Synopses & Reviews
Even before the subprime crisis of 2008, economic growth in the United States was steadily decelerating. Over the eighty-year span from 1929 to 2009, average annual GDP growth was 3.6 percent, but the ten-year growth rate was only 1.9 percent and the five-year growth rate was less than one percent. With unfunded Medicare and Social Security liabilities growing at a rate of 33 percent of GDP ($5 trillion annually), the U.S. faces the greatest solvency crisis in history. Ever shrinking incomes and an erratic stock market combine with a widening gap between spending promises and actual resources to create a perfect storm of downward mobility.
As the U.S. grows more bankrupt by the day, many Americans are looking for investing opportunities abroad, but the familiar, traditional "advanced" temperate-zone economies of Europe and Asia seem just as bleak. In Brazil Is the New America: How Brazil Offers Upward Mobility in a Collapsing World, acclaimed entrepreneur James Davidson presents another option, explaining how Brazil has emerged as the new destination for investment success.
While the United States remains in the throes of financial crisis, Brazil has already undergone its own period of wrenching adjustment and has come out the other side all the stronger for it. Having learned its inflation lesson, Brazil is now reinstituting high-interest credit, paving the way for impressive growth prospects over the next decade, while transforming the country into an investor's dream.
With a population just two-thirds the size of that of the U.S., Brazil has created over 15 million jobs in the past eight years, while the U.S. lost jobs. Combining energy independence and vast natural resources, including 60 percent of the world's unused arable land, and 25 percent of its fresh water, Brazil is the first tropical superpower, offering a whole new frontier for growth. Add in a young population, a relatively underleveraged consumer economy, and a per capita GDP that has more than doubled in the last decade, and you have a recipe for investment success.
The awakening of the long slumbering giants, China and India, will profoundly reshape the world economy, and one country is sure to benefitBrazil. Whether you're looking to relocate yourself and your entire business, or simply want to put your money to work somewhere that still has the potential to grow, Brazil Is the New America tells you about everything you need to get started.
Synopsis
The US faces its greatest solvency crisis ever with unfunded Medicare, Social Security along with threats to the stock market and diminishing wealth in the US. Steadily falling income in the US is another concern. According to the author, people need to get off the “sinking ship” and go to Brazil. Unlike the US economy, the economic situation in Brazil is still quite strong, in part because the consumer economy is relatively non-leveraged. Per capital GDP in Brazil has more than doubled over the past ten years. Cost structure of employment is generally lower than in the US. Brazilians are uneasy about debt and many people there wouldn’t think of buying a home unless they can pay for it in cash.
Synopsis
Look to Brazil for safe, stable investmentsAs the future of the American economy seems to get bleaker by the day, it is tempting to look abroad for business opportunities. Europe and Asia don't provide much hope, but what about somewhere that's both closer to home and sunny year-round? In Brazil is the New America: How Brazil Offers Upward Mobility in a Collapsing World, James D. Davidson shows that the current financial situation in Brazil is a haven for those looking to make money in a world in turmoil.
With a population just 62 percent the size of that of the US, Brazil has added 15,023,633 jobs over the past eight years, while the US has lost millions. In a world burdened by bankrupt governments and aging populations, Brazil is solvent, with two people of working age for every dependent. In a world of "Peak Oil" Brazil is energy independent, with 70 billion barrels of oil, 60% of the world's unused arable land, and 15% of its fresh water. Comparatively non-leveraged—and with significant room for growth and expansion, as well as vast natural resources, Brazil is a haven of opportunity.
Written by James D. Davidson, the editor/publisher of Strategic Investment and cofounder of Agora and the media outlet, Newsmax, Brazil is the New America details:
- How the original "America" now embodies the brightest hope for realizing the American Dream while the "Old America" is headed for a dramatic decline in the standard of living
- Investment opportunities not only for those willing to relocate, but anyone who can consider investing there
- The cost structure of employment in Brazil versus the United States
Brazil has already learned its lesson about the dangers of inflation. Cash has taken the place of credit, and high interest rate returns are now the norm.
Synopsis
Praise for
Brazil Is the New America"This is a book about your future. If you wonder why Morgan Stanley chief investment strategist David Darst warns that Brazil is becoming more like what America used to be and America is becoming more like what Brazil used to be, look no further. James Davidson explains it perfectly."
—Donald Trump
"There's a lot that Americans can learn from other countries. In this book, James Davidson offers an insightful analysis of the surprisingly promising Brazilian economy. You will learn how 'the country of the future' holds promise whether you're an investor or an entrepreneur."
—Chris Ruddy, CEO and President, Newsmax Media
"Brazil Is the New America is far better than the title suggests. The title tells you that you're going to find out why Brazil is the next America, which you think you already know, but the book gives readers far more—the hidden role of BTUs, the Little Ice Age, and 'debtism.' In a way, it's a shame to find these tucked away in a book on Brazil. I read the Financial News and the Financial Times every day—Roubini, Ferguson, Grant, Hendry, Wolf—but Jim Davidson's macro-historical writing is the best. It is original. It is dense. It is clever."
—Bill Bonner, bestselling author
"Today's default view of the future says all prophets are false prophets: since we cannot divine determinate trends, we ought to learn to cope with uncontrollable surprises. In Brazil Is the New America, James Davidson wisely rejects this prevailing attitude, making definite forecasts with uncanny prescience. America's preeminence will give way as Davidson predicts, unless we confront and reverse the decelerating economic progress he so deftly describes."
—Peter Thiel, entrepreneur, investor, and philanthropist; cofounder, PayPal
"James Davidson has written the best account of the development of the Brazilian economy, which is now outstripping the United States. I strongly recommend Brazil Is the New America: How Brazil Offers Upward Mobility in a Collapsing World."
—Lord William Rees-Mogg, former Editor, The Times of London
About the Author
James Dale Davidson is a successful entrepreneur who edits Strategic Investment. A cofounder, with Bill Bonner, of Agora Inc. and a cofounder of the media outlet Newsmax.com, Mr. Davidson is the author of five books. He defied conventional wisdom to forecast the Japanese stock market crash of 1989, the fall of the Berlin Wall, and the collapse of the Soviet Union.
Table of Contents
Preface xiii
Acknowledgments xv
Chapter 1 The World in 2050 1
A Preview of the Future 2
A Decrease in Productive Capacity 5
Squandering Prosperity 9
Chapter 2 The Original America Is the New Brazil 11
The Country of the Future 14
The Origins of America 20
The Mythic Brazil 24
A Difficult Dream to Realize 26
Can America’s Destiny Be Fulfilled in Brazil? 28
Chapter 3 How Brazil Became Endowed for Prosperity in a Collapsing World 35
The Impact of Topography 36
Yesterday’s Limitations as Today’s Strengths 45
Three Radical Changes 53
Predatory Government
Growth Imperatives Lead to Fiat Money and Runaway Debt
Energy Surges Alter Spatial Configurations of Economies
Chapter 4 Prosperity and Energy Density: The Hidden Role of BTUs in the Rise and Fall of Economies 67
Denser Energy Equals a Rise in Prosperity 68
Coal and Adam Smith 69
Going Forward or Backward?
The Phases of Extracting Energy 73
Phase One: An Abundance of Wood
Phase Two: An Abundance of Coal
Phase Three: The Original Petroleum Industry
The Shift from Coal to Oil and World War I 75
Peak Oil and Declining Money 79
Declining Energy and Systemic Collapse
The Real Symptoms of Peak Oil
The Competition for Prosperity 84
Expensive Oil Remains
A 665,000 Percent Increase in the Price of a BTU?
The SS Great Britain Sails Again 87
“Yes! We Have No Bananas”
Chapter 5 Malthus Again: Population Pressures, Global Cooling, and the Coming Dark Age 91
The Dynamics of Weather 93
Not Wrong, but Early 96
Waiting for Our Malthusian Moment 100
The Next Little Ice Age 104
“The Dog That Did Not Bark” 114
Putting Two and Two Together 117
A New Maunder Minimum 124
Dearth, Insanity, and Revolution 125
Chapter 6 Deficit Attention Disorder: How the Perverse Logic of Debtism Promotes the Illusion of Democratic Consensus but Devastates the Economy 131
How Debtism Changed the World 132
Debtism Helps Politicians Manipulate You 142
The U.S. Budget Deficits Would Make Greece Blush 144
Worse than the Great Depression 149
The Collapse of the Boom 156
Chapter 7 “Rome” Falls, Again: Economic Closure and Financial Repression as the United States Faces Bankruptcy 159
Slip-Sliding Down the Road to National Insolvency 160
The Destruction of the Middle Class
Pre-Industrial Growth Rates
Are You Ready for Taxes to Double?
Welcome to the Second Decline and Fall of “Rome” 167
The New Berlin Wall
Americans as the New Illegal Emigrants 172
Chapter 8 The Sunny Side of the Leverage Cycle: How Brazil’s Legacy of Hyperinflation Prepared It to Prosper in a Post-Dollar World 175
You Are in Steerage on a Sinking Ship 178
Stopping Runaway Spending 181
Important Lessons from Hyperinflation 185
Minimal Bank Capital Ratios: A Crisis Waiting to Happen
U.S. Reserve Requirements: A System Failure
The Political Roots of the Economic Crisis
How Brazilians Became the New Scots
Crash-Proofing the System Brazilian Style
America’s $104 Trillion Problem
Brazil and the Taylor Rule
Leverage and Growth 195
GDP Gains Based on Income Growth 196
Chapter 9 A Bounty of Water and Land: Brazil as History’s First Tropical Superpower 199
Brazil and Water 199
Sustainability
A World of Water Shortages
Renewable Water
Brazil Reinvents Agriculture 206
The New Breadbasket of the World Diversification
Irrigation
A History of Small and Large Farms
A Stunning Increase
Chapter 10 Reversing the Gap: Brazil as the World’s Emerging Energy Superpower 221
The Zero Sum Growth Game 222
Grim Prospects 226
Pulling the Plug 228
Submerging Economies 231
Rio Is the New Houston 233
Leading the Way in Renewable Energy 238
Let There Be Light 242
Declining Power after an Energy Transition 244
Chapter 11 Demographic Turbocharge: Brazil’s Coming Decades of Miracle Growth 247
China Takes a Dive? 251
Brazil’s Demographic Bonus 253
A Laboratory for New Products 257
A Real Cultural Melting Pot 258
Chapter 12 Back to the Future: What Could Go Wrong 261
Is Brazil Following the United States
Too Closely? 262
Weight 264
Effects on Health Care 268
Diversity Issues 270
Infrastructure 274
Corruption 277
Bureaucracy 278
Custo Brasil 281
Credit 284
Chapter 13 On the Outside Looking In: Making the Move toward Prosperity 289
Conclusions 290
Healthcare
Education
Military
“Plagiarize, Plagiarize, Why Not Use Your Eyes?” 298
Coming Soon: Financial Repression 299
“Revocation or Denial of Passport in Case of Certain Unpaid Taxes” From the Empire Settlement Act to Unsettling Choices 302
Looking at BRICs 304
Untapped Resources
Climate: Brazil Stays Warm in the Little Ice Age
U.S. Farmers Lead the Migration to Brazil
Making the Move 308
About the Author 311
Index 313