“…Although some progress was made in reducing inequality in Brazil during the recent PT governments, the rise of Jair Bolsonaro threatened to undo all their achievements with his government’s support for financialization of the economy. This process in fact began during the PT period (see, e.g., Almeida, 2022). According to Saad-Filho (2020b: 10, 23), “The PT governments accepted that their industrial, financial, wage, and welfare policies would be bounded by the reproduction of neoliberalism: which limited the potential gains in redistribution, output, and employment.” He further states that “despite their achievements, the social policies of the PT governments were bound by neoliberalism and fostered the marketization and financialization of daily life instead of limiting the commodification of social reproduction.” He argues that the PT period encompassed two varieties of neoliberalism, inclusive (2003–2006) and developmentalist (2006–2013), followed by incoherent economic policies continuing to this day, what he calls “authoritarian neoliberalism.”…”