The three cycles of State and the society

Authors

  • Luiz Carlos Bresser-Pereira

Keywords:

Capitalism revolution, Nationalism, Dependency, Interpretations,

Abstract

The history of independent Brazil may be divided in three political cycles, and, since 1930, we can distinguish five political pacts or class coalitions. Since 1930 these pacts have been nationalist. Only in the 1990s the Brazilian elites surrendered to the neoliberal hegemony. Yet, since the mid 2000s, they are recovering their idea of nation. In fact, the main claim of the essay is that Brazilian elites and the Brazilian society are “national-dependent”, i.e., they are ambiguous and contradictory, requiring an oxymoron to define them. The elite is dependent because it often sees itself as “European” and its people as inferior. But Brazil’s domestic market is big enough and the Brazilian state capable enough to persuade elites to be national. Today, it searches for a synthesis between the two last political cycles: between the nation and economic development and the democracy and social justice cycles.

Issue

Section

Desenvolvimento e periferia