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Brazil Expecting 3.5% GDP Growth for 2005
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Indians from Brazil Against Piracy of Their Culture
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Old Age and Pension in Brazil and Other Countries
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Brazil's GDP Growth on Target
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Banks Upbeat about Brazil
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Brazil's GDP Grows 4.2% in First Half
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Brazil's Year Surplus Grows to US$ 22.1 Billion
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Brazil Wants New Rules for Intellectual Property
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Brazil's Industrial Capacity Nearing Its Limit
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In Brazil, from Drugs to Software, All Is Pirated
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Market in Brazil not Bullish for 2005
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Brazil's Debt Falls US$ 2 Bi, Still US$ 329.7 Bi
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PC Pirates Killed Computer Market in Brazil
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Brazil Market Upbeat Despite High Interests
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Brazil Betting on Dollar Falling and GDP Rising
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Rewrite Your Books. Brazil Grew in 2003.
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Brazil's Industry Leads Best Growth in 9 Years
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Brazil Join Forces with Mercosur Against Piracy
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Brazil Goes to War on Piracy
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Brazil to Grow 5.5% This Year
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Brazil's Lula Signs Public-Private Partnership Law
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Piracy in Brazil Is Annual $10 Billion Heist
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Brazil Wants Fair Profit for Biodiverse Areas
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Brazil's GDP Up 5.2%, Best in 10 Years
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For Minister Brazil's 5.2% GDP Shows a Healthy Economy
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Chinese and Korean Mafias Lead Piracy in Brazil
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Brazil Adopts 99 Measures to Stem US$ 30 Billion in Losses to Piracy
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IMF Urges Brazil to Fight Poverty and Inequality
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US Harms Brazil as Much as Pirates, Says Minister
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Brazil's Per Capital GDP Grows 3.7% to US$ 3,640
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Brazil Criticizes US for Postponing Piracy Verdict
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Group Urges U.S. Congress to Punish Brazil for Piracy
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U.S. GDP Scares Brazil's Bulls
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64% of Brazil's Software is Pirated. But US Has 10 Times More Losses.
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Brazil Industry and Services Shrink in First Quarter
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Brazil Betting Tight Credit Is Ending
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Brazilian Industry Blames High Interest Rates for Paltry GDP
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Some Banks Saying Brazil Won't Grow More than 2.5% in 2005
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500 Police from Brazil Out for Biopiracy and Animal Trafficking
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Economists Lower Brazil's 2005 GDP Growth Forecast to 3.27%
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Brazil Forecasts 4.5% GDP Growth and 4% Inflation for Next Three Years
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Brazil Launches Popular Campaign Against Biopiracy
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Brazil Lowers GDP Expectations from 4% to 3.12%
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Brazil Loses 1.5 Million Jobs a Year Due to Piracy
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US Group Asks for a Halt to Brazil's "State-Sponsored Piracy"
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Brazil Industry Urges War on Piracy
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Analysts See Lower Brazilian GDP
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Brazil Hopes Steep Fines Will Curb Biopiracy
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In Brazil, Piracy Is Now Organized Crime and Not a Social Issue
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Brazil's GDP Decelerates, But It Is Still Up 2.9%
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Brazil's Share of World Investment Grows from 1.7% to 3%
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Brazil Is World's 14th in GDP and 86th in Per Capita Income
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US$ 4 Million Worth of Chinese Pirate Goods Destroyed in Brazil
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US Calls Brazilian Economic Policy Extraodinary and Lula a Rare Leader
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Brazil Rises Anticipating Interest Cuts
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Brazil GDP Grows 4.3% in a Year
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GDP Good News Raises Hopes and Stocks in Brazil
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Brazil's Economy Hasn't Been That Good in Decades, Says Finance Minister
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Led by Mineral Extraction, Brazilian Industry Is Pulling Economy Up
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Lula Pats Himself on the Back for Brazil's Booming Economy
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Brazil Is Having a Hard Time Preventing International Biopiracy
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Brazil Drafts China and Mercosur into War on Piracy
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Brazil's GDP Grows 3.4%, Supermarket Sales Too by 2.6%
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Brazil Government Forecasting Lower 2005 GDP
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Higher Inflation and Lower GDP Make Investors Cautious in Brazil
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Brazil's Economy Shrinks, So Does Consumer Confidence
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IMF Applauds While Banks Lament Brazil's Economic Performance
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Brazil's GDP Fall, Worse Than Bad News
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Brazil Industry Calls Government Pigheaded for Refusing to Cut Interest Rates
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Brazil Destroys Half a Million CDs to Celebrate Anti-Piracy Day
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Brazil to Grow a Mere 2.3% in 2005, Says IPEA
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Low Dollar and High Interests Reduces Brazil's GDP to 2.5%
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Economist Betting Lower Interests Will Take Brazil from Slump
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Estimates for Brazil's Growth and Investments Fall Sharply
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Brazil's GDP Grows to US$ 609 Billion Up to September
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Central Bank Lowers Brazil's 2005 GDP Estimate from 3.4% to 2.6%
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Despite Recent Downturn, Brazil's GDP Totaled US$ 622 Billion Up to September
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Brazil Declares War to Piracy and Promises Zero Tolerance
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Brazil Starts Year by Burning 130,000 Pirated DVDs and CDs
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US Probe Concludes Brazil Is Seriously Fighting Piracy
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Brazil to Pay 13% of Debt Due in 2006. Rest to Be Renegotiated.
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Slow-Growing Brazil Is Holding Back LatAm's Expansion
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Forecast Still On: Brazil's GDP to Grow 3.4% This Year
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Brazil's Piracy Costs US Economy Close to US$ 1 Billion a Year, Says Group
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Brazil Launches Hip Campaign to Deter Piracy
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EU and 187 Other Countries Debate in Brazil How to Prevent Biopiracy
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Despite Low GDP Brazil's Economy Jumps from 15 to 11th Place in the World
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In LatAm's Poor Showing on Share of World GDP Brazil Does Best
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GDP Growth in LatAm: Argentina 7.3%, Venezuela 6%, Brazil 3.5%
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Brazilian Industry Raises Brazil's 2006 GDP Growth Estimate to 3.7%
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Industry Revises Brazil's Growth Up. GDP Expected to Grow 3.7%.
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Brazil Releases 3,000 Plant Species Names to Prevent Biopiracy
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Brazil's Agribusiness GDP Falls 6% in Three Years
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Brazil's GDP Grows 1.4% in First Quarter
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Lula Calls Brazil's GDP Growth "Excellent News"
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Brazil's Central Bank Bets on 4% GDP Growth and 4.3% Inflation
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Brazil's GDP Reaches US$ 215 Billion. Industry Brings US$ 76 Billion.
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IMF Predicts 3.5% Growth, But Brazil Says It Will Grow 4.5% in 2006
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Only 10% of Brazilians Belong to a Co-op. This Rate is 40% in Rich Countries.
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Brazil Gets Boost After 4.5% Growth Forecast for 2006
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Contrary to Experts Brazil's Finance Minister Forecasts a Minimum 4% GDP Growth
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Brazil's GDP Grows Meager 0.5% in Quarter. Lula Minimizes Poor Performance
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With World's Worst GDP Growth Brazil Sees 2006 Industry GDP Downgraded to 2%
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Brazil Blames Dismal GDP on Peoples' Love for Soccer
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Brazil Economy's Poor Showing Doesn't Hurt Lula's Mood or Popularity
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Brazil's Latest Growth Projection for 2006: No More than 3.3%
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Brazil Is Celebrating: Pirate PCs Fell from 73% to 48% of All Computers Sold
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Police Visit Brazilian Mall on Opening Day. 70% of Products Were Pirated
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Beyond Reelection: Brazil's Lula 2.0 Doesn't Sound Too Promising
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Fear of US Recession Lowers Brazil's Growth Expectation from 4% to 3.5%
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In Piracy, Brazil Is in Good Company: China, Russia and Turkey
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Brazilian Police Sweep 13 States in Search of Software Pirates
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Brazil to Grow 3% or Less This Year, Say Experts
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Tired of Being Emerging Power Brazil Will Go Over the Speed Limit, Vows Lula
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Tax Cuts and Spending Caps to Make Brazil Grow 5% a Year
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Brazil's Per Capita Income Tumbles from 41% to 28% of First World's Take
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Brazil Has to Grow 5.2% in Last Quarter to Reach Government's Forecast
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Brazil's Lula Orders 5% Growth, But Doubting Thomases Abound
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Brazilian Industry Tired of Growing Slower than Rest of the World
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2007 Forecast: Brazil Will Grow 3.4% and Export Record US$ 150 Billion
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2006 Brazilian GDP Downgraded to 2.74%
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Brazil's Lula Unveils Today His 5%-a-Year Growth Package
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Brazil's 70% of GDP Debt Puts It Far from Investment Grade
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By 2050 Brazilians Will Be as Rich as Europeans Were in 2005
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Brazil's 2.9% Growth Is the Worst in South America
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Brazil Charged with Leading a World Gang of Intellectual Property Predators
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New Official Calculations Make Brazil World's Tenth Largest Economy
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With New Methodology Brazil's 2006 Growth Jumps from 2.9% to 3.7%
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A Bullish Brazil Betting on 4.2% Growth for 2007
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Brazil: More than Half of São Paulo Population Buys Pirated Products
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Experts Say Brazil Won't Grow More than 4.1% This Year
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Group Asks US Congress to Punish Brazil and Thai Drug Piracy
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Market Analysts Up Their Bets for Brazilian Economy
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Key Interest Rate Cut in Brazil Leads to Higher GDP Forecast
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Brazil's GDP Grows 4.3% in First Quarter Reaching US$ 307 Billion
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Less than 1% of Brazilians Own 54% of Brazil's Assets
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Forecast for Brazil: 4.5% GDP Growth with 4% Inflation
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Brazil GDP Expected to Grow 4.71% This Year and 4.33% the Next
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Led by Industry Brazil's GDP Grows 5.3% This Year
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Brazil Pleasantly Surprised by Year-End Numbers: Industry GDP Is Up 5.3%
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Brazil Becomes World's 6th Largest Economy with Twice China's Per Capita GDP
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Heated Domestic Demand Ups Brazil GDP to 5.2% This Year
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Brazil's Credit Volume Goes Past Half a Trillion Dollars, 34% of GDP
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Trouble in US and EU Won't Slow Down Brazil, Says Minister
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Brazil's GDP Grows 5.4% While Investments Jump 13%
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Brazil Fears Inflation While GDP Grows 5.8%
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Brazil's Central Bank Projecting 4.8% Growth for Country
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Brazil's Credit Volume Reaches 36.5% of GDP, Best in 13 Years
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Brazilians Are Paying 54% a Year in Interest for Personal Credit
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Brazil's Credit to GDP Ratio Reaches 14-Year High: US$ 600 Billion
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43% of Brazil's GDP Represented in Business Gathering in Portugal
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Brazil Sees 5,3% Growth with Domestic Market Making Up for Export Losses
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UN Hints Brazil May Grow a Mere 0.5% in 2009
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Brazil Grows 6.8% and Won't Go in Recession, Says Minister
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Lula Still Hopeful Brazil Will Grow 4% in 2009
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Forecasts for Brazil: 2.5% Growth, 5% Inflation, Dollar at 2.25 Reais
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After Zero or Negative Growth Brazil to Expand 4%, Says Veteran Guru
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Brazil Finally Admits It Might Get Stuck on Zero GDP Growth in 2009
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Stuck in Recession Brazil Creates Its Own Stimulus Package
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Brazilian Industry Sees Brazil's GDP Falling 0.4% This Year
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Bleak: Less than 1% of Brazil's Small Businesses Are Innovative
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Brazil Vows to Spend 1.5% of Its GDP, About US$ 22 Billion, in Science
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Finance Minister Foresees 4% Growth for Brazil in Coming 12 Months
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Brazil's GDP Grows 1.9% Compared to First Quarter
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Brazilians' Buying Spree Yanked Brazil Out of Recession
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2009 Brazil GDP Grows 0.01% and Industry Contracts 7.5%, Say Markets
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IMF Revises Forecast and Says Brazil in 2010 Will Grow Over 3.5%
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Brazil Loses US$ 230 Billion a Year or 1/3 of GDP to Piracy |
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Written by Cristiane Ribeiro
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Friday, 11 November 2005 |
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The secretary of Economic Rights in Brazil's Ministry of Justice, Daniel Goldberg, reaffirmed, Thursday, November 10, that piracy in Brazil is responsible for economic losses on the order of 30% of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP).
By this calculation, last year's losses amounted to around US$ 230 billion. For this reason, Goldberg argued, the campaign against counterfeit merchandise is one of the priorities of President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva's Administration. Goldberg, who participated this week in the Second Cycle of Studies of Regulation, in Rio de Janeiro, said that, besides the Federal Police and the Federal Revenue agency, the government possesses a Council to Combat Piracy and a Consumer Protection and Defense Department - all of them with the mission of suppressing the black market. He said that the National Consumer Protection System (Sistema Nacional de Defesa do Consumidor), which can be accessed on the Internet, provides information on counterfeit products that represent safety hazards to the population. Goldberg explained that the information is updated on-line with the help of ten state Consumer Protection agencies (Procons), as the list of counterfeit products grows daily. According to the secretary, the most flagrant falsification is of CDs, DVDs, clothes, and sneakers. Nevertheless, there is also piracy involving goods like eyeglasses, lenses, medicines, and, most recently, scalpels. "It is recognized internationally that there have never been as many efforts to combat piracy as the ones implemented in Lula's Administration. Piracy is one of the priorities of Federal Police action, and the government created the Council to Combat Piracy as a priority strategic organ of interministerial coordination," he added. Agência Brasil
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The secretary of Economic Rights in Brazil's Ministry of Justice, Daniel Goldberg, reaffirmed, Thursday, November 10, that piracy in Brazil is responsible for economic losses on the order of 30%.
The politicians take what's left behind. The 70%. Ain't that fun??