Showing posts with label CMN. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CMN. Show all posts

Friday, 28 June 2019

Inflation slows in Brazil due to the economic crisis and the truck drivers strike

Inflation fell from 4.83% to 3.84% in the accumulated of the last 12 months. However, this drop was mainly caused by the truck drivers' strike in 2018 and the economic slowdown that brought down consumption within the country.

Thus, inflation in Brazil, which had accelerated in the first four months of 2019, seems to be giving a truce in the last two months, according to data released by IBGE. After the scares of March and April, when the IPCA, official index of inflation, reached 0.75% and 0.57%, respectively, in May the rise slowed to 0.13%.

As a result, the National Monetary Council (CMN) decided to lower the inflation target by 3.5% to 2022. The target will have a tolerance interval of 1.5 percentage points, more or less, and the inflation target will be considered fulfilled if the index stays between 2% and 5%.

According to the G1 website, between 2005 and 2018, the inflation target in Brazil "was maintained at 4.5%. In the following years, it was reduced by 0.25 percentage points each year, from 4.25% in 2019 to 3.75% by 2021."

Now, the Brazilian Central Bank should seek even lower inflation. The mistake of the government here is to present absolutely no policy to combat the economic stagnation and the unemployment that reaches millions of people. As a result, this situation is likely to persist in the coming months.

An alternative to this would be to keep the inflation target at 4.25% and reduce interest rates to try to stimulate investment, but even now, this seems insufficient because of the government's delay in presenting any plan to change this scenario of economic stagnation.

Friday, 10 May 2019

Brazil: inflation higher than expected by the government

Inflation in Brazil continues to rise, reaching 4.94% per year and getting distance from the center of the official target for 2019, which is 4.25%.

According to the IBGE, the Broad National Consumer Price Index (IPCA), considered the country's official inflation, stood at 0.57% in April 2019. This is the highest rate for a month in April since 2016 when the index was 0.61%.

When it reached 4.94%, the accumulated in 12 months exceeded the central inflation target of 4.25% set by the National Monetary Council (CMN).

The rise in the price of medicines was one of the main reasons for the growth of inflation in Brazil. The upward trend in inflation in Brazil is expected to continue higher due to the 3.43% increase in the price of the gas cylinder, authorized by Petrobras and in effect since 5 of May, and also by the increase in the price of energy consumption.

Monday, 6 May 2019

Debt and unemployment hit young Brazilians

According to SPC Serasa, 4 out of every 10 young Brazilians have a debt that has already won and has not been paid. Unemployment is the main reason for the very high level of indebtedness among young Brazilians. According to the website Poder360, the unemployment rate among young Brazilians is 30%.

This same survey carried out by SPC Serasa pointed out that at least one in four Brazilians who bought with credit cards entered the revolving credit in February 2019, a month in which the average annual interest rate charged by this modality loan was in 286.9% per year in Brazil.

The high level of unemployment among young Brazilians and the inexistence of other cheaper lines of credit ends up pushing a multitude of young people to one of the most expensive loan modalities in the world.

This is the scenario for a country with 27.9 million unemployed/underemployed, 63 million defaulters and whose banks charge the highest spreads in the civilized world. The current government, and also the previous government, does nothing to change the situation. On the contrary, it uses the Central Bank to impose norms capable of reducing the performance of the Fintechs. An example of this is the Resolution 4.658 of the National Monetary Council. This rule makes it more difficult to comply with the technical, legal and economic adjustments imposed by National Monetary Council (CMN) Resolution 4.658, which, in turn, diminishes the capacity of the Fintechs and reduces the supply of credit in the country.

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