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Brazil Economy Slowdown: GDP Growth, Inflation Outlook & Interest Rates

by Lucas Fernandez – World Editor

Brazil‘s Economic Growth ⁤Decelerates Sharply in Second Quarter, Though Exceeds Expectations

SÃO PAULO – Brazil’s economy ‍slowed considerably‌ in the second quarter, expanding by just 0.1% according to data released today,marking a steep drop from the revised 1.3% growth reported in the first quarter. Despite the deceleration, the ‌figure surpassed forecasts from⁣ a Reuters poll.

On a year-over-year basis,GDP expanded 2.2%,‍ aligning with expectations. The first quarter’s performance benefited from a boost in seasonal farm output.

Economists note the data signals a gradual slowdown in household consumption. Gustavo Rostelato, an economist at Armor Capital, stated the GDP data provided few new elements, reinforcing this trend.

The slowdown⁢ comes as brazil’s central bank has ⁢aggressively tightened monetary policy, lifting its benchmark interest rate by​ 450 basis points since September to 15%, a near two-decade high, and holding steady in July.⁢ Policymakers have indicated plans to maintain this stance‌ for a “very ⁤prolonged” period⁢ to curb ⁣inflation.

Weaker growth supports an ⁣improving inflation outlook, potentially allowing the central bank to begin cutting interest rates around the end of the year, according to Liam Peach, a senior emerging markets economist at‌ Capital Economics. He forecasts GDP⁣ growth of around 0.3% quarter-over-quarter in the coming quarters,‌ with full-year growth for 2025 at 2.3%, and below ‍2.0% ​next year.

The Finance Ministry has flagged a slight downward bias to its 2.5% growth forecast ‍for this year,⁣ following the 3.4% expansion recorded in 2024, citing the sharper-than-expected second-quarter deceleration and the ‍lagged effects of monetary tightening.

Key indicators within the second quarter data reveal household consumption rose 0.5% from the ‍previous quarter, supported by government measures to sustain wage gains, but slowed from a 1.0%⁣ increase in the ⁢first quarter. Investments fell 2.2%, pressured by‌ high borrowing costs, while government consumption declined⁢ 0.6%.

Services, accounting for approximately 70% of Brazil’s ‌GDP, expanded 0.6% from the prior three months, supported by a robust labor market.

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