Explaining why government-controlled prices rose so much

03/01/2006 - 21h08

Mylena Fiori
Reporter Agência Brasil

Brasília – Between May 1995 and November 2005, prices in economic segments controlled by the government (such as telephones, energy and gasoline) rose almost four times as much as prices in the private sector (340% compared to 93%). How did this happen?

Marcelo Saintive, the deputy head of the Secretariat of Economic Oversight at the Ministry of Finance explains that the causes were: privatizations which required price adjustments to be viable (that is, attractive to investors), the devaluation of Brazilian currency in 1999 (it slumped over 30% against the dollar) and higher petroleum prices.

Saintive says that those shocks have now be absorbed by the Brazilian economy and that the tendency is for government-controlled prices to rise less in the future.

Translation: Allen Bennett