Central Bank Lowers Brazil’s 2005 GDP Estimate from 3.4% to 2.6%

Brazil’s Central Bank (BC) lowered its estimate for this year’s growth in the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) from 3.4% to 2.6%. This forecast is part of the Quarterly Inflation Report, which was released Wednesday, December 28.

The latest report indicates the 1.2% drop in the GDP registered in the third quarter by the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE) as one of the main reasons for the lower estimate. The outlook for 2006 is for the GDP to grow 4%.

The report also estimates that the Broad Consumer Price Index (IPCA), which is the index of inflation used by the Brazilian government, will end the year at 5.7%, above the 4.5% target set by Brazil’s National Monetary Council (CMN). The BC is operating under the assumption that inflation will amount to 3.8% in 2006 and 3.6% in 2007.

In the judgment of the BC’s director of Economic Policy, Afonso Bevilaqua, the drop in the estimated GDP growth is "a thing of the past."

According to him, the prospect is one of recovery in the final quarter of 2005, due to the increase in the number of jobs and the real salary mass, as well as inventory equilibrium in the productive sector and credit expansion.

Bevilaqua observes that preliminary industrial and commercial data suggest a "more dynamic" economy from November on, which should ensure 3% growth in industry, 2.1% in services, and 1.5% in the agricultural sector in 2005.

The BC expects recovery in all segments of the economy next year: 5.3% growth in industry, 4.8% in agriculture, and 2.9% in services.

The performance of Brazil’s industry, he adds, should receive direct, positive impacts from domestic petroleum production and the favorable international economic situation, even with the slight decline in international oil prices.

The projection for the performance of the Brazilian agriculture is based on the estimated 2005/2006 agricultural harvest, in which grain production is expected to increase 12%.

Agência Brasil

Tags:

You May Also Like

Guarulhos International Airport in São Paulo, Brazil

Foreign Tourists Fall by Half a Million in Brazil

The collapse of Brazil's flag carrier Varig last year caused a significant fall in ...

Looking for Love

Documents required: By Janaina Gimael The Secretaria de Assistência Social (Social Assistance Department), an ...

Why Brazilians Should Elect Dilma Rousseff the Next President of Brazil

A little over four years ago, in September 2006 “Brazzil” published one of my ...

New Data Show Brazil Is in a Recession or About to Get into One

Brazil’s economic activity went down sharply in June as the World Cup football tournament ...

Brazil: Too Tense for Comfort

Several moderate politicians and the press have criticized the overly lenient attitude of Brazilian ...

Brazil Cautiously Dances with China While Seeing It as a Rival for Leadership in LatAm

>After the BRICS summit and a visit to Brazil, China’s President Xi Jinping is ...

It’s 13.75%: For Fourth Time in a Row Brazil Raises Key Interest Rate

Brazil's Copom (Monetary Policy Committee) of the Brazilian Central Bank (BC) raised Brazil's base ...

Brazil Uses Courts to Reimpose Prior Censorship on the Press

A judge in the Brazilian Northeast has forbidden a newspaper from publishing stories on ...

Four Years and Counting

Public approval of the Real plan is not unanimous anymore. Complaints range from the ...

Brazilian TV Crew Beaten Up by Lula’s Party Supporters

Reporters Without Borders expressed indignation after three members of a television crew from privately-owned ...