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  1. March 15: Fernando Collor de Mello is sworn in as the 32nd President of Brazil and becomes the youngest president in Brazilian history. April. April 3: The National Congress of Brazil approves the first measures of the Collor Plan. July

  2. Mar 15, 1990 · Harried by hyperinflation and mounting debts, a new young economic team takes office here Thursday carrying blueprints of free-market reforms designed to turn Brazil into an economic world power...

  3. So what went wrong for Brazil in 1990? Take a look at the list of strikers available – Bebeto, Careca, Muller, Renato Gaucho and Romario – and there is no doubting the quality at their disposal.

  4. The 1990-94 Period. Brazil Table of Contents. The first post-military-regime president elected by popular suffrage, Fernando Collor de Mello (1990-92), was sworn into office in March 1990. Facing imminent hyperinflation and a virtually bankrupt public sector, the new administration introduced a stabilization plan, together with a set of reforms ...

  5. Mar 14, 1990 · Brazil's central bank closed the nation's banks late today for the rest of the week until an emergency economic package is announced by President-elect Fernando Collor de Mello.

  6. Brazilian history from 1985 to the present, also known as the Sixth Brazilian Republic or New Republic, is the contemporary epoch in the history of Brazil, beginning when civilian government was restored after a 21-year-long military dictatorship established after the 1964 coup d'état.

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  8. All these resemblances between the early 1990s and 2016 seem to confirm the popular Brazilian saying that “nothing ever changes in Brazil”. But is that really the case? The similarities make it easy to overlook two fundamental changes to Brazilian democracy since the early 1990s.

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