Fernando Henrique Cardoso
- Born:
- June 18, 1931, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
- Title / Office:
- foreign minister (1992), Brazil
Fernando Henrique Cardoso (born June 18, 1931, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil) is a Brazilian sociologist, teacher, and politician who was president of Brazil from 1995 to 2003.
Cardoso became a professor of sociology at the University of São Paulo in 1958, but the military government that took power in 1964 blacklisted him from teaching in the country’s university system. He went into exile, teaching at universities in Santiago, Chile, and Paris and continuing his research into the relationship between developing countries and the West. He returned to Brazil in 1968, founded the Brazilian Centre for Analysis and Planning, and established a reputation as one of the foremost members of the left-wing opposition.
Cardoso entered politics in 1986 when he was elected senator from São Paulo. In 1988 he cofounded the centre-left Brazilian Social Democratic Party. In 1992, after President Fernando Collor de Mello was impeached for corruption and was replaced by Itamar Franco, Cardoso resigned his seat in the Senate to become foreign minister. In May 1993 he became finance minister, overseeing negotiations that produced a number of anti-inflation measures.
Cardoso entered the race for the presidency in 1994 and with the support of the nation’s business community won a decisive victory. During his administration he emphasized further economic reform, including privatization and increased foreign investment, as well as funding for education and social services. In 1997 voters approved an amendment to the constitution that allowed the president to hold consecutive terms, and in 1998 Cardoso became the first Brazilian president to be reelected for a second four-year term. By this time, however, Brazil was facing severe financial problems, and the president was forced to pursue an austerity plan, which included spending cuts and tax increases, to reduce the budget deficit and to secure international loans. Barred constitutionally from seeking a third consecutive term, Cardoso left office in 2003.