Shoppers here with a notion of what items cost abroad need to brace themselves when buying a Samsung Galaxy S4 phone: the same model that costs $615 in the United States is nearly double that in Brazil. An even bigger shock awaits parents needing a crib: the cheapest one at Tok & Stok costs over $440, more than six times the price of a similarly made item at Ikea in the United States.
For Brazilians seething with
resentment over wasteful spending by the country’s political elite, the high
prices they must pay for just about everything — a large cheese pizza can cost
almost $30 — only fuel their ire.
“People get angry because we
know there are ways to get things cheaper; we see it elsewhere, so we know
there must be something wrong here,” said Luana Medeiros, 28, who works in the
Education Ministry.
Brazil’s street protests grew
out of a popular campaign against bus fare increases. Residents of São Paulo
and Rio de Janeiro spend a much larger share of their salaries to ride the bus
than residents of New York or Paris. Yet the price of transportation is just
one example of the struggles that many Brazilians face in making ends meet,
economists say.
Renting an apartment in
coveted areas of Rio has become more expensive than in Oslo, the capital of
oil-rich Norway. Before the protests, soaring prices for basic foods like
tomatoes prompted parodies of President Dilma Rousseff and her economic
advisers.
Inflation stands at about 6.4
percent, with many in the middle class complaining that they are bearing the
brunt of price increases. Limiting the authorities’ maneuvering room, the
popular indignation is festering at a time when huge stimulus projects are
failing to lift the economy from a slowdown, raising the specter of stagflation
in Latin America’s largest economy.
“Brazil is on the verge of
recession now that the commodities boom is over,” said Luciano Sobral, an
economist and a partner in a São Paulo asset management firm who maintains an
irreverent economics blog under the name the Drunkeynesian. “This is making it
impossible to ignore the high prices which plague Brazilians, especially those
who cannot easily afford to travel abroad for buying sprees where things are
cheaper.”
Brazil’s sky-high costs can be
attributed to an array of factors, including transportation bottlenecks that
make it expensive to get products to consumers, protectionist policies that
shield Brazilian manufacturers from competition and a legacy of consumers
somewhat inured to relatively high inflation, which remains far below the 2,477
percent reached in 1993, before a drastic restructuring of the economy.
But economists say much of the blame for the stunningly high prices can be placed on a dysfunctional tax system that prioritizes consumption taxes, which are relatively easy to collect, over income taxes.
Alexandre Versignassi, a
writer who specializes in deciphering Brazil’s tax code, said companies were
grappling with 88 federal, state and municipal taxes, a number of which are
charged directly to consumers. Keeping accountants on their toes, the Brazilian
authorities issue an estimated 46 new tax rules every day, he said.
Making matters worse for many
poor and middle-class Brazilians, loopholes enable the rich to avoid taxation
on much of their income; wealthy investors, for instance, can avoid taxes on dividend
income, and partners in private companies are taxed at a much lower rate than
many regular employees.
The result is that many
products made in Brazil, like automobiles, cost much more here than in the
far-flung countries that import them. One example is the Gol, a subcompact car
produced by Volkswagen at a factory in the São Paulo metropolitan area. A
four-door Gol with air-conditioning sells for about $16,100 here, including
taxes. In Mexico, the equivalent model, made in Brazil but sold to Mexicans as
the Nuevo Gol, costs thousands of dollars less.
The ability of many Brazilians
to afford such cars reflects positive economic changes over the past decade,
like the rise of millions of people from grinding poverty and a decline in
unemployment, which is now at historically low levels. Salaries climbed during
that time, with per-capita income now about $11,630, as measured by the World
Bank, compared with $6,990 in neighboring Colombia. But Brazil finds itself far
below developed nations like Canada, where the per-capita income is $50,970.
As a result, a resident of São
Paulo, Brazil’s financial capital, has to work an average of 106 hours to buy
an iPhone, while someone in Brussels labors 54 hours to buy the same product,
according to a global study of wages by the investment bank UBS. To buy a Big
Mac, a resident here has to work 39 minutes, compared with 11 minutes for a
resident of Chicago.
Stroll into any international
airport in Brazil, and such imbalances are vividly on display, with thousands
of residents packing into flights each day for shopping trips to countries
where goods are substantially cheaper.
Even though the Brazilian
currency, the real, has weakened against the dollar this year (it currently
stands at about 2.20 to the dollar), Brazilians spent $2.2 billion abroad in
May, the highest amount on record for the month since the central bank began
tracking such data in 1969.
Eyeing this market, some
travel agents have begun tailoring trips to Miami for clients eager to buy baby
products like digital monitors, strollers, pacifiers, even Pampers wipes, which
in Brazil cost almost three times as much as in the United States.
Seeking to prevent such
shopping binges from getting out of control, the federal police screen
travelers upon arrival, picking out people whose luggage appears to bulge with
too many items. If it can be proved that Brazilians spent over a certain limit
abroad, they are immediately forced to pay taxes on their purchases.
Such screening catches
foreigners, too. In May, the police at São Paulo’s international airport
arrested two American Airlines flight attendants, both American citizens, on
smuggling charges after they were found going through customs carrying a total
of 14 smartphones, 4 tablet computers, 3 luxury watches and several video
games. The smartphones were hidden in their underwear, the police said, and
were intended to be sold on the black market.
Before the protests began,
Brazil’s government had begun trying to combat price increases. The central
bank raised interest rates after an uproar over food prices this year
contributed to inflation fears. The authorities removed some taxes on some
products, like cars. Even so, inflation remains high while the economy remains
sluggish, leaving many Brazilians fuming about the high taxes embedded in the
price of products they buy.
A new federal law requiring
retailers to detail on receipts how much tax customers are being charged has
fed some of this anger. Fernando Bergamini, 38, a graphic designer, was stunned
after spending $92 one recent day on groceries like tomatoes, beans and
bananas, only to glance at his receipt and discover that $25 of that was in
taxes.
“It is shocking given the
services we receive for giving the government our money,” Mr. Bergamini said.
“Seeing it like this on a piece of paper makes me feel indignant.”
Lucy Jordan contributed reporting from Brasília, Taylor Barnes from Rio
de Janeiro, and Paula Ramon from São Paulo.
Simon Romero, The New York Times, 23-7-2013
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