Bazillionaires: Chasing Dreams of Wealth in an American Country by Alex Cuadros, is an interesting look at Brazil and its recent development, growth and struggles, by examining the wealthiest individuals in the country. Cuadros is a journalist for Bloomberg who specializes in reporting on the wealthy, and helps develop Bloomberg's list of wealthiest individuals. He has also lived and worked in Brazil for decades. This allows him to look closely at the wealthiest in Brazil, and how they affect the countries growth, struggles and income equality.
Brazil is a fascinating country that is not well reported in most mainstream Western press, nor examined closely by academia in accessible circles. There are very few books on Brazil in wide print, and most people only hear about Brazilian soccer, riots and corruption, or the widespread deforestation of the Amazon rainforest, and how outrageous this is to citizens of other nations who probably could not name a single city or Province in the country. Cuadros' book takes a similar approach, and does so it seems to help reach a wider audience. This is appreciated, as although I would love to know more about Brazil, one needs to start somewhere.
The book jumps around, starting with the controversy surrounding Eike Batista, one of the America's richest billionairs, and a speculative genius who has gained investment dollars for oil rig projects, railroads, steel factories, communications lines, agricultural production facilities and beauty lines, often without actually developing the business. The man is a brilliant fundraiser, and can sell a project all over the world, even if returns are not guaranteed. He is also a popular figure in Brazil, once being married to a famous model, and also sporting close political connections and a Donald Trump-style oratory tradition (blust and blunder). In 2015, his son Thor hit and killed a biker on the road, out to buy groceries for his wife on her birthday. This controversy highlighted the contrasting living conditions of Brazilian rich and poor, and the different treatment certain people receive from the government - Thor's son should not have been driving in the first place, as he had received a request number of speeding tickets to have his license revoked. His son had previously hit and injured an elderly man a few years before. And two months after the fatal accident, Thor was publically drag racing in a Formula-style race.
Cuadros looks at other Billionaires in brief - media tycoons who create novelas in Brazil, old military barons, and so on, but the main focus is on Batista and his wealth. It tracks his dizzying rise, and the slow and piecemeal fire sale of his business empire in recent years. The style used is to contrast this with the whims and fancies of a nation many do not understand. Much like China or Russia, many westerners have a lot to criticize in the BRIC nations, and developing nations in general. Corruption and nepotism are big parts of the developmentalist ideals of Brazil's business leaders and politicians. This is why Luis de Silva and Dilma Rousseff, nominally socialist politicians, can cozy up to old military hardliners from the era of dictatorship. It is for the greater good, in their opinion, and who could disagree? Brazil's rise has been fairly rapid. Although not as glamorous as China's double digit decade, Brazil has risen to become the world's top exporter of Coffee and Beef, pulp and more. It has modernized its industrial base using a developmentalist mentality, ie. close government control of the banking system, periodic assistance for struggling industries, and so on. It also engages in American-style libertarian views on wealth. Many wealthy Brazilians will die on the cross before claiming they inherited their wealth, and will play up the self made aspects of their business empires, even though they may take loans, favourable interest rates, or other forms of support from the government. Many billionaires are also philanthropic, and will donate to poverty reduction programs, or to buy equipment for government agencies or build schools, roads and so on.
This contrasts with corruption allegations which have been sneeringly grabbed by Western press over the last few years. Brazilian politicians and business leaders are closely related (sometimes literally related) and so their is much insider knowledge being traded around, much cooperation and agency capture, and favourable contracts, financial support and so on. These allegations closely mirror other developing nations, where cooperation between various actors is necessary to support economic growth, but can also be detrimental to the transparency of the states politics and economics. Brazil struggles with this especially as a democratic nation, where it is unable to crack down as hard as China can on corruption (or indeed, exploit is closely like other nations do). Cuadros claims this system closely resembles the development style of early USA, with tycoons who have lots of leeway to make decisions, and are closely connected to local and federal politicians.
This style of development is also chafing in its income inequality. Most Brazilians live in poverty closely akin to what one might see in China or India or Mexico. Services like electricity, telephone access, internet access, and even road or port access, are all relatively unknown. The booming Soy fields of Mato Grosso, for example, have to ship product over distances, and through terrain, that increases the price of product more so than shipping it over the Pacific Ocean to market in Asia. Brazil has its own class of migrant workers, moving from boom town to boom town, working in beef, soy farms, coffee plantations or the lumber industry, for example. This contrasts with the New Rich in Brazil, who drive sports cars, have apartments in Miami, Florida, and have dozens of bodyguards at their disposal. One can see why Brazil is often seething with unrest, as recent protests against Dilma Rousseff have shown, these tensions can erupt into violent protest and unrest. Brazil suffers from a high crime rate, and drug gangs operate as quasi-governments in favelas all over the country, providing protection, services and support for local businesses and residents. They are also heavily armed, and police executing operations often look more like soldiers storming a rebel stronghold then police-man. And the drug gangs reciprocate. They shoot back through rubble, fire rocket propelled grenades at helicopters, and melt into the general population as unrecognizable as local residents - often because they are.
Brazil, clearly, struggles with an image issue. Its poverty issues are terrifying to many westerners, but are not any more onerous than those of other developing nations. Its other big issue is environmental. US politicians and celebrities have gone on camera saying that the rainforests of Brazil are not Brazilian, they are global territory. This has as little traction in Brazil as a Chinese politician claiming Wall Street as "global property" for its financial importance, and criticizing US politicians for being protectionist. Although I am a staunch environmentalist myself, I can feel the resentment the global environmental movement can have on those wishing to bring themselves out of poverty, and develop a nation that can mirror the West in its success. This is a thorny issue, as lumber and land are important for Brazil's resource driven economy. How can one develop resources and compete globally, to bring millions out of poverty, if they are unable to export any resources? These questions remained unanswered.
So how did the book do? Cuadros has done a great job analyzing a country that is not well known in much of the rest of the world. Although Brazil has been struggling of late, it is still one of the biggest and most resource rich countries in the world, with a few hundred million citizens to boot. It is South America's China, and it is always strange to me why it is ignored so. Cuadros seeks to reverse this issue, bringing to light Brazil's relationship with its rich and poor, and contrasting this mostly to the rise and fall of Eike Batista's (and a select few others) business empire. I enjoyed this style enough, but would have preferred a more straightforward analysis of Brazil's economy and internal politics. This book leaves a lot to be desired for me, and in a way, that is a good thing. It will make the reader want to learn more on Brazil, and seek new information, or may make them read more of it in the news (and so on). As a reader who already does this however, I was hoping for a more in depth look at Brazil's economy, and this book could have used it. The anecdotal stories on Batista and his life were adequately entertaining, but do not wholly cover up the lack of concrete substance. I think I was not the target audience for this book, but appreciate the time and effort Cuadros has put into writing it. This is a subject worth learning more about, and Brazillionaires is most certainly a good introduction on Brazil that may take the average reader down new paths. Don't let my three stars throw you off if you are looking to start somewhere on Brazil. This is a very commendable place to begin.