segments, such as green hydrogen,” says Gabriel Brasil, an analyst at Control Risks.But he cautions overall growth depends on “structural reforms and increased institutional stability”, adding that both Lula and Bolsonaro are likely to face challenges.Beker is more bullish, saying the country is primed to grow if it maintains fiscal discipline and continues reforming: “We have big potential for ESG investments. We are far away from conflict and it is peaceful country. The question is, can we capitalise on that?”Additional reporting by Carolina IngizzaData visualisation by Steven Bernard and Keith Fray More