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Ricardo Amorim

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Ricardo Amorim is a Brazilian economist. He was described as "Brazil's most influential economist" by Forbes magazine.[1]

Career

Amorim holds a B.A. in Economics from the University of São Paulo and conducted graduate work in International Finance and Business at ESSEC Business School in Paris.

He is one of the hosts of the roundtable TV show Manhattan Connection on GloboNews, and is an economics and financial markets columnist at ISTOÉ Magazine.

He was one of the few economists to anticipate Brazil’s electricity crisis in 2001, the US real estate and financial crisis in 2008, Emerging Markets’ decoupling from the 2009 global financial crisis and Europe´s 2011/2012 sovereign crisis. Following a twenty-year career in financial institutions in the USA, Brazil and Europe, he returned to Brazil in 2008 after eight years working in Wall Street. In Brazil, he started Ricam Consultoria, a financial consulting firm that advises on economics, finance, investment and strategy.

Awards and recognition

In 2015, he was included by Forbes in its list of the "100 most influential Brazilians".[citation needed]

References

  1. ^ Ricardo Geromel (15 August 2014). "Meet Ricardo Amorim, Brazil's Most Influential Economist". Forbes.