Brazilian Political Science Review (Mar 2022)
How Politics and Economics Work Together to Limit Development: Institutional Complementarities in Brazil
Abstract
Few of the facts in ‘Decadent Developmentalism’ will be unfamiliar to even casual followers of Brazil’s political economy: the segmented labour markets that limit workers’ access to social protection; the ability of incumbent firms like JBS to extract resources from the government; or the role of the bureaucracy in taming the HIV/AIDS epidemic. Reliance on a consolidated block of evidence makes it all the more impressive that this book so dramatically reorients the reader’s understanding of Brazil’s development trajectory since 1985. Rather than simply extend the existing debate with more recent statistics, or niche case studies, the author deploys a broad swath of evidence within a new theoretical framework focused on the complementarities – the mutual supports – ‘between’ institutions, extracting much greater mileage from every data point.