João Baptista de Oliveira Figueiredo (born Jan. 15, 1918, Rio de Janeiro, Braz.—died Dec. 24, 1999, Rio de Janeiro) was a four-star general and president of Brazil from 1979 to 1985.
One of the planners of the 1964 coup that established 21 years of military rule, Figueiredo was the last in the succession of five officers chosen by the armed forces to govern Brazil as president in that period. He was an instructor specializing in intelligence in the military’s advanced training schools when the coup took place. Promoted to colonel, he was immediately transferred to intelligence operations. His military career culminated with his appointment as chief of the national intelligence service under President Ernesto Geisel in 1974, a post in which he gained the reputation of “minister of silence” due to his inaccessibility and aloofness from public life.
Hand-picked by Geisel as his successor, Figueiredo announced his intention to restore democracy to the country. He faced severe national economic problems when he took office in 1979, including an inflation rate of 43 percent and a grossly unequal distribution of income. What economic growth there was benefited only the wealthy, without affecting the standard of living of the lower classes. He responded to the situation by providing a schedule of workers’ pay increases pegged to inflation, by allowing collective bargaining for the first time since the military coup of 1964, and by devaluing the currency and fixing interest rates. On the political front he signed amnesty legislation for political dissenters (although Amnesty International still cited instances of police brutality) and permitted the creation of new political parties, a move which angered the extreme right. In 1980 he demonstrated his commitment to redistribution of wealth by authorizing the expropriation of 47,000 acres from large estates in Mato Grosso do Sul to be redistributed among 1,000 dispossessed farmers. He also relaxed the censorship of the press. In contrast to his earlier image, Figueiredo adopted a more outgoing stance after he became president, appearing frequently in public. Heart trouble caused him to reduce his leadership in Brazil’s democratization, but he kept its opponents in check. In 1985 he was succeeded in office by the first civilian president since 1964, José Sarney.