Using a comprehensive array of primary and secondary sources and in-depth company case studies, this book examines how one vitally important Brazilian industrial sector, the non-serial capital goods sector, coped with the onset of liberalization. While liberalization undoubtedly helped to promote greater efficiency in some areas of corporate performance, the impact elsewhere was far less favorable. This differentiated response raises some interesting and troubling theoretical and policy issues.
1. Introduction 2. The Policy Environment 3. Policy Liberalization and the Production Process 4. The External Dimension: Exports, Imports, and Quality 5. Technological Development and Policy Liberalization 6. Concentration, Diversification, and Financial Performance 7. Conclusions
Dr. Edmund Amannis a Fellow at the Centre for Brazilian Studies, Oxford.