Personally, I also think that Brazil's problems are also connected to the fact that they've leaned more to having stronger connections to the BRICS group rather than connecting more to anyone or everyone that spurs genuine economic ties which results in mutually beneficial growth. Think about it, the group has been more of a political group rather than an economic one, wherein whatever Russia and China says will help everyone in the group economically, yet we have never really seen countries like South Africa and India have a consistent decades long high growth like that of Taiwan or S.Korea. Just think about it, when Vietnam(a former chinese aly) decided to be more neutral and prioritized solely itself first. Suddenly they've become a global manufacturing hub that is having intense growth right now. Compared to Pakistan who is still currently a Chinese interest leaning aly, yet it's economy is never really that impressive.
I don’t think that is Brazil’s problem. The west is not interested in doing business here also. They are investors, yes, but not big trade partners. China is a huge deal for Brazil for good and bad, and the best thing about it is that they don’t want to interfere in our domestic affairs. The Chinese invested in education. A distorted one but still it is one. China is transforming from an underdeveloped manufacturer of cheap goods into a world-class exporter of domestic products created with Chinese intelligence. If you stop to think that China 50 years ago was starving, you can see that coherent public policies are the key to development, a key that Brazil seems to have lost for eternity.
@OzumaRukasu read my comment again bro, what I said was to have more connections to anyone and everyone to naturally and mutually grow with. Not just the West, and not change your political alignment to them as well. On China, what China did was what china did. What Brazil is doing is following what China and Russia says what Brazil should do, but not what China actually did. In fact, it was only when China opened up to the west, especially to the US, that it prospered.
@@Lucas_FiczI don't see how China is prospering with its exponential economical downfall due to hostile geopolitics and an ever growing youth unemployment rate caused by its inefficiency to address personal necessities to their local population. Brazil should be weary or BRICS, specially China and Russia instead of strengthening its ties with them.
@@Lucas_Ficz The United States is not interested in trading with Brazil because Brazil is mainly going after industries that the United States already has. Brazil is a major exporter of beef, soybeans, oranges, sugar cane, and petrochemicals all industries that the U.S. competes in. They are creating competition with the U.S. instead of being complimentary to U.S. industry. I believe the rest of the West is having similar issues with Brazilian trade too in that it is not complimentary but is instead competitive. This is the reason that a free trade agreement between the EU and Brazil has been stalled.
Brazil's problem is lack of infrastructure and good public services. Sometimes I think our educational system makes people more stupid than if they didn't go to school. Our public healthcare has its perks but overall it is underfunded. The country is still very badly interconnected. There is simply no bright future ahead for Brazil.
@@Alex0S1234 is there a bright future for Brazil? Where? It is not being apocalyptic, it is being realistic. No country can develop without investment in education and infrastructure and Brazil is underperforming in both since colonial times. Even if we were to invest everything we could in education and infrastructure and improved our ease to do business in the country and grew by 4% non-stop, it would take over 40 years to reach Western Europe’s current level of per capita GDP standards and quality of life. And also 40 years from now they will presumably be way more developed. I mean… unless you make Brazil grow by 10% non-stop, then no, I see no bright future for this country.
@@Lucas_Ficzpib per capita do Brasil é de 46 mil, maior do que muitos países do ocidente desenvolvidos, isso não muda em nada Há, vale lembrar que pib são convertidos em dolares, e países que têm moedas fracas, e trabalhadores com rendimentos médio de 400 dólares sempre vão estár atrás da conversão 😂😂😂 Ou seja, isso não conta pra nada, não pode existir algo que possa dizer ou medir como uma régua pra saber qual pais é desenvolvido ou não.
Temos vários problemas mas negar saúde pra população como esses países de “1 mundo” hahaha
Personally, I also think that Brazil's problems are also connected to the fact that they've leaned more to having stronger connections to the BRICS group rather than connecting more to anyone or everyone that spurs genuine economic ties which results in mutually beneficial growth. Think about it, the group has been more of a political group rather than an economic one, wherein whatever Russia and China says will help everyone in the group economically, yet we have never really seen countries like South Africa and India have a consistent decades long high growth like that of Taiwan or S.Korea. Just think about it, when Vietnam(a former chinese aly) decided to be more neutral and prioritized solely itself first. Suddenly they've become a global manufacturing hub that is having intense growth right now. Compared to Pakistan who is still currently a Chinese interest leaning aly, yet it's economy is never really that impressive.
I don’t think that is Brazil’s problem. The west is not interested in doing business here also. They are investors, yes, but not big trade partners. China is a huge deal for Brazil for good and bad, and the best thing about it is that they don’t want to interfere in our domestic affairs.
The Chinese invested in education. A distorted one but still it is one. China is transforming from an underdeveloped manufacturer of cheap goods into a world-class exporter of domestic products created with Chinese intelligence. If you stop to think that China 50 years ago was starving, you can see that coherent public policies are the key to development, a key that Brazil seems to have lost for eternity.
É muita submissão aos interesses do ocidente, que não vão ajudar em nada o seu país 😂
@OzumaRukasu read my comment again bro, what I said was to have more connections to anyone and everyone to naturally and mutually grow with. Not just the West, and not change your political alignment to them as well.
On China, what China did was what china did. What Brazil is doing is following what China and Russia says what Brazil should do, but not what China actually did. In fact, it was only when China opened up to the west, especially to the US, that it prospered.
@@Lucas_FiczI don't see how China is prospering with its exponential economical downfall due to hostile geopolitics and an ever growing youth unemployment rate caused by its inefficiency to address personal necessities to their local population. Brazil should be weary or BRICS, specially China and Russia instead of strengthening its ties with them.
@@Lucas_Ficz The United States is not interested in trading with Brazil because Brazil is mainly going after industries that the United States already has. Brazil is a major exporter of beef, soybeans, oranges, sugar cane, and petrochemicals all industries that the U.S. competes in. They are creating competition with the U.S. instead of being complimentary to U.S. industry. I believe the rest of the West is having similar issues with Brazilian trade too in that it is not complimentary but is instead competitive. This is the reason that a free trade agreement between the EU and Brazil has been stalled.
BRazil just did a tax reform
Se tira o SUS do Brasil, não sobra nada.
Very good channel 👍.
very informative, good video, me as a brazilian have liked :D
UM PAÍS QUE TEM A SAÚDE GRATUITA MAIS MAIS DE 210 MILHÕES DE PESSOAS. SUS ❤️
Don't worry, there's no risk of Brazil succeeding. We brazilians are working tirelessly on it 💪
What are you saying? That Brazilians are working against their own success?
yes we are, we just elected an incompetent analphabet ex presidiary as the president and the other option was not good either....
@@TheLolo099 He's joking. A classical brazillian one, btw, where we say things with a hint of irony, exaggeration and distorted truth.
@@TheLolo099 It was a joke. But yes, we are and always have been
Brazil's problem is lack of infrastructure and good public services. Sometimes I think our educational system makes people more stupid than if they didn't go to school. Our public healthcare has its perks but overall it is underfunded. The country is still very badly interconnected. There is simply no bright future ahead for Brazil.
Wow! “No bright future” is a little bit exaggerated. Brasileiros e seus dramas apocalípticos 😂
At least you know you have public healthcare system
@@Alex0S1234 is there a bright future for Brazil? Where? It is not being apocalyptic, it is being realistic. No country can develop without investment in education and infrastructure and Brazil is underperforming in both since colonial times. Even if we were to invest everything we could in education and infrastructure and improved our ease to do business in the country and grew by 4% non-stop, it would take over 40 years to reach Western Europe’s current level of per capita GDP standards and quality of life. And also 40 years from now they will presumably be way more developed. I mean… unless you make Brazil grow by 10% non-stop, then no, I see no bright future for this country.
@@Lucas_Ficzpib per capita do Brasil é de 46 mil, maior do que muitos países do ocidente desenvolvidos, isso não muda em nada
Há, vale lembrar que pib são convertidos em dolares, e países que têm moedas fracas, e trabalhadores com rendimentos médio de 400 dólares sempre vão estár atrás da conversão 😂😂😂
Ou seja, isso não conta pra nada, não pode existir algo que possa dizer ou medir como uma régua pra saber qual pais é desenvolvido ou não.
@@generalbenjaminarrola340 Somente alguém que nunca estudou economia na vida poderia dizer o que você disse.