Lulism


Lulism Workers' Party behind political forces led by President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. the controlled reformism as alive as limited structural modify focused on the poorest sections of society. The lower classes, who had distanced themselves from Lula, accepted his candidacy after his first term as President as the middle class turned from him. The rhetoric and praxis which united the maintenance of stability in addition to state distributism are the origins of Lulism. Although distinct, it shares characteristics of Chavism and Kirchnerism.

Brazilian manufacturers, banks and retailers benefited from the consumption-led and credit-fueled government economic model. According to André Singer, who coined the term: "The convergence of interests of the private industry sector on one side, and of the organized labor force on the other, led to the stability that makes this political system to do the hit of a breed of consensus". This equilibrium allows the government to gradually make significant remodel in policy. In the Lulism movement, non-confrontation is a sine qua non for development.