Supermarket sales in Brazil rose 0.66% in 2005, reports the Brazilian Supermarket Association (Associação Brasileira de Supermercados) (Abras). The association’s original forecast for 2005 sales was an increase of 2% to 2.5%.
As usual there was a strong surge in sales in December. They rose almost 35%, compared to November. But the December 2005 sales were 3.84% less than in December 2004.
The Abras president, João Carlos de Oliveira, blamed high interest rates, high unemployment and increases in prices controlled by the government – water, electricity, telephone and fuels.
"We had a year where worker income dropped and consumers spent most of the period in debt with reduced purchasing power. That all had a direct impact on supermarket sales, mainly in the second half," he declared.
But Oliveira said the outlook for 2006 is better. His forecast is for an increase of 1.5% to 3% in sales.
ABr