Brazil’s 2005 Trade Surplus Well Above Expectations: US$ 44 Bi

Brazil’s Minister of Development, Industry and Foreign Trade, Luis Fernando Furlan, told journalists at a press conference breakfast that Brazil’s year-end trade surplus will probably reach US$ 44 billion.

And then he surprised his listeners by saying that a much smaller surplus would be sufficient – under normal circumstances, with interest rates on a downward trajectory.

"We could be very comfortable with a trade surplus of around US$ 20 billion," he said.

It is Furlan’s understanding that the "cooling off" of the Brazilian economy this year, caused by the country’s high interest rates, put a brake on imports, which caused the unexpectedly large foreign trade surplus.

He pointed out that imports are a function of domestic economic dynamics: when there is domestic growth, imports will rise because they are mainly the machinery, equipment, components and raw material needed to feed output.

According to the ministry, up to December 7, Brazil’s cumulative trade surplus for the year was US$ 41.183 billion, with exports of slightly more than US$ 110 billion, which should reach US$ 117 billion by the end of the month.

The government’s present export target for 2006 is US$ 120 billion, with a surplus of US$ 30 billion.

Since Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva took office in January 2003, Brazil has a cumulative foreign trade surplus of over US$ 100 billion.

Agência Brasil

Tags:

You May Also Like

Concession of Highways and Railroads Is No Privatization, Says Brazil President

Brazilian president Dilma Rousseff and Finance minister, Guido Mantega, both denied that the announced ...

US’s HRF Gives Brazilian Woman Human Rights Award for Fighting Death Squads

Sandra Carvalho, a lawyer, sociologist and director of the non-governmental organization Global Justice, is ...

Brazil Pans Canada’s G20 Summit. Floods in Brazil Kept Lula Home

At the end of the G20 summit, Brazil criticized the participants of the meeting ...