
Eloisa Capurro
Economioc Reporter at Bloomberg News
Uruguayan reporter in Brasília with @business for Latam economic and monetary policy. Ex Reuters @Busquedaonline @um_umpe @Bagehots Opinions/likes/rt my own
Articles
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Mar 6, 2024 |
bloomberg.com | Eloisa Capurro
O principal banco de desenvolvimento da América Latina pressiona por uma cartilha com diferentes instrumentos de financiamento que possam ser partilhados entre instituições multilaterais para aumentar o impacto de seus empréstimos. A ideia é ter instrumentos comuns que vão desde swaps de dívida até títulos ligados à sustentabilidade que se adaptem às necessidades de cada país, disse Ilan Goldfajn, presidente do Banco Interamericano de Desenvolvimento, em entrevista.
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Mar 6, 2024 |
bloomberg.com | Eloisa Capurro
Latin America’s top development bank is pushing for a manual with different lending instruments that can be shared among fellow multilateral institutions to boost the impact of their loans. The idea is to have a common set of instruments ranging from debt swaps to sustainability-linked bonds that dovetail with the needs of each country, Inter-American Development Bank President Ilan Goldfajn said in an interview.
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Mar 6, 2024 |
yahoo.com | Eloisa Capurro
(Bloomberg) -- Latin America’s top development bank is pushing for a manual with different lending instruments that can be shared among fellow multilateral institutions to boost the impact of their loans. The idea is to have a common set of instruments ranging from debt swaps to sustainability-linked bonds that dovetail with the needs of each country, Inter-American Development Bank President Ilan Goldfajn said in an interview.
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Mar 2, 2024 |
postguam.com | Andrew Rosati |Eloisa Capurro
In his first spell as Brazil’s president, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva managed to keep both low-income voters and Wall Street investors happy. In his first year back in power, he has pulled off the same rare trick. The $2 trillion economy expanded close to 3% in 2023 - triple what analysts were expecting in January when Lula returned to office. Inflation has slowed and polls show the president’s supporters, predominantly poorer Brazilians, feel that he’s delivering.
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Feb 29, 2024 |
bloomberg.com | Andrew Rosati |Eloisa Capurro
Brazil wants billionaires to pay more in the global fight against poverty. To sell the idea, it’s enlisting a French economist famous for tracking down where the world’s ultra-rich hide their money. Gabriel Zucman, an assistant professor at University of California Berkeley, is promoting a proposal for a global minimum wealth tax to the finance chiefs gathered in Sao Paulo for the G-20 this week.
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