Brazil Blames Interest Rates for 13% Decline in Industrial Sales

Industrial sales in Brazil grew 2.03% last year, less than in 2004, when the sector increased its sales by 15%. The figures that register this slowdown appear in the National Industrial Confederation’s (CNI) study, Industrial Indicators.

The CNI’s executive secretary of economic policy, Flávio Castelo Branco, attributes the slowdown to high interest rates and the appreciation of the real in relation to the US dollar.

Castelo Branco also suggests that sales growth in 2005 was disappointing compared with what was expected. "We began 2005 with very high expectations, generated by the growth in 2004. Over the course of the year, the economy cooled, and, despite the positive figures, there is an air of frustration," he affirmed.

Despite the weak sales performance, the industrial job market did not mirror this trend. Employment was up 4.18% in 2005, in comparison with 2004. Moreover, industrial workers’ purchasing power rose 8.10%, in comparison with 2004.

According to CNI economist Paulo Mol, workers are able to buy more as a result of the drop in inflation.

"Salaries were readjusted in 2005 in line with a high inflation rate [that of 2004], and since inflation [in 2005] was less than the salary readjustment, the hike in purchasing power was not wiped out. This difference is what leads to gains in purchasing power," he observed.

Industrial employment is expected to grow in 2006 as well, but at a lower rate than in 2005.

The CNI expects that industrial growth will accelerate in 2006, stimulated by lower interest rates.

"In 2005 the economy was mainly affected by the monetary policy practiced in 2004. What basically restrained the economy were the high interest rates. This was the chief factor that caused the currency to appreciate and the economy to decelerate.

"If the decline in interest rates intensifies in the early part of this year, it may begin to produce positive results in the second and third quarters of 2006," Castelo Branco commented.

Agência Brasil

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil: A Truckload of Trouble for Politician Maluf

A case was put against failed candidate Paulo Maluf (PP) by prosecutors in front ...

Brazil to Become in a Decade World’s 3rd Largest Car Maker, Ahead of Japan

Car production capacity in Brazil should jump from the current 3.6 million units per ...

Brazil Spends Over US$ 400,000 in Books by Indian Authors

Brazil’s Ministry of Education (MEC) allocated US$ 414,000 (1 million reais) from the Literate ...

FTAA Disappeared from Brazilian Radar

Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva insisted on the need to consolidate the ...

Ten Facts Brazil’s President Should Tell the World Including GDP Doesn’t Equal Progress

In a debate at the University of Brasília, Ambassador Correa do Lago asked for ...

A Carnaval of Disillusion in Brazil

Brazilian politics is once again involved in a scandal. It was revealed that the ...

Seven Suitors to a Speaker’s Chair in Brazil

As Brazil’s political party leaders met to work out the details of the election ...

Machinery industry has optimistic forecasts for 2007

The machinery and equipment sector will have in 2006 a performance similar to that ...

Identification of Bodies from Crashed Boeing in Brazil May Take Two Years

The bodies of the victims of the Boeing 737-800 that fell in the Brazilian ...

UN Gives Brazil High Marks for Poverty Fight But a D for Justice

The top UN human rights official, during a three-day visit to Brazil that ended ...