SANTIAGO, Chile, CMC – President of the Brazilian Development Bank (BNDES), Aloizio Mercadante, says Latin America and the Caribbean must act with “courage” to reactivate and accelerate regional integration, putting the focus on the necessary decarbonization of the region’s economies to tackle the severe climate crisis.
Delivering a lecture to commemorate the 75th anniversary of the Economic Commissioner for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), Mercadante said, “We are facing a major geopolitical shift, a polarization between East and West, between the United States and China.
“In this scenario, the region must continue actively pursuing a multipolar world. Latin America needs to build bridges, pursuing interactions among the countries of the Global South,” said Mercadante.
In his presentation, Mercadante reviewed the pillars of the Brazilian government’s current economic policy, which include a new industrial policy, a program to accelerate growth, and the ecological transformation, which he described as initiatives for moving towards a green, decarbonized economy.
“This is part of a historic effort. Brazil is living through a new time, which is very positive, but this only makes sense if it is shared with other Latin American and Caribbean countries.
“Together, we have a greater diplomatic presence and a more powerful consumer market. But the integration agenda must be revised,” he said, adding, “We must integrate the region’s value chains to generate partnerships between companies. We must intensify infrastructure to accelerate the region’s economic and trade integration.
“Our challenge in the region is not to replace the commodities we export, but to create value-added.”
In his remarks, the Brazilian economist also recognized ECLAC’s historical contributions and expressed confidence that the United Nations regional organization can support the region on its challenges today.
“ECLAC has always been a crucial, structuralist, and innovative point of reference on development, combining economic development and the fight against inequality in our region,” he said.
ECLAC’s executive secretary, José Manuel Salazar-Xirinachs, thanked Mercadante for participating in the Keynote Lecture Series, highlighting the long and fruitful relationship between ECLAC and the BNDES, recalling the importance of influential Brazilian economist Celso Furtado.
“Celso Furtado, who would have turned 103 this year, was one of the founders of what is known as the ECLAC school of thought on Latin America and the Caribbean’s development, and he also formed part of the BNDES as a director in the 1950s,” Salazar-Xirinachs said.
ECLAC and BNDES have signed a memorandum of understanding that, among other things, formalizes the creation of a new joint Working Group, named after Celso Furtado, to promote academic research, the publication of studies, and training on critical issues for the development of the Brazilian, Latin American and Caribbean economies.
“This Working Group recovers, 70 years later, a historical framework for action and initiatives for economic development, with the new challenges and complexities that the 21st century poses for creating a more productive, inclusive, and sustainable future,” Salazar-Xirinachs explained.
“Brazil and the countries of Latin America and the Caribbean are at a crossroads: despite these countries’ enormous potential, growth rates in the last decade have been meager, creating an environment in which the structural gaps in development tend to worsen.”
“The big push that we must make on multiple fronts – productive, social, environmental, digital, educational, and on the care society – to transform our development models requires scaling up financing, and few institutions in the world have as much experience with this issue as the BNDES,” Salazar-Xirinachs said.