In a country where economic debates often descend into ideological trench warfare, the Manual de Economia has maintained a rare status: a balanced, rigorous, and deeply Brazilian perspective on the science of scarcity. What makes the USP Manual unique is not just its content, but its authorship. Organized by the late professors Sérgio de Oliveira Birchal and led by iconic figures like Antonio Delfim Netto (the legendary former Finance Minister) and Elizabeth Maria Mercier Querido Farina , the book is a collective work of the "Pau da Bola" research group.
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To compete, the latest editions have come with QR codes linking to data from IBGE (Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics) and video lectures from the authors. Yet, the core remains paper and ink—a dense, 1,000-page monument to the idea that understanding Brazil requires a specific manual, not a generic import. The Manual de Economia is not a beach read. It is a tool of citizenship. In a country where understanding inflation, interest rates, and fiscal deficit is the difference between preserving your savings and losing them overnight, this book has served as a democratic weapon. Manual de economia- USP
The book begins traditionally: consumer theory, production costs, market structures (perfect competition, monopoly, oligopoly). However, it quickly pivots to Industrial Economics —a USP specialty. Here, the student learns not just theoretical market models, but how Brazilian industrial concentration actually works, including concepts of custo Brasil (Brazil cost) and vertical integration. In a country where economic debates often descend
, a co-author, once noted in an interview, "Our goal was to kill the fear of economics. A student in Pará should open the book and see a problem they recognize from their own backyard, not just from Manhattan or London." Critical Reception and Legacy The manual is not without its critics. Some orthodox economists argue that the text retains too much structuralist and Cepalino (ECLAC) influence, a Latin American development school that views the international division of labor as inherently exploitative. Others on the left argue that the book is too neoliberal in its industrial organization sections. By [Author Name] To compete, the latest editions
Yet, this tension is precisely why the book endures. It does not hide the ideological debates; it presents them. A student reading the USP Manual learns "monetarist" and "Keynesian" as tools, not tribes.
It teaches the reader that economics is not fate, but a social choice. As Delfim Netto used to tell his freshmen: "You cannot repeal the laws of economics, but you can write a manual to understand them. That is the first step to changing them."