This document summarizes Brazil's institutional arrangements for promoting productivity and industrial policy. It describes how Brazil transitioned from a closed market economy in the 1980s to opening up in the 1990s, privatizing state-owned industries. In the 2000s, the government recovered its role in industrial policy through new forums and regulatory frameworks. Key institutions created include ABDI (Brazilian Agency for Industrial Development) and CNDI (National Industrial Development Council) in 2004 to connect actors and inform decision-making. The presentation evaluates these arrangements based on criteria for effective policy institutions and notes both strengths like social consensus on productivity, and weaknesses like limited long-term planning due to election cycles.