Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7czq Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-23T07:42:16.375Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Fiscal Incentives for Regional Development

A Case Study of the Western Amazon Basin

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Dennis J. Mahar*
Affiliation:
Instituto De Planejamento Econômico e Social, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Extract

Intermittent cycles of boom and bust based on one product have long characterized the economic history of Brazil. In this respect, the immense tropical rainforest comprising the Amazon Basin has been no exception. Economic activity reached its peak in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries when this region held a virtual monopoly position in the world rubber market. Manaus, strategically located at the confluence of the Negro and Solimões (Amazonas) Rivers, became the hub of the rubber industry and was transformed from an obscure river town of 3,000 inhabitants to a prosperous, cosmopolitan city of 50,000 in less than forty years. Due to an influx of Asian plantation-grown rubber, though, world prices started declining after 1910 and the Brazilian monopoly was broken—between 1910 and 1934, the Amazon's share of the world rubber market fell precipitously from 60 percent to 1 percent (Andrade, 1950: 23).

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © University of Miami 1976

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Andrade, A. de (1950) Contribuicão à Historia Administrativa do Brasil. Rio de Janeiro: José Olympio Editora.Google Scholar
Burns, E. B. (1965) “Manaus, 1910: portrait of a boom town.” J. of Interamerican Studies and World Affairs 7 (July): 400421.Google Scholar
Comissao de Desenvolvimento do Estado do Amazonas (1974) “Incentivos fiscais do estado do Amazonas.” Cadernos de Documentação 5 (April).Google Scholar
Comissao de Desenvolvimento do Estado do Amazonas (1973) Cidade de Manaus, I Pesquisa Sócio-Económica. Manaus.Google Scholar
Comissao de Desenvolvimento do Estado do Amazonas (1972a) Cidade de Manaus, III Pesquisa Sócio-Económica. Manaus.Google Scholar
Comissao de Desenvolvimento do Estado do Amazonas (1972b) Informativo 1 (July).Google Scholar
Fundacáo Getúlio Vargas (1973) Atualização Parcial do Sistema de Contas Nacionais. Rio de Janeiro.Google Scholar
Instituto Brasileiro de Geografía de Estatística (1966-1974) Anuário Estatístico do Brasil. Rio de Janeiro: Serviço Gráfico do IBGE.Google Scholar
Ministério da Fazenda (1972) Comércio Exterior do Brasil. Rio de Janeiro.Google Scholar
Ministério do Planejamento e Coordenação Geral (1973) Incentivos Fiscais na Amazonia. Brasilia.Google Scholar
Panagides, S. S. and Magalhaes, V. L. (1974) “Amazon economic policy and prospects,” in Wagley, C. (ed.) Man in the Amazon. Gainesville: Univ. of Florida Press.Google Scholar
Rosenbaum, H. J. and Tyler, W. G. (1971) “Policy-making for the Brazilian Amazon.” J. of Interamerican Studies and World Affairs 13 (July-October): 416433.Google Scholar
Serviço Federal de Habitação e Urbanismo (1970) Manaus: Termos de Referência Para o Planejamento Local Integrado. Manaus.Google Scholar
Superintendência da Zona Franca de Manaus (1974) A Ação da SUFRAMA: Urna Avaliação Preliminar. Manaus.Google Scholar
Superintendência da Zona Franca de Manaus (1971-1973) Anuario Estatístico. Rio de Janeiro: Editora Artenova.Google Scholar
Superintendência da Zona Franca de Manaus (n.d.) SUFRAMA: Repercussoes de sua Atuação. Manaus.Google Scholar
Williams, J. R. (1971) Manaus, Amazonas: A Focal Point for Development in Amazonia. Washington, D.C.: Pan American Institute of Geography and History.Google Scholar