Economic Development

Brazil on the front foot again

August 28, 2012

Global

Brazil

August 28, 2012

Global
Sara Mosavi

Former editor

Sara is a Policy and Research Manager at UK Commission for Employment and Skills working on issues such as youth unemployment, productivity, apprenticeships and further education. Prior to this, Sara worked as an Editor with The Economist Intelligence Unit's Thought Leadership team for over three years researching projects on educuation, talent, risk management and organisational behaviour. Sara holds a MSc in International Public Policy at UCL and read Italian and Linguistics at St Hugh's College, Oxford.

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Once every quarter, The Economist and the Financial Times jointly survey over 1,500 senior executives from around the world for their Global Business Barometer.

Participants are asked to give their views on the state of the global economy and the outlook for their own businesses and markets. In the latest edition of the barometer published this month, we asked executives to indicate how confident they were about the economic prospects of the biggest economies over the next six months. 

Here's what they said: 

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After roaring through the first few years of this century, the four emerging markets known collectively as BRICs have had to encounter a fair amount of turbulence of late. But based on the optimism expressed by global executives in the chart above, it seems that better days are ahead for at least one of them. In comparison to its BRIC comrades, executives are most positive on Brazil's prospects in the next six months. Their confidence appears to be well-founded. The Brazilian central bank's latest Index of Economic Activity released earlier this month confirms that Brazil is turning the corner. Data for June shows that retail sales and industrial output have begun to climb up again. Employment levels are on the rise too thanks to 140,000 new jobs in July alone – higher than the same period last year.

The eyes of the world will soon be turning towards Brazil as it hosts the football World Cup in 2014 and the Olympics in 2016. So the latest figures will be welcomed with a sigh of relief not just by Brazil, but also by sports fans the world over.

For more analysis from the Economist/FT Global Business Barometer, click here »

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