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Strategies & Market Trends : Telebras (TBH) & Brazil
TBH 0.956+6.7%3:59 PM EST

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To: wl9839 who wrote (11897)1/17/1999 11:31:00 PM
From: wl9839  Read Replies (1) of 22640
 
Let us hope that Malan is right about the Congressional vote this week.

Sunday January 17, 7:30 pm Eastern Time

Brazil's Malan sees Congress voting
fiscal reforms

BRASILIA, Jan 17 (Reuters) - Brazilian Finance Minister Pedro
Malan said in an interview published on Sunday that it was not
true Congress was preventing urgent fiscal reforms from being
approved, and that a crucial vote would take place this week.

Malan also told Epoca news magazine some of the terms of a $41.5 billion bailout led by the International Monetary Fund and the U.S. Treasury would have to be reviewed following the devaluation of the real currency, ''but not the fiscal part.''

Epoca did not make clear whether it spoke to Malan before or after Friday's free-float of the real, once the proud linchpin of an economic stabilization plan that ended soaring inflation. Most of
Malan's comments appeared to refer to last Wednesday's attempt at a controlled 8 percent devaluation.

''People always say the fiscal stabilization program isn't working. Many analysts say Congress isn't responding to the program. That's not correct; it's not true,'' Malan said.

Investor patience with the world's eighth biggest economy ran out this month because of a series of indications that Brazil was having insurmountable trouble trying to narrow its 8 percent of gross
domestic product public sector deficit.

In December, Congress rejected a law that would have increased pension contributions from civil servants and levied pension contributions on retired civil servants. That blow was followed this month by a unilateral debt moratorium by Minas Gerais state on debt owed to the federal government.

Malan said the amount of money involved was negligible but the use of the word moratorium spooked traders. ''It's an instinctive reaction for a trader,'' he said.

Malan said the pension contribution proposal would be put to a new vote in Congress this week after government allies reached an accord on the measure.

He also noted that 18 of Brazil's 27 state governors had declared they would not default on theirdebt to Brasilia.

In addition, concerns that a special tax on financial transactions, known as the CPMF or check tax, would not start to be collected for several months should be removed by proposals to fill the income
gap with funds from elsewhere.
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