Brazil Calls IMF’s Report on Country’s Economy Wrong and Stupid

Finance minister Guido Mantega from Brazil For Brazil’s Finance minister Guido Mantega the International Monetary Fund’s assessment that Brazil’s fiscal situation is worsening and putting at risk the government’s targets is “totally wrong” and “stupid.”

In a report on the global fiscal situation the IMF said that “deterioration in Brazil’s fiscal accounts is particularly pronounced.”

The government is expected to miss by a “wide margin” its 2011 target for a budget surplus before interest payments equal to 3 percent of gross domestic product, the IMF report said.

Mantega, speaking to reporters in Brazilian capital Brasília, said he tried unsuccessfully to call IMF Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn this morning to discuss the report and will try reaching him again later.

“I think the managing director of the IMF must have gone on vacation and some of the orthodox, old men of the IMF got distracted and wrote this stupid thing about Brazil,” Mantega said. “It’s totally wrong.”

The central government’s budget surplus before interest payment widened more than expected in December, the finance ministry said today. The so-called primary surplus widened to 14.4 billion reais (US$ 8.6 billion) last month, beating all seven estimates in a Bloomberg survey whose median forecast was for a 8.6 billion reais surplus.

The central government’s surplus was 2.16 percent of GDP last year, the ministry said in a report. The target, which does not include contributions from state-run companies and local governments, was 2.15 percent.

Mantega said that Brazil will meet its fiscal targets this year after following the IMF’s advice and increasing spending during the global financial crisis to help Latin America’s largest economy exit recession.

The country’s deficit is one of the lowest in the world, and net debt will fall to 38 percent of GDP this year from 41 percent in 2010, he said.

Carlo Cottarelli, director of the IMF’s fiscal affairs department, told journalists that Brazil doesn’t face any “immediate risk” from a “relatively modest” increase in its deficit this year. Still, the country’s fiscal position could be stronger than it currently is, Cottarelli said.

Mercopress

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil Vows Compensation to 250 Families Living in Indian Territory

Brazil’s National Institute of Colonization and Agrarian Reform (Incra) estimates that, in all, around ...

Brazil Gets New Congress. 15% of Deputies Are Charged with Crimes

A report published by Globo online reveals that at least 74, 1 in 7, ...

Brazil’s Agribusiness Exports to Arabs Increase 27%

Brazil's agribusiness exports to the Arab countries totaled US$ 1.234 billion in the first ...

Arab Bank ABC Trades Shares at Brazil’s Stock Exchange

ABC Brazil bank, the Brazilian branch of the Arab Banking Corporation (ABC), which is ...

Best-seller Books, Plays and Movies

All the dirty words you knew existed, but didn’t know where to find. How ...

Brazilian Beef on Its Way to Tsunami Victims

The Brazilian Beef Industry and Exporters Association (Abiec), entity which gathers 17 slaughterhouses responsible ...

Brazil Will Use Digital TV to Expand the Internet

Brazil’s Minister of Communications, Hélio Costa, affirmed that there is an expectation that digital ...

Brazil Sends Blair a Note: Key to Security Is Fighting Poverty

Brazil’s President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva sent a message Tuesday, November 15, to ...

Facing Too Many Suits to Kick Out Legislators Brazilian Congress Won’t Even Consider Some

The president of the Brazilian Congress’s Council of Ethics, Deputy Ricardo Izar (PTB-São Paulo), ...

Brazil’s Petrobras Wins 10 Bids to Prospect Oil in the US

Petrobras America, the Brazilian state enterprise’s subsidiary in the United States, knocked down ten ...