Brazil Grows a Paltry 2.4% in 2005, the Lowest in LatAm

The total wealth produced in Brazil during 2005 expanded 2.40%, as revealed in the Focus bulletin issued today by the Brazilian Central Bank (BC).

Brazil’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) grew less than anywhere else in Latin America, and the growth rate came to about half the 4.90% registered in Brazil in 2004. It also fell short of the 3.50% forecast made at the outset of 2005.

The disappointing showing is due in part to the decline in last year’s expected growth in industrial production, down from 4.50% to 3.15%, together with weak performances by agribusiness and commerce in general.

Nevertheless, estimates of the ratio between net government debt and the GDP remain unchanged at 51.60%, as they have been for the past ten weeks.

The BC survey, based on interviews conducted last Friday, December 30, with a hundred market analysts and representatives of financial institutions, is betting on a 3.50% increase in the GDP in 2006, as a result of the recovery in industrial production, which is expected to grow 4.05% and help lower the debt/GDP ratio to 50.70%.

When today’s bulletin is compared with the one based on interviews conducted on December 30, 2004, one perceives a generalized dashing of the predictions made at that time.

For a starter, the annualized benchmark interest rate (Selic), which everybody supposed would end 2005 at 16% but turned out to be 18%, with prospects for declining to 15% only at the end of 2006.

The forecasts indicated that the exchange rate of the US dollar would end 2005 at R$ 2.95, but the market drove the quotation down to the level of R$ 2.20, and it was only thanks to the intervention of the BC itself, which entered the market buying dollars, that the US currency was able to rebound to R$ 2.33 at the end of the financial exercise. Today’s prediction for the exchange rate at the end of 2006 goes no higher than R$ 2.40.

Foreign trade was an exception. Both the government and entrepreneurs began last year expecting that the trade surplus (exports minus imports) would not surpass US$ 26.4 billion in 2005, below the US$ 33.66 billion registered in 2004.

But the performance of the sector took everyone by surprise, with the surplus exceeding US$ 44 billion. The market projects a US$ 36.98 billion surplus in 2006.

Agência Brasil

Tags:

You May Also Like

Opposition Takes Sí£o Paulo and Minas, Almost Half of Brazil’s GDP

The Brazilian Social Democrat opposition, party to which former president Fernando Henrique Cardoso belongs, ...

Brazilian Government Buys Bean to Control Prices

Purchases of bean by the Brazilian federal government in Rondônia, northern Brazil, raised the spirits ...

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 ...

Brazilians Want to Know How Lula’s Son Went from Jobless to Millionaire in 4 Years

An investigation has been launched into the fortune of one of the Brazilian president’s ...

Brazilian Industry Says It Won’t Accept Increases in Bolivia’s Gas Prices

The president of the São Paulo Manufacturers Federation (Federação das Indústrias do Estado de ...

7.2 Million Brazilians Don’t Have a House to Live In

On Friday, May 27, the Minister of Cities, OlÀ­vio Dutra, declared that Brazil’s overall ...

Brazil Uses Trading Companies to Boost Exports

Brazil's Export and Investment Promotion Agency (Apex) launched a new project to encourage business ...

Brazil’s Most Innovative Physicists Join Colleagues from Around the World in Morocco

The students at Escola Crescimento (Portuguese for Growth School), in the city of São ...

Brazilian Cattle Ranchers Destroying Indians Habitat in Paraguay

In the Paraguayan side of the border between Brazil and Paraguay, the last uncontacted Indians ...

Letters

Here like there Reading your “Red Tape Addiction” article in the November issue made ...