ABSTRACT
Brazil’s and Mexico’s economies collapsed almost simultaneously in the early 1980s. Their respective outputs per worker remained in a state of near stagnation since then. We develop a comparative analysis to try to understand what went wrong. Macroeconomic magnitudes (capital accumulation and technical progress) exhibit more similarities than differences. These appear more starkly when productivity changes are analyzed at disaggregated levels: by regions, sectors of activity, tradability, firm size, and labormarket informality. Our empirical findings are consistent with a view that Brazil’s economic failure is associated to excessive protectionism; Mexico’s to heightened domestic polarization.
KEYWORDS:
Brazil; capital accumulation; labor productivity; Mexico