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Brazil lower house approves bill to cap public spending growth

Dubbed the “New Fiscal Regime” by the government, the austerity
Luciano Nascimento reports from Agência Brasil
Published on 11/10/2016 - 10:29
Brasília
Brasília - Sessão extraordinária destinada a analisar a PEC 241/16, do Executivo, que cria teto de despesas primárias federais reajustado pelo IPCA (Fabio Rodrigues Pozzebom/Agência Brasil)
© Fabio Rodrigues Pozzebom/Agência Brasil
Brasília - Sessão extraordinária destinada a analisar a PEC 241/16, do Executivo, que cria teto de despesas primárias federais reajustado pelo IPCA (Fabio Rodrigues Pozzebom/Agência Brasil)

Dubbed the “New Fiscal Regime” by the government, the measure(PEC 241) will limit the annual growth rate of federal spending in the next 20 years to the previous year's inflation rate.Fabio Rodrigues Pozzebom/Agência Brasil

The Chamber of Deputies on Monday night (Oct. 10) voted 366-111 (with two abstentions) to approve a constitution amendment bill that will cap public spending for the next 20 years. The draft must now undergo a second-round vote on the lower house floor before it proceeds to Senate. Dubbed the “New Fiscal Regime” by the government, the measure will limit the annual growth rate of federal spending in the next 20 years to the previous year's inflation rate.

If the government fails to stay within this limit, it will be prohibited from hiring staff, running civil service entry examinations, raising staff pay, and creating or changing government jobs that incur additional costs.

For opposition lawmakers, limiting federal spending to the inflation rate is not the way to boost the economy, and will actually hurt investment in healthcare and education. Moreover, they argue, it is an issue that should have been discussed with the population. The leader for the Workers' Party (PT) at the lower house, Afonso Florence, said the proposal will “dismantle all public policy, the social security system, SUS [the public healthcare system], and state-run higher education.”

Legacy

Government allies contend that the budget crisis was “inherited” from the Workers' Party administrations that preceded the current government. “The PT was a spendthrift,” said Deputy Duarte Nogueira of the Brazilian Social Democracy Party (PSDB).

They maintain that the so-called “New Fiscal Regime” will drive economic growth and, contrary to what the opposition says, will not take away funding from health and education.

“Next year, will be adding an extra $3.1 billion to healthcare alone,” said Deputy Baleia Rossi, leader of President Temer's PMDB party. “Similarly, all funding for education policy is guaranteed. We're committed to the floor not the ceiling. These lies won't stand.”

According to the draft of the austerity proposal, as of 2018, the funds for these two areas will no longer account for a fixed share of the total government revenue; instead, their growth pace will be limited to the inflation rate like all other costs.

Thank-you statement

In a statement thanking deputies for passing the amendment, President Michel Temer said “restoring fiscal balance is not a goal in itself, but a means to restore growth, reduce interest rates, and revive employment.” According to him, a balanced budget means a guarantee that there will be enough funding for anti-poverty welfare policy, health, and education in the future.


Translated by Mayra Borges


Fonte: Brazil lower house approves bill to cap public spending growth