Brazilian Journal of Political Economy (Sep 2013)

Assessing development and the idea of development in the 1950s in Brazil

  • Rafael Rossotto Ioris,
  • Antonio Augusto Rossotto Ioris

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/S0101-31572013000300003
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 33, no. 3
pp. 411 – 426

Abstract

Read online

The decade of 1950s was a crucial period of the industrialization of the Brazilian economy. The dominant school of thought was the national-developmentalism, which was not restricted to the sphere of economic production but also encompassed political and socio-cultural processes of change. Combining repression, persuasion and paternalism, the national state took a significantly political and economic responsibility in the social, material and symbolic modernization during the Vargas and Kubitschek administrations. However, internal disputes, foreign demands and a long legacy of socio-spatial inequalities prevented the achievement of more socially inclusive goals, leading a legacy of unanswered questions that still have currency today.

Keywords