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“Money, Greed, Technology: Financial assets and the world economy,”
Braudel Papers. No. 42/2008. Analysis of the causes and consequences
of the wolrldwide
proliferation of financial assets.
>Portuguese
>English
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O Obama
desconhecido (The Unknown Obama).
O
Estado de Sâo Paulo. May 30, 2008
>
English
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The Forgotten Progress of Latin America.
“El Olvidado Progreso de
América Latina”,
>
English >Spanish
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A
democracia ameaçada?
Especial para o
Estado de S. Paulo
Artigo publicado no jornal
O Estado de S. Paulo,
em 09 de maio de 2004
> Português >Spanish
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Em
entrevista, Norman Gall fala sobre Democracia
Entrevista concedida à Revista Ser Médico, edição 26, Janeiro/Fevereiro/Março
de 2004
>
Português
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“Is
Democracy Threatened?: Latin America´s struggling institutions”
Braudel Papers. No. 34 (2004). Special
edition published in English, Spanish and Portuguese for the
international conference on “The Future of Democracy in Latin
America,” São Paulo and Brasília, March 2004.
> English
> Português >Spanish
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"What
is federalism?",
with Marcos Mendes, Braudel Papers No. 23 (2000).
> English
> Português
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"Money,
Greed Technology. Part 1: Brazil and the Asian Crisis,"
Braudel Papers No. 19 (1998);
"Part 2: Japan, Russia,
Brazil,"
Braudel Papers No. 20 (1998). An analysis of the worldwide
proliferation of financial assets in recent years as the driving
force behind the Asian crisis, overwhelming institutional capacities
to manage problems of scale.
Parte 1:
> English
> Português
Parte 2:
> English
> Português
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"Globalism
and Localism: What are the limits of competition and security?"
Braudel Papers. No. 16 (1997). With Rubens Ricupero,
Secretary-General of UNCTAD (United Nations Conference on Trade and
Development), former Finance Minister of Brazil and Honorary
President of the Fernand Braudel Institute of World Economics.
Analysis of world trends in trade
and investment and of institutional blockages to economic
integration.
> English
> Português
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"Corruption
and Democracy: Disclosure becomes the decisive weapon,"
Braudel Papers No. 13 (1996). With Moisés Naím of the
Carnegie Endowment of International Peace, Washington. Analysis of
the historical roots of corruption and of political, economic and
technological trends breeding the current wave of scandals
worldwide.
> English
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"Wrecking
the public sector: What went wrong in in Latin America,"
a review-essay on An Economic History of Latin America since
Independence by Victor Bulmer-Thomas. The Times
Literary Supplment, London. January 26, 1996.
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"The
Political Economy of Regeneration,"
Braudel Papers. No. 7 (1994). Resurgent mortality threatens
decapitalized complex societies. Comments on Tarun Dutt’s "The
Revival of Calcutta: The stubborn pursuit of survival under threat
of catastrophe" and Shane Hunt’s "Lima Emerges from Hyperinflation
and Violence," both published in the same issue. These experiences
generate hopeful messages that collapse can be avoided in cities
suffering from overload and fatigue. These messages imply that
cities can develop a political economy of regeneration to reverse
disorder and decline. The elements of this political economy of
regeneration are: (1) balanced fiscal accounts; (2) credible
government; (3) cooperation between political and business leaders;
(4) responsible social policies and (5) international support.
> English
> Português
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"Without
stability there is no salvation,"
Braudel Papers. No. 5 (1994). Comments on trade regimes and
political stability, referring to Rubens Ricupero’s essay on "Trade,
Power and the Future," published in the same issue.
> English
> Português
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"Politics
and Markets,"
a 10,000-word dialogue with Professor Jeffrey Sachs of Harvard
University on economic reform, Braudel Papers . São Paulo:
Fernand Braudel Institute of World Economics, March-April 1993, in
English and Portuguese editions. Shorter version published in O
Estado de São Paulo . Sunday, March 7, 1993.
> English
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"Modernity,"
Commentary.
July 1992. A review essay on Paul Johnson's The Birth of the
Modern: World Society, 1815-1830, discussing the meaning of
modernity as displayed in its great surge after the
Napoleonic Wars.
> English
>
Print Version
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["Lessons from Peru and Venezuela"] "Lições que vêm do
Peru e da Venezuela", O Estado de São
Paulo, Sunday, May 3, 1992. Full-page article in Portuguese on
the implications of the failed military coup in Venezuela and the
purges of Congress and the Judiciary announced by President Alberto
Fujimori in Peru. It argues that decapitalization threatens
reversion of some populations to more archaic forms of civilization
and mortality. This threat of regression is driving a shift in the
politics of nations from a political economy of entitlements, or
acquired rights, toward a political economy of survival. The shift
is only beginning and its effects have not come fully into view.
Spanish version in El Nacional, Caracas, June 4, 1992.
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The
DeathThreat.
Analysis of
the Latin American cholera epidemic of 1991-92, a warning of
deterioration of survival systems under the impacts of rapid
urbanization and growth of adult population. While recent cholera
death/case ratios have been a fraction of those in the 19th Century
pandemics, the new epidemic shows that the low mortality levels
achieved in recent decades may be endangered by decapitalization
linked to chronic inflation, reducing the institutional capacity of
communities and nations to operate complex societies. This study is
part of the research program on Chronic Inflation as Systemic
Failure: Latin America and the Polarization of the World Economy
of the Fernand Braudel Institute of World Economics (1992).
>
English Download (614kb)
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"Shunning Map to Prosperity,
Vast Nations Take the Low Road, "The
Wall Street Journal (editorial page). May 31, 1989. Overview of
the polarization of the world economy. Portuguese versions published
in Gazeta Mercantil (São Paulo) June 7, 1990 and Jornal da
Tarde (São Paulo) September 2, 1989.
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"A
Nova Era da Economia Mundial,"
in Norman Gall and Werner Loewenberg, A Nova Era da Economia
Mundial. Proceedings of the inaugural conference of the Fernand
Braudel Institute of World Economics. São Paulo: Editora Pioneira
1989.
> English
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"Does
anyone really believe in free trade?"
(cover story), Forbes. December 15, 1986. "Through gift,
theft and license, our technology is leaking abroad almost as fast
as we develop it. So scratch the long-term dream of a U.S. living
off exports of high technology goods and services." Focusing on the
trade conflict over Brazil’s new computer industry.
> English
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"What
Ails the Developing Economies?"
(cover story), Forbes, July 28, 1986. Focusing on the
distressing examples of Peru, Argentina, Mexico and some African
countries, this analysis, based on many years of first-hand
reporting, blames excessive urbanization for the crippling of many
Third World economies, forcing them to concentrate resources on
sustaining unproductive city populations and reducing possibilities
of both capital-formation and adapting to changes in the world
economy. Spanish version published in El Diario de Caracas
(Venezuela), August 24, 1986. Complete original version published as
four-part series, Jornal da Tarde, January 26-30, 1987.
> English
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"We
are living off our capital,"
Forbes. September 22, 1986. How fast is the world running out
of oil? Geologist Joseph Riva, author of World Petroleum Resources
and Reserves, predicts in a taped interview that the Middle East, if
not crippled by political disturbances, will compensate for
production declines elsewhere by raising its share from 20% today to
50% by 2005 and 75% by 2020, after which world output will start to
fall.
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"The
Dollar: Too Strong for Our Own Good"
(cover story), Forbes, February 28, 1983. Taped interview
with Martin Feldstein, chairman of President Reagan’s Council of
Economic Advisers, on the world crisis in public finance, with U.S.
budget deficits driving up interest rates that artificially
strengthen the dollar, leading to huge deficits in foreign trade and
transformation of the U.S. into a debtor nation.
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"Joseph
Schumpeter: The 20th Century’s Greatest Economist"
(cover story, with Peter Drucker and James W. Michaels), Forbes,
May 23, 1983. In the centenary year of both Schumpeter and John
Maynard Keynes, Forbes analyzes the work of both men and
finds that Schumpeter’s "Wagnerian vision" of business cycles and
"creative destruction" more accurately describes an open and dynamic
world economy.
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"The
World Gasps for Liquidity"
(cover story), Forbes, October 11, 1982. An overview of the
world banking and credit crisis in the light of Mexico’s 1982
suspension of payments on its foreign debt and nationalization of
its private banks.
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"Volkswagen’s
Dilemma: Is There Another Rabbit in the Hat?"
(cover story), Forbes, August 17, 1981. A survey of the
crisis in the world automotive industry as experienced by the leader
in small-car exports until the Japanese came along, viewing
Volkswagen’s operations in Germany and Brazil.
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"The
good news and the bad,"
Forbes, October 12, 1981. Taped interview with Princeton’s
Ansley Coale, one of the world’s leading demographers, on the
results of the 1980 round of national censuses, which recorded the
first decline in the rate of world population growth in two
centuries.
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"Has Germany caught the American disease?",
Forbes, March 16, 1981. Interpretive essay and "round table"
of taped interviews with Economics Minister Otto Lambsdorff, Hermann
J. Abs of the Deutsche Bank and Eugen Loderer, head of the powerful
I. G. Metall metalworkers’ union. Portuguese version in the
Jornal do Brasil (Rio de Janeiro), March 8, 1981.
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"It’s
later than we think," Forbes,
February 2, 1981. Taped interview with Professor William J.
Abernathy of the Harvard Business School, an expert in automotive
manufacturing technology, on the nature of the Japanese cost
advantage on world car markets.
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"Recycling
Petrodollars: How Much More Can the System Take?"
(cover story), Forbes, June 23, 1980. An analysis of
"sovereign risk" international bank lending in the light of the
growth of world money aggregates during the 1970s and historical
experience, going back to the involvement of the Medici bank in
England’s War of the Roses in the 15th Century. Longer Portuguese
version published in Jornal do Brasil, June 8, 1980. French
version in L’Expansion (Paris), November 7, 1980. Spanish
version in Mercado (Buenos Aires), July 31, 1980.
> English
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"It’s
a moving target, Gentlemen,"
Forbes, November 10, 1980. Taped interview with Charles Gray,
head of the Environmental Protection Agency laboratory setting
automotive safety, pollution and mileage standards, predicting a
further slide in the competitiveness of the U.S. car industry if
greater design innovations are not forthcoming.
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"The
economy’s problem: it doesn’t pay to invest,"
Forbes, March 19, 1979. Taped interview with one of the
world’s leading develovepment economists,
Arthur Lewis of Princeton University. Portuguese version, oriented
more toward problems of developing countries, published in Jornal
do Brasil (Caderno Especial), December 17, 1979.
"Caminhos
para Rondônia",
American
Universities Field Staff,
February/March, 1979.
|
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"A
Cheerleader’s Report: Guerrilla Movements in Latin America,"
The New York Times Book Review, March 28, 1971. A review of
Richard Gott’s book.
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America
Latina: "El Pueblo de Dios."
Caracas: Monte Avila Editores, 1971 (in Spanish). Analysis of
revolutionary movements in Latin American Catholicism.
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"Latin
America: The Church Militant,"
Commentary,
April 1970. Somewhat different Spanish and German versions have
appeared in Mundo Nuevo (Paris-Buenos Aires) No. 48, June
1970 and in Monat (Frankfurt) August 1970. An essay on the
revolutionary and post-Conciliar movements in Latin American
Catholicism. A greatly expanded version of this essay, together with
an earlier report on the Catholic Church in revolutionary Cuba (The
New Leader, September 14, 1964), appears as a book in Spanish,
America Latina: "El Pueblo de Dios", published by Monte Avila
Editores, Caracas, January 1971.
> English
> Print Version
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"The
Failure of the Revolution and the Death of the Revolutionist",
The New York Times Book Review, July 27, 1969. Review of two
books on the circumstances of Che Guevara’s defeat and death.
|
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"Rockefeller’s
Unfortunate Trip South,"
The World Street Journal, (editorial page), June 12, 1969.
Political commentary.
|
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"Guerrilla
Saint",
(not my title), The New York Times Book Review, May 5, 1968.
A critical appraisal of Che Guevara’s political writings.
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"The
Legacy of Che Guevara,"
Commentary, December 1967. French version published in Esprit
(Paris), September 1969. Book version published in Bruce Mazlish et.
al., eds., Revolution. New York: Macmillan, 1971. A survey of the
failure of the Castroite rural guerrilla movements in the 1960s in
Latin America, culminating in Che Guevara’s death in Bolivia.
> English
> Print Version
>Français
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"Revolution
without Revolutionaries,"
The Nation. August 22, 1966. Based on first-hand reporting on
guerrilla movements in Latin America in 1965-66.
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