Programa avalia dívida externa e a gestão das contas públicas

As contas externas brasileiras vem registrando déficits preocupantes, somando em maio US$ 6,63 bilhões. A dívida externa, junto à queda de produção em vários setores, constante redução na oferta de empregos e inflação em alta, irão contribuir para que a economia brasileira tenha mais um ano de crescimento baixo.
 
O programa Brasilianas.org desta segunda-feira (07), ao vivo, a partir das 20h, na TV Brasil, discutirá as questões em torno da gestão das contas públicas e as estratégias de longo prazo para a economia do país. O apresentador Luis Nassif receberá o assessor da presidência do BNDES, David Kupfer; o diretor do Instituto de Economia da Unicamp, Fernando Sarti e o economista-chefe da Austin Rating Alex Agostini
 
Não perca e participe mandando suas perguntas que poderão ser selecionadas ao vivo. Para encaminhá-las, clique aqui.
 
Onde sintonizar a TV Brasil:
 
UHF Analógico Canal 62 (SP)
UHF Digital Canal 63 (SP)
VHF Canal 2 (RJ), (DF) e (MA)
Net – Canais 4 (SP), 16 (DF), 18 (RJ e MA)
Sky-Direct TV – Canal 116
TVA digital – Canal 181
 
Ou assista pela internet: www.tvbrasil.ebc.com.br. 

 

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    1. Além de ser papo lá para o


      Além de ser papo lá para o PIG, parece que não se sabe que Lula pagou toda dívida e até somos hoje credores. E mais: o Brasil vai, com os Brincs,  abrir um banco para investir nos mais pobres e tal a primeira operação seja comprar todo dívida  da Argentina.

  1. Fim do Dólar

    Gostaria de saber do Sr. Márcio Holland se o Brasil possui um plano de contigência no caso de um ataque especulativo ao Dólar que leve a suspensão de sua conversibilidade?

    1. Minha opinião

      É óbvio que acredito firmemente que uma união de estratégias e táticas inteligêntes consiguiriam dotar a moeda brasileira, o Real, de maior resiliência num cenário fortemente especulativo com o Dólar. Basta ter uma dose de prudência e unir a isto conhecimentos e vontade política de proteger o povo e a nação.

      1. Por falar em ferramentas que movimentam as finanças

        A boa notícia é que o Brasil têm 55% de chances de vencer a Argentina na final.

        Google Cloud Predicts World Cup Winners

        by CloudWedge Staff    |    Jul 6, 2014  
        Wikimedia

        [video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YyvvxFeADh8%5D

        It seems that now Google’s Cloud Platform has come to replace Paul the Octopus. In Google’s annual developer­ focused conference Google I/O 2014, Jordan Tigani, a Google Engineer accurately predicted the outcomes of all the Round of 16 (video below). Now, how did Google manage to do that?The 2010 Football (‘Soccer’) World Cup had many wild predictions from all over the world. Yet, Paul the Octopus had made some very accurate predictions that brought him international fame overnight. Too bad for us, Paul is no more. So how do we still get our friendly water-cooler bets on the World Cup?

        How does Google predict the World Cup?

        Google’s Cloud Platform used a model that was built using touch-­by-­touch data from Opta, a high definition sports data collection company that is covering the World Cup. It used the data from many soccer leagues where World Cup players play and examined their behavioral patterns to predict their performance in subsequent games. It also utilized a number of Google services including: Google Cloud Dataflow, to ingest the data, Google BigQuery to build derived features, and Google Compute Engine to crunch the data. The Google Prediction API was also used in this model.

        So what really is Google Cloud Platform?

        Now, let’s understand Google’s Cloud Platform in detail. Google Cloud Platform is a family of products and services offered by Google, each including a web interface and a command line tool, along with additional programming interfaces and a RESTful API. Some of the components of the Google Cloud Platform are:

        Google Compute Engine: 

        Is the Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) service that provides virtual machines that run on Google infrastructure. However, all instances on Google Cloud Platform are linux based such as RedHat, Debian, CentOS etc. It also offers exclusive features such as enhanced security, global load balancing and pay­per­use servers and storage.

        Google App Engine:

        Is the Platform as a Service (PaaS) service that enables users to develop and host web applications in Google’s huge data centers. It provides exclusive features such as free service for minimum resources and bulk downloading. It’s database uses a SQL­like syntax called GQL.

        Google Cloud Storage

        Is the online storage web service that helps user to store and access their files on Google’s storage servers. It provides some phenomenal features such as Interoperability, resume-able uploads, and access control.

        The other platform services include Cloud SQL, Cloud Datastore, Cloud DNS, Hadoop on Google Cloud Platform, BigQuery, Translate API etc.

        What are the other real world applications of the Google Prediction API?

        Imagine if you were a day trader (one who buys and sells stock many times daily to make an average gain), you would want to know how the stock would be trending in the next 10 minutes. Right?

        Google’s Cloud Platform prediction model might just be the right thing for you. However, predicting the moving average of a stock takes in more than just the past patterns. Imagine calculating a person’s credit score using this, to predict the likelihood of his future payments. Or imagine predicting the currency exchange rates and the international flight prices.

        One new start-up actually built their entire business on the Google Prediction API and other Google Cloud Platform Services.  Pondera Solutions, a fraud ­detection company built their services on Google’s cloud to provide FDaaS (Fraud detection as a Service).

        This jump in innovation opens up endless possibilities for how the cloud and big data will shape every aspect of our day to day lives.

        1. Juntando os pontos…

          The Next Global Meltdown Is Baked In: Connecting The Dots Between Oil, Debt, Interest Rates And Risk

          The Next Global Meltdown Is Baked In: Connecting The Dots Between Oil, Debt, Interest Rates And Risk thumbnail

          The bottom line is the Fed can only keep the machine duct-taped together by suppressing the market’s pricing of risk.

           

          One of the Grand Narratives of our era is the substitution of debt for income: as earned income and disposable income have stagnated for 40 years, the gap between the rising cost of living and stagnant household income has been filled by borrowed money.

          Money has been borrowed to replace income everywhere: consumers have borrowed money to buy things they otherwise couldn’t afford, students have borrowed over $1 trillion to attend college, governments have borrowed money to fund wars and social spending, corporations have borrowed money to buy back their own shares, pushing stock prices higher.

          There’s one little problem with debt: interest must be paid on debt. Let’s focus for a second on the difference between cash income and borrowing money. Cash doesn’t cost money to maintain; debt does. In a functioning economy (as opposed to the dysfunctional mess we have now), cash would earn income from interest paid by borrowers.

          If cash income is saved, the cash can buy stuff without debt or interest payments. That is a powerful advantage over debt.

          How powerful is the advantage of cash over debt? It’s literally life-changing. Take a look at your credit card statements, which now include an estimate of interest you will pay and how long it will take to pay off the balance at a given monthly payment.

          Those making minimal payments will end up paying 100% or more of the balance due in interest.
          The phenomenally high accrued costs of interest is true of mortgages, student loans, auto loans, corporate debt and government debt: eventually, current spending is crimped as more and more net income is devoted to paying interest.

          There are two words for what happens when real income declines and interest payments rise: impoverishment and insolvency. This dynamic is scale-invariant, meaning it works the same for individuals, households, enterprises and governments.

          Let’s connect the rising cost of oil to debt. As we all know, oil matters because it’s the foundation of our economy, and the cost of oil is built into virtually every sector in some way. For example, look at how the the cost of food rises and declines in lockstep with the cost of oil:

          Despite the substitution of cheaper natural gas for oil, we use a lot of oil.

          While the recent increase of 3+ million barrels a day in domestic production is welcome on many fronts (more jobs, more money kept at home, reduced dependence on foreign suppliers, etc.), the U.S. still needs to import crude oil.

          U.S. Imports by Country of Origin (U.S. Energy Information Administration)

          The rising cost of oil acts as an economy-wide tax. Everything that uses oil in its production or transport rises in price without offering consumers any more value than it did at much lower prices.

          Look at the impact on food prices as oil rose from $20/barrel in 2002 to $140/barrel in 2008. While government statisticians adjust the consumer price index (CPI) based on hedonics (as the quality of things goes up, the price is adjusted accordingly) and substitution (people buy chicken instead of steak, etc.), the reality is, as one heckler put it, “We don’t eat iPads:” that is, all the stuff that is hedonically adjusted (tech goodies, etc.) is non-essential.

          The Status Quo has compensated for the relentless rise in the systemic oil “tax” by making debt cheaper to service. The Federal Reserve’s zero-interest rate policy (ZIRP) has two purposes:

          1. Channel immense sums of free money to the too big to fail banks by relieving them of the onerous requirement of paying interest on deposits while giving them unlimited access to nearly-free money they can lend out at huge spreads. (This is crony-capitalism writ large. The winners were picked by the Fed and the rest of us are the losers. Yea for the godlike Fed, our modern-day Mammon.)

          2. To keep consumption alive as income declined and the oil tax eroded household disposable income, the Fed made borrowing cheaper.

          Unfortunately for the godlike deities residing in the Fed, zero-interest rates trigger malinvestments, which are inherently risky. When unqualified borrowers borrow a ton of money–for example, a student with no assets or income, or a poor credit risk household assumes an FHA mortgage, or a corporation sells junk-rated bonds– the risk of default is intrinsically higher than debt taken on by qualified borrowers.

          This poses a systemic problem for the Fed: The Fed needs to enable more borrowing by the uncreditworthy to keep consumption growing and bank profits flowing, yet the inevitable result of such credit expansion is a massive expansion of systemic risk.

          The more debt that is taken on by marginal borrowers–where marginal is defined as unable to weather any shock or decline to their financial position or income–the more risk piles up in the system.

          The analogy is a forest where the deadwood is never allowed to burn: The Yellowstone Analogy and The Crisis of Neoliberal Capitalism (May 18, 2009). The net result of rising systemic risk is a massive conflagration that burns off off the accumulated risk and bad debt.

          Such a fire sweeping through the mountains of risky debt piled up in the American financial system would bring down the entire Status Quo. So what’s a godlike Federal Reserve to do when it can no longer lower interest rates?

          Answer: it suppresses visible risk by manipulating the stock market to reflect complacency.
          “Old” VIX Plunges To Record Low (Zero Hedge)

          Does a record low measure of risk reflect the systemic risk of default and a decline in consumption, or is it merely a reflection of the herd’s boundless faith in the godlike powers of the Fed to suppress risk even as Fed policies pile risk ever higher?

          The bottom line is the Fed can only keep the machine duct-taped together by suppressing the market’s pricing of risk. Suppressing the market’s ability to price risk is throwing common-sense fiscal caution to the winds; when risk arises from its drugged slumber despite the Fed’s best efforts to eliminate it, we will all reap what the Fed has sown.

          Charles Hugh-Smith of OfTwoMinds blog

          1. Videos

            O colapso do dólar como moeda de troca e sua s consequencias ao mundo (2)

             Jacob Blinder   Assistindo aos três vídeos (endereços abaixo transcritos) poderemos entender por qual motivo a Rússia – que está sendo provocada pelos Estados Unidos até os limites do suportável – para que invada militarmente a Ucrânia e com isso provoque um grande conflito de abrangência mundial e reative simultaneamente uma nova guerra fria com países do Ocidente – tem resistido corajosamente a esse intento insano; mas ao mesmo tempo a Rússia  tem criado condições para atingir os Estados Unidos no seu calcanhar de Aquiles, que é dar um golpe mortal a sua economia substituindo o dólar como moeda de troca comercial mundial.  Daí a importância dos países, com destaque ao Brasil, de criar condições alternativas para que seja menos dependente do dólar em suas trocas comerciais com outros países – fato esse que será discutido na próxima reunião dos BRICS e que será realizada em Fortaleza esse mês. O futuro se constrói no presente e o presente traz fortes indicações de que a era do dólar chega ao fim e um mundo multipolar surge com muitos centros de decisões, com muitos interesses convergentes e divergentes e, sobretudo muito mais equilibrado do que hoje se encontra e com isso gerar menos injustiças e mais equidade a todos. Jacob David Blinder

             http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=umTq6HKXwXY   Colapso del Dollar: China y Russia las nuevas potencias  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-zcwwQU3UwM   Brasil y China buscan eliminar el dólar EEUU de sus comércios http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CCCODObemPk   EL PRÓXIMO COLAPSO DEL DOLAR

             

    2. Número 7 e seja o que Deus quiser…

      Official 2014 IMF Forecast Based on ‘Magic Number Seven’-Steve Quayle

      By Greg Hunter On July 2, 2014 In Politics

       

      Steve Quayle - Official 2014 IMF Forecast Based on ‘Magic Number Seven’By Greg Hunter’s USAWatchdog.com

      Radio talk show veteran and 10 time published author, Steve Quayle, says dark powers are at work in the financial markets at the highest levels of global government.  Quayle contends, “First of all, the illuminati and the occult are one in the same with hidden meanings to the general population, but announcements to people on the inside.”  At the beginning of 2014, the head of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), Christine Lagarde, gave a primer on numerology to an audience at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C.  She did it as a set up to an official IMF forecast for “what we should expect for 2014.”   Why is this important now?  The IMF forecast was based on what Lagarde called the “magic 7,” and July is the seventh month of the year.  Lagarde is overtly using numerology to forecast big changes this year and this month.  For example, Lagarde pointed out that 2014 will “mark the 7th anniversary of the financial market jitters” that started in 2007.  If you individually add up the numbers of the year 2014 (2+0+1+4=7), you get the number 7.  Lagarde also said that 2014 “will mark the 70th anniversary, 70th anniversary, drop the zero, seven, of the Bretton Woods Conference that actually gave birth to the IMF” (7 + 0 = 7).  Lagarde also said, “And it will be the 25th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall, 25th” (2 + 5 = 7).  Lagarde also brings up the G-20 out of nowhere.  Is that a reference to a date?  (G is the 7the letter of the alphabet and this might be a reference to 7/20/2014.)   Quayle explains, “People have to understand the number 7 to realize why this is critical.  The number 7 is used 287 times; it’s used in the Old and New Testament.  What is critical about this is these people rule their lives by the stars and numerology.  Never in anything have I monitored in my 25 years being on talk radio that I have witnessed such a blatant presentation of the number 7.  When she says it’s ‘quite a number,’ yes, it’s God’s number, but these people worship their god and their god is Lucifer.”

      Quayle goes on to say, “When Lagarde makes reference to 7 and 14, and talking about the“financial market jitters,” what I believe she is saying is the end of the old financial system is past and the new one is coming on.  The new one will be what the Bible talks about such as the Mark of the Beast and the one-world government.  The 20th of July . . . what she is telling everybody is they are ready to make their move on the economy, and I believe is simply going to be the end of the U.S. dollar in a traumatic and dramatic fashion.  The people who aren’t prepared for it are simply going to be wiped out, and they are going to be blown away.”

      So, why give a warning ahead of time?  Quayle states, “In the occult, they have a maxim in their world.  They must warn the people they consider useless eaters and stupid people of what they are going to do.  They derive some sort of sick pleasure out of that, and it’s kind of like the ultimate mocking through numerology.  The point being is Lagarde made 10 different references in a six minute portion of her speech; you gotta know the message is being sent. . . . What these guys are doing is basically telling everybody ahead of time that they plan to change everything. . . . Jesus said, ‘The love of money is the root of all evil,’ and I’ll take it one step further and say the control of money is the control of all evil.  They are speaking the message loud and clear.  This month, something big starts to happen, and it changes the rest of the world for the next 7 years. . . . We are headed for a crisis or turning point of Biblical proportions that is going to change everything literally in a matter of days, if not overnight.”

       

      1. Sir Isaac NewtonMagician’s

        Sir Isaac Newton

        Magician’s brain

        The real Sir Isaac Newton was not first king of reason, but last of the magicians

         

         Man of measure

        The Newton Papers: The Strange and True Odyssey of Isaac 

        Newton’s Manuscripts. By Sarah Dry. 

        FEW scientists have had the influence of Sir Isaac Newton, who largely built the edifice of modern science. He was the first to formulate the laws of motion. He discovered and explained the law of gravity, and provided the theoretical framework through which the observations of Galileo Galilei and the planetary laws of Johannes Kepler could be understood. His experiments with sunlight and glass prisms and mirrors helped him understand the origin of colours and create a new kind of telescope. He invented calculus, independently of Gottfried Leibniz, feuding with him over who was first. And he was the first to postulate that the laws of physics would be the same all over the universe.

        As befits a man of such prodigious reputation, Newton left behind a voluminous trove of papers: more than 7m words filling hundreds of notebooks and loose sheets of paper. These included drafts of successive editions of his crowning achievement, “Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica”, as well as his treatise on light, “Opticks”. There were also letters to scientists and other scholars, pages of derivations of mathematics and physics formulae, and copious writings on alchemy and religion. The solitary and eccentric Newton apparently saved everything he wrote; among his papers are recipes for ink that he scribbled as a scholar at Cambridge. But he was reticent about publishing his work, fearing controversy and criticism (his fight with Leibniz over calculus had made him extra-sensitive). At his death, more than half of his writings were unpublished, including all his thoughts on religion and alchemy.Newton’s genius was recognised while he was a young scholar at Cambridge. At the age of 26, he was made Lucasian professor of mathematics. By the time he died in 1727, at the ripe old age of 84, he had become a national icon: President of the Royal Society, and warden and master of the Royal Mint. He was interred in Westminster Abbey.

        Sarah Dry’s engaging book, “The Newton Papers”, traces what happened to Newton’s unpublished manuscripts after his death. A lifelong bachelor, Newton died without leaving a will. His papers were inherited by John Conduitt, who had married Newton’s closest relative and housekeeper, his half-niece Catherine Barton. Conduitt started an effort to publish a biography of Newton, but in the end it was unsuccessful. As Ms Dry makes clear, Conduitt had a vested interest in guarding Newton’s reputation as a paragon of science. Conduitt probably recognised the explosive nature of Newton’s religious writings, which showed him to favour the doctrine of one God, denying the unity of Father, Son and Holy Ghost. Such anti-Trinitarianism would have been considered heretical by Newton’s contemporaries. It was common at the time for Cambridge faculty members (all of them men) to take holy orders in the Church of England; Newton, true to himself, refused.

        After Conduitt and his wife died, Newton’s papers passed to the family of the Earls of Portsmouth, and there they remained for the best part of 150 years. Ms Dry catalogues what happened to Newton’s manuscripts through three centuries, how they were sold, dispersed and then partially reunited through the efforts of John Maynard Keynes, a British economist who developed a fascination with Newton’s alchemical writings, and Abraham Yahuda, a Jewish rabbinical scholar who was interested in Newton’s theological explanations. Ms Dry explains how 19th-century Cambridge luminaries, such as George Gabriel Stokes (who, like Newton, became the Lucasian professor) and John Couch Adams (who used Newtonian mechanics to predict the existence of the planet Neptune) struggled with Newton’s manuscripts, in the hope that they would yield further insight into the great man’s thinking. However, the vastness of the archive and its often abstruse nature thwarted easy categorisation.

        The Newton that emerges from the manuscripts is far from the popular image of a rational practitioner of cold and pure reason. The architect of modern science was himself not very modern. He was obsessed with alchemy. He spent hours copying alchemical recipes and trying to replicate them in his laboratory. He believed that the Bible contained numerological codes. The truth is that Newton was very much a product of his time. The colossus of science was not the first king of reason, Keynes wrote after reading Newton’s unpublished manuscripts. Instead “he was the last of the magicians”.

         

  2. Integração com a America do Sul: econômica, cultura e monetária

    ações macroeconômicas a serem implementadas:

    produção de petróleo

    aprofundamento das relações com o mercosul

    Pacerias com BRICs  inovação e comércio

    Usinas hidreletricas binacionais para fomentar a industrialização vizando o mercado internacional ,pois a China será nosso parceiro por termos  energia renovável e a poluição do ar na China já está no limite

    Acabar com a armadilha dos juros escorchantes e ser um Pais normal em política de juros e inflação.

  3. Recentemente Rússia e China

    Recentemente Rússia e China fecharam um negócio bilionário de venda de gás lastreado em Yuan e não em Dólar.

    Se esta moda pega e o dolar se sublimar mundialmente, qual será o efeito desta desdolarização mundial sobre as nossas contas externas? Se for malévolo, qual o plano B que o Brasil possui para escapar desta forte possibilidade?

  4. Perdi uma hora assistindo a nada

    Nassif, cadê o Holland?

    Ah…. pelo menos numa coisa todos concordaram, que a Dilma dormiu no ponto.

    Acorda, Dilma!

  5. E o BACEN hein? tem o dom

    E o BACEN hein? Tem o dom natural de subir a taxa SELIC e de queimar US$ 80 bi das reservas com Swap nos últimos doze meses.

    Essa flexibilidade encarnada nas contas públicas é um fardo comum da gestão soberana, da força e da eficácia da dívida externa.

    Digamos que a falta de valor para propriedades da ciência da economia é como a separação da alma do corpo: A morte do crescimento.

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