Brazil’s economy slows as inflation eases and rates begin to fall, amid oil shocks, trade shifts, and fiscal pressures shaping growth outlook.
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| Cover Image Attribute: The file photo of Christ the Redeemer (statue) in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil by Armando Paiva Foto from Pixabay |
Inflation trends offered some relief, with the year-over-year rate at 4.4 percent in January, just below the upper bound of the target range, aided by sharply lower food prices. Core inflation had eased from 5.3 percent in June 2025 to 4.2 percent. Producer prices fell 3.4 percent from a year earlier in November, and consumer expectations for the next 12 months reached their lowest level since April 2021. Yet services prices rose 6 percent year-over-year in December, underscoring lingering pressures from a tight labor market. The policy rate stood steady at 15 percent since June 2025, keeping real interest rates among the highest globally and contributing to subdued investment. Merchandise exports grew roughly 17 percent year-over-year in the final quarter of 2025, propelled by agricultural products up about 20 percent and industrial supplies up 15 percent, though durable goods exports slipped 11 percent. Trade patterns shifted, with shipments to China rising 36 percent while those to the United States declined 24 percent. Fiscal balances remained a concern, as the government targeted a primary surplus of 0.25 percent of gross domestic product for the year, excluding certain spending categories, against a backdrop of public debt projected to climb from 87.3 percent of GDP in 2024 to 95 percent. Nearly half of the debt was indexed to the benchmark rate, amplifying sensitivity to sustained high borrowing costs.
These underlying dynamics set the stage for heightened scrutiny as external shocks intensified. Geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, particularly the conflict involving Iran, introduced significant volatility to commodity markets and fiscal planning. Oil prices swung sharply, briefly approaching 120 dollars per barrel before easing to around 83 dollars, far above the 65 dollars assumed in the original budget projections that had anticipated 2.4 percent GDP growth and 3.6 percent inflation. Higher oil revenues through royalties and dividends from state-controlled Petrobras could provide a fiscal lift up to about 85 dollars per barrel, but levels exceeding 100 dollars risked generating real inflationary pressure and complicating monetary policy. The Brazilian real had weakened temporarily but stabilized near 5.14 per dollar. Officials preparing the first bimonthly budget review, due by late March, faced the task of revising growth and inflation forecasts amid these swings, with concerns that prolonged disruption to refineries or production could inflict medium-term damage to inflation and debt trajectories. Market reactions included tempered expectations for an imminent interest rate reduction, tilting toward a more measured 25-basis-point cut rather than 50, as elevated rates would further strain the debt burden.
Fresh inflation readings released shortly afterward showed the 12-month consumer price index slowing to 3.81 percent in February, the lowest since April 2024 and down from 4.44 percent in January, though still above the 3.77 percent median forecast from economists. The monthly IPCA index rose 0.70 percent, exceeding the anticipated 0.65 percent, with education and transportation costs leading the increase. This data arrived days before the central bank's monetary policy meeting, where the Selic rate had been held at 15 percent—the highest in nearly two decades—for several consecutive sessions following seven rate hikes between September 2024 and June 2025. Policymakers had signaled in January the possibility of beginning an easing cycle that month, but recent global energy price movements from the Middle East conflict added uncertainty. Economists expressed divided views: one noted that the reading appeared slightly more pressured due to oil price impacts, creating a bias toward holding rates steady yet still anticipating a modest reduction, while another highlighted that very high real interest rates and relative stability in the currency made a cut more likely than not despite the added risks. Government plans to announce measures addressing domestic diesel price effects from international oil surges underscored the interconnected pressures.
On the trade front, Brazilian lawmakers took a significant step by ratifying the legislative decree approving the free trade agreement between Mercosur and the European Union, signed after more than two decades of negotiations. Brazil became the third Mercosur member to approve the pact, following Argentina and Uruguay, with Paraguay yet to act. The ratification occurred during a solemn joint session of Congress, attended by Senate President Davi Alcolumbre, Chamber of Deputies President Hugo Motta, Vice President Geraldo Alckmin—who also serves as minister of development, industry and trade—and Foreign Minister Mauro Vieira. Alcolumbre highlighted the rapid passage through Congress and expressed expectation for provisional entry into force in May, assuming no delays in the European schedule. Alckmin confirmed that the government had notified the European Union of the ratification the same day, a prerequisite for provisional application that would allow partial trade measures to take effect ahead of full ratification by the European Parliament and an opinion from the EU Court of Justice. This development carried potential to expand agricultural exports substantially, including an 80 percent increase in beef shipments, while possibly pressuring domestic manufacturing output and employment by more than 5 percent in some sectors amid greater import competition.
Almost concurrently, the central bank kicked off its easing cycle with a unanimous 25-basis-point reduction in the Selic rate to 14.75 percent from 15 percent, the first cut since May 2024 and the start of what policymakers described as a data-dependent process. This move came after five straight meetings holding the rate at its highest level since July 2006, against a backdrop of oil prices surging above 100 dollars per barrel—roughly 60 percent higher than assumptions from the January meeting—and tied to the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran. The Monetary Policy Committee raised its inflation projection for the year to 3.9 percent from 3.4 percent, with the relevant policy horizon extending to the third quarter of 2027 lifted to 3.3 percent from 3.2 percent. The 12-month inflation through February stood at 3.81 percent. In its statement, the committee stressed the need for serenity and cautiousness in monetary policy conduction so that future steps could incorporate new information about the depth and duration of conflicts in the Middle East. It described the external environment as more uncertain due to the intensification of geopolitical conflicts, with volatility in asset prices and commodities calling for additional caution among emerging economies. The pace of further easing would depend on incoming data, including repercussions on global financial conditions.
Analysts interpreted the decision as dovish yet prudent. One economist observed that the bank had proceeded with the reduction despite a sharp deterioration in inflation projections, even after incorporating a more favorable exchange-rate path. Another anticipated a 50-basis-point cut at the subsequent meeting, with risks of reverting to 25 basis points if the conflict persisted without easing in international prices. Separate reporting on the same day illustrated the conflict's broader ripple effects, noting that rising diesel costs—critical for farm machinery and transportation—were squeezing margins for Brazil's soybean producers, the world's largest exporters, and pushing up global soybean prices. This dynamic fed into food security concerns in major importers such as China, while high fuel prices strained household budgets across Asia and raised recession risks in Europe, where policy tools to cushion energy shocks were limited. The overall outlook darkened, with persistently elevated energy costs threatening vulnerable economies and amplifying the potential for a wider global slowdown.
Follow-up coverage the next day reinforced details of the rate decision, confirming the unanimous vote and noting that the Selic had remained at 15 percent for nine consecutive months after the earlier hiking cycle. Projections from private economists in the weekly Focus survey had climbed to 4.1 percent for inflation that year, with GDP growth expected at 1.83 percent, down from an average of 3.2 percent over the prior three years. The committee's own forecasts aligned closely, and markets priced in roughly 275 basis points of total cuts by year-end, bringing the rate to about 12.25 percent. The cut was smaller than the 50-basis-point move many had anticipated until early March, when geopolitical developments shifted bets. Economists attributed the action partly to prior forward guidance from January, suggesting that without it a hold might have been more likely, though the modest step allowed flexibility to accelerate easing if tensions subsided or to pause if they escalated. Brent crude's climb above 100 dollars per barrel, coupled with threats to close the Strait of Hormuz—a passage for 20 percent of global oil—underscored the external risks, even as domestic factors like government stimulus and a tight labor market continued to exert price pressures.
Taken together, these developments reflect a Brazilian economy transitioning toward gradual monetary relief amid persistent challenges. Real interest rates remained above 10 percent, restraining investment and consumer durables while supporting disinflation progress. Fiscal targets loomed large, with debt dynamics sensitive to both higher oil revenues and potential rate persistence. The trade agreement offered longer-term opportunities for export diversification, particularly in agriculture, yet raised questions about industrial competitiveness and employment in import-competing sectors. Geopolitical uncertainties from the Middle East continued to cloud commodity outlooks, with mixed implications for an oil-exporting nation reliant on imported diesel for logistics. Policymakers and analysts alike emphasized data dependence, balancing the benefits of lower borrowing costs for households and businesses against risks of renewed inflationary pressures or fiscal slippage. Over the course of the year, the interplay of these elements—slowing growth, easing inflation within target bands, cautious rate adjustments, and evolving global trade and energy landscapes—would determine whether Brazil could sustain momentum toward greater stability without derailing hard-won disinflation gains or fiscal discipline.
With reporting by Bloomberg, Deloitte, Mercopress, Reuters, and the Rio Times.
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