Even if transmissions lines are lengthy and theft occurs - it does to varying degrees in most developing countries - there is no plausible justification for electricity to be as pricey to the end user.
How much more competitive could Brazil's economy be - government still taking in sizeable tax revenue - if only the entire system/cost structure+taxes were adjusted to reflect all variables in a balanced way?
Will there be political drive to deliver fairly and squarely in this
vital sector over the coming years?
Such an objective must be regarded as strategic to the country's overall performance and well-being.
Well within its reach and to be achieved at the earliest.
Will it?
But a tendency it is for it need not be destiny.
Canada and Australia, to mention two major economies with relatively small populations, do defy the notion.
Brazil too is indeed a manufacturing powerhouse in South America with relevant sales of manufactured goods across all sectors from needles and pins to advanced aircraft.
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