Resumen:
An intense process of globalization, shaped by profound changes in trade, production and
investments, has marked the world economy since the 1980s, whose offshore and outsourcing
opportunities were notable for the possibilities of insertion, participation and industrial updating
of developing countries in the Chains. Global Values (GVCs). This implied new approaches to
industrial policy and state intervention. In this context, the objective of this thesis was to
evaluate the structure and functioning of the Brazilian automobile industry, and from then on
to discuss the viability of measures of a local content (LC) nature to strengthen the national
auto parts sector in the movement of GVCs. It is understood that this viability of the content
policy involves its effectiveness on the ownership of national capital, supported by an effort to
build competences, without which the construction of a local supply chain is compromised in
its updating and gains in participation in the CGV, even running the risk of being “locked in”
to low value-added segments. Thus, it was supported as a hypothesis the fact that industrial
policy measures such as those of CL must be viable for the development and strengthening of
the Brazilian automotive supply chain; however, the lack of policy emphasis and strategy
regarding ownership of national capital (combined with the effort to build capacity) weakened
the likelihood of building a more integrated, more participatory, and up-to-date local supply
chain in value chains (regional and global). For this purpose, OECD added value (AV) measures
(TiVA) were used, which were conceived based on the input-output methodological framework
developed by Koopman, Wang and Wei (2014), to assess the performance of Brazil and other
players, with an emphasis on China and India, between 2000-2018. The analysis of local content
(LC) measures in the light of VA indicators and from the catching up pattern of technological
stages, based on the Indian and Chinese automotive industries, allowed us to identify that PCL
in Brazil did not contribute to the constitution of leading companies and failed to promote VA
gains and functional upgrade (functional upgrade) in the local automotive chain, confirming the
research hypothesis.