1) The Development Process of Brazilian industry occurred from late way in relation to developed countries (alternative B).
Some countries such as England , a pioneer in this process, began their industrialization in the eighteenth century, while Brazil began its industrialization from d The nineteenth century, about 100 years late in relation to England, and for this reason industrialization is considered late.
2) The years of 1930 marked the Brazilian industrialization through state support and the fall of coffee imports << Strong> (Alternative A).
With the serious economic crisis of the year of 1929, the United States, a major importer of Brazilian coffee, failed to buy it < /Strong>. As the Brazilian economy depended on this import, it ended up in crisis as well.
Between the years of 1930 and 1956, Brazilian industrialization was characterized by an explicit state intervention, mainly through investments in the sectors of Production goods, capital goods and mineral extraction.
3) The Brazilian region concentrated the largest volume of industries until 1980 was the Southeast Region (alternative D).
Since the beginning, industrialization has focused on southeast, mainly in the cities of Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro . This was because the coffee cycle had developed in the region.
As Brazilian oligarchies , with the coffee crisis, moved their investments for the industrial sector, implanting modern factories in the region, while there was no the same investment in other parts of the territory.
4) The President Juscelino Kubitscheck was responsible for opening the country for multinational companies (Alternative A).
Through its Developmental Policy , based on the Goal Plan, were set in the country branches of multinational industries Capital goods and durable consumer goods.
There was also at this time the ticket of foreign capital , responsible for the increased industrial production in the sectors a utomobile, pharmaceutical and appliances.