IMF Goes to Brazil to Liquidate the Country’s Debt

The managing director of the International Monetary Fund, Rodrigo de Rato, will be in Brazil on January 10 and 11 to officialize the pre-payment of Brazil’s debt with the IMF.

During his stay in the country, Rato will meet with Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva; Minister of Finance, Antônio Palocci and the president of the Central Bank, Henrique Meirelles.

At the end of last year, Brazil announced it would anticipate paying off a US$ 15.5 billion debt with the IMF, thus saving some US$ 900 million in interest payments. The debt was to have been paid in installments running until December 2007.

In December, Lula declared that by paying off its IMF debt Brazil was demonstrating its independence. According to the Brazilian President the country was able to make the payment because its reserves have now risen to over US$ 60 billion.

Lula went on to say that Brazil is in charge of its own destiny ("dono de seu nariz" – owner of its own nose, as he put it) and capable of continued growth.

"We have money, exports, production and now we have shown that we can administer our own debt and move on as we grow more and create jobs," said the President.

In conclusion, Lula said that what Brazil needs is a decade of solid growth in order to achieve definitive stability.

ABr

Tags:

You May Also Like

Journalists Kidnapped and Tortured by Brazil’s Police

Paris-based press freedom organization Reporters Without Borders (RSF) is calling for a Brazilian federal ...

Brazil Shows Its Fittest Arabian Horses

The National Arabian Show started today at the HÀ­pica Paulista, in São Paulo, the ...

Anti-Gun Crowd Takes to the Streets in Brazil

Around 15,000 people took part in the 9th March for Life, Peace and in ...

Brazil Searching Candidates for This Year’s Teacher Prize

Inscriptions for this year’s Teacher Prize for Brazilian public school teachers will close on ...

Jordan Gets Zero-Tariff Trade Deal with Brazil and Mercosur

The countries of the Mercosur trading bloc (Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay) signed, during ...

Brazil Puts Biodiesel in the Tank

While developed nations around the world are working on diversifying 10 to 20 percent ...

Five Months to Open a Firm in Brazil. This Is Just the Start of the Red Tape

It takes about 5 months (152 days) to open a company in Brazil, more ...

US Gets on DVD Two Masterpieces of Brazil’s Contemporary Drama

City of Men, a television series from the makers of the highly acclaimed Brazilian ...

Brazil V. Venezuela: The Inevitability of Latin American Polarization

For any political scientist, economist and historian who may not be entirely familiarized with ...

Change or I’ll Live, Chávez Tells Brazil and Mercosur

Venezuela is interested in becoming a member of a “new Mercosur,” but if there’s ...