Brazil in Recession, with Industry Due to Shrink 1.7% in 2014

Pernambuco port in Brazil Industrial-activity data released this week added to worries that Brazil’s economy, already in recession, is far from a strong recovery. The trade group National Confederation of Industry, CNI, said revenue for the Brazilian manufacturing sector fell 5.1% in July from a year earlier and rose 1.2% from June.

The economy is in worse shape than the group believed earlier in the year and will result in Brazil’s industrial sector shrinking 1.7% from 2013, CNI said, compared with its previous estimate of a 0.5% contraction. The change in the estimate “is caused by a strong retraction in investment and recent industrial data,” CNI economic policy manager, Flavio Castelo Branco, said to reporters.

One reason for the decline in revenue in July is that there were fewer working days in the month this year because of holidays declared during the soccer World Cup tournament, which was held in Brazil in June and July, according to Mr. Castelo Branco.

There were 2.3% less working hours in Brazil in July compared with a year earlier. CNI data also showed that industrial-capacity usage fell to 81% in July from 82.4% a year earlier.

The industrial data fit into the picture of a struggling economy. After shrinking for two consecutive quarters in the first half of the year, Brazil is heading to a anemic 0.5% GDP growth this year, according to a central-bank survey with forecasters.

“The manufacturing sector should have a small recovery in the third quarter versus the second, but it will still be a contraction in the 12-month period,” said Pedro Raffy Vartanian, a professor of economics at São Paulo-based Mackenzie University.

Finance Minister Guido Mantega has said the first-half slump was due to a sputtering global economy, and that early indicators show Brazil recovering in the second half. But many economists in the private sector say the problems are homegrown and any recovery will tend to be slow.

“The business environment has deteriorated as the government implemented pro-consumption measures in the past few years, but failed to promote needed reforms in other sectors,” Mr. Vartanian said.

A change in economic policy might be around the corner, as Brazilians head for general elections in October. Even if incumbent President Dilma Rousseff wins a second term, analysts expect her to immediately announce policy changes.

But economists predict that whoever is in power will have to push tough reforms, including an urgent increase in fuel prices to pull up Petrobras, that will likely damp growth prospects in order to tame inflation.

Brazilian consumer prices are rising at a 6.5% annual pace, which is the ceiling of the central bank’s target range, and the bank has had to raise its benchmark interest rate to 11% from 7.25% to bring inflation down.

“In 2014 we have inflation at the top of the target-range and the central bank raising rates. All that contributed to a negative environment for the productive sector,” CNI’s Mr. Castelo Branco said.

Mercopress

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil’s Lula: We Are Beggars No More!

In an interview to Brazilian radio stations, Brazil President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva recalled ...

World Bank Tells Brazil to Fight Poverty If It Wants to Catch Up with China

Brazil and the other countries in Latin America need to be more aggressive in ...

After 10 Years Brazil and Neighbors Still Opposed to US’s Plan Colombia

Colombia is likely to become the regional hub for the Pentagon's Latin American activities ...

Brazil’s WSF to Be Powered by Linux

Like the Brazilian government, the World Social Forum wants distance from Microsoft. According to ...

Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva

Brazil’s Lula Starts Political Overhaul and Vows Not to Seek Third Term

Brazil's President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva asked on Monday, April 23, for opposition ...

For This Brazilian Entrepreneur Exporting Commodities Is a Dead End

Brazil as any other developing country must increase and add value to its exports, ...

Sales Jump 1.5% in Brazil. Clothes Up, Books Down

Compared with the previous month, retail trade sales grew 1.8% in March, in Brazil, ...

Brazil Calls for an End to U.S. Dictatorship over the Internet

The administration of the internet must be made more democratic. This is the Brazilian ...

Brazil Exports US$ 14 Bi and Imports US$ 8 Bi in July. Two Records.

Brazilian exports in the month of July were the greatest in history, registering the ...

World’s Largest Cattle Fair, Expozebu, Starts Its 73rd Edition in Brazil

The city of Uberaba, in the interior of the southeastern Brazilian state of Minas ...