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The Encilhamento was a economic bubble that boomed between late 1880s and early 1890s in Brazil, having burst during the provisional government of Deodoro da Fonseca (1889-1891), then becoming a financial crisis. Respectively, the then secretaries of Finance, Viscount of Ouro Preto and Rui Barbosa, on the grounds of encouraging the country industrialization, adopted a policy based on free credits to industrial investments guaranteed by abundant monetary issuance.[1][2] The way this policy of economic incentives was generated and managed, unbridled general speculation, rose the inflation and encouraged fraudulent IPOs.[3][4]
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The word "encilhamento", literally "saddling-up", the act of girthing or mounting a horse,[5] was a borrowed term from horse racing and used to name the speculative movement due its analogy related to the belief of trying to take advantage of the get-rich-quickly opportunities whenever they unfold,[6] in an analogy based on the Brazilian popular saying "A unmounted saddled horse doesn't come twice."[7]
Throughout the 19th century the maturation of technological innovations, especially the development of rail transport, gas lighting and steamships, among others, all linked to the process industrialization, created opportunities for large speculative movements, leading to an acceleration of the flow of capital in the world.[8]
And despite a considerable native capital volume have been released with the prohibition of the slave trade in 1850, at the same time when Baron of Maua laid the modern banking system in Brazil; decades later at beginning of the Republic, the Brazilian economy was still tied through, among other things, by a restrictive economic legislation that mainly due respectively to the 1850 "Land Law" and the "Barriers Act" of 1860, inhibited the access to land ownership by former slaves and immigrants in a time where agriculture was predominant economically in the country,[9][10] and tied for decades the development of Brazilian financial markets, with them having become at that time, a kind of "notary oligopoly" under the control of few families.[11]
Proposed changes in land legislation for example, was one of the reasons why large landowners and former slaveholders supported the establishment of the republic.[12][13] In this political environment, economic and social under the pretext of promoting the process of industrialization of the country, occurred the Encilhamento.
The 1st step of encilhamento took place during the end Monarchy under the command of Viscount of Ouro Preto, the last finance secretary of that period, when it was regulated a new Banking Act, in November 1888. A rise in the Rio de Janeiro Stock Exchange, that had already boomed in 1886 accelerated with the abolition of slavery 2 years later, having reheated again with the measures implemented by the new banking law (that reversed the 1860 "Barriers Act"), and in 1889 the proposed changes for the Land and Real State laws. Along with the increase in market liquidity, there was the introduction of modern financial mechanisms, enhancing the financial leverage possibilities. The reduction in the issuance of government bonds has also opened space for the expansion of stocks issues.[19] All this, slowly led to an increase in speculation and inflation in general, embracing all economic sectors, from the currencies to real estate,[20] creating minor bubbles into a big one.
In this environment, the Viscount of Ouro Preto decided to create a institution to act as regulatory agency for the financial market, a private central bank in the European manner, a reserve bank, a monetary authority of liquidity. The fact that Rui Barbosa had been a great opponent of such system, accredited him to be appointed as finance secretary in the republic.[21] Ironically, when took office, soon after the proclamation of the Republic, he put into practice all that he had criticized. In January 1890 he enacts a new banking law, inspired by the ideas of the counselor Mayrinck, his banker and personal friend, who he appointed as head of the new Central Bank, without even consulting the president, signing the bill late at night in a scandal that would be the first of a series until his departure from the secretary.
This however didn't stop the enacting of the new law, despite the protest and opposition from secretaries like Demetrio Ribeiro and Campos Sales, who predicting the consequences of measures, got a central bank to São Paulo.[22]
The unregulated speculation rose as direct reflection of the new law and although had reached all major sectors of the economy, especially over currency trading where it picked its highest volume; was in the rogue trading on IPOs, despite its legality, that occurred the main political disaster of the process, due the leniency of the new banking law that allowed authorized issuers act freely, without any supervision or official punishment.[12][23] A example of such issues occurred not only when a company went to the IPO without any economic fundament to support it, but also whenever it needed more money, just issued new subscriptions. The investor who wouldn't answer to the new offerings, lost the rights to the old ones and all the money paid previously.[24]
Since the new law tied to trade rights to their nominal values, there was no official oscillation of stock prices, and consequently, no way to negocitate them directly in the Stock Exchange in order to both minimize losses or maximize profits. That restriction led to a deadlock for new issues, preventing the legitimate business take off out of the process and causing a total loss to many inexperienced investors.[25][12]
Instead of help to promote growth and structural change in the economy, the process led to one of the worst inflation outbreaks of the country's history, while the Brazilian economy suffered violent "collapse".[26][27] The Encilhamento Last Straw came with the financial shock wave caused by the default of Argentine government bonds following the 1st collapse of the Bank Baring Brothers in the ending of 1890, and although the burst has been initiated then, it occurred in a slowly way, until 1892.[28][29][30]
On January 20, 1891, Rui Barbosa stepped down as finance secretary to head 2 companies that were created during the Encilhamento and which he had partnership with the Counselor Mayrink.[31][32] General Deodoro da Fonseca resign on 23 November of that year, during the 1st naval revolt, under imminent threat of deposition by the Republicans, represented by Vice President Marechal Floriano Peixoto, which assumes "naturally" the presidency.
The success of the new stage of economic development, that in theory intended Encilhamento, depended on to be able to create an enabling environment both regarding the relocation of domestic savings, as foreign investments.[33]
However, due to the extraordinary powers conferred to monetary authorities, the private interests in Encilhamento just overlapping the public interest. So, instead of a slow and steady promotion of development, economic growth, distribution of wealth, financial literacy & confidence; what occurred was an increase in concentration of wealth, overvaluation of profiteering at the expense of productive activity, widespread of bankruptcy, as well as of the ignorance and distrust about how politics and markets works, in addition to the geometric increase of debt and economic stagnation.[34][35][15]
So, are pointed out 3 main reasons for the failure of this speculative movement as a lever for development:[36]
Following the effects of the bust, came the usual period of "witch hunt" that lasted until 1895, when especially during the tenure of Floriano Peixoto, some Encilhamento prominent figures had for example their assets frozen, seized, beyond have been prosecuted publicly and administratively. Among these, was Rui Barbosa, who had to go into exile in Europe.[38]
Also, the legislation concerning the financial markets in Brazil, in a vain attempt to control their volatility, at a time when the concept of Antifragility[39][40] was unknown, suffered violent setback to the time of the "Barriers Act", having only get rid of it, 70 years later in 1965.[38]
Although the bubble burst has happened between 1890–92, their economic and political effects were made throughout the decade,[41] with only in the end of the Campos Sales administration, with Rodrigues Alves in charge of the Brazilian economy, been decreased, but at a high social cost,[42] due to the economic policy taken in accordance with requests of the big international capital.[43]
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