Brazil enters the coming year facing a central economic dilemma: how to sustain growth in an environment deliberately designed to slow it down. While recent macroeconomic indicators show resilience, including low unemployment, controlled inflation, and modest GDP growth, clear signs of economic deceleration are already emerging. With the SELIC rate hovering near 15% per year, rising household debt, and tighter credit conditions, Brazil risks sacrificing long-term development in exchange for short-term financial stability.
This slowdown is not an unintended side effect of monetary policy. It is, in fact, its explicit objective.
The Monetary Policy Paradox in Brazil
Brazil’s Central Bank has openly stated that maintaining high interest rates is intended to curb consumption, cool the labor market, and reduce aggregate demand. Official communications confirm that economic deceleration is not a policy failure, it is the policy itself.
This approach clashes directly with fiscal policy. Although fiscal rules allow for modest real growth in public spending, any expansionary effect is neutralized by restrictive monetary conditions. The result is a policy mix that suppresses domestic consumption, historically one of Brazil’s main growth engines.
Exchange Rate Stability and Financial Dependence
One of the main justifications for high interest rates is exchange rate stability. As a peripheral economy, Brazil must offer higher returns than advanced economies to attract capital inflows. Consequently, the Brazilian real is often treated more as a financial asset than a currency, leaving it vulnerable to speculative movements.
However, current interest rates frequently exceed what is necessary to compensate for global interest differentials and risk premiums. This suggests that the policy choice reflects not only technical caution but also a political commitment to appeasing financial markets.
Deindustrialization in Brazil: A 40-Year Structural Decline
One of the most damaging long-term consequences of this monetary framework is the collapse of Brazilian industry. In 1980, manufacturing accounted for approximately 25% of Brazil’s GDP. Today, it represents barely 10%.
This decline is largely driven by two structural factors:
1. High Interest Rates and the Cost of Capital
Historically, Brazil has experienced interest rates as high as 40% per year. At such levels, productive investment becomes economically irrational. When investors can earn high, risk-free returns by holding government bonds, there is little incentive to build factories, innovate, or create jobs. Capital is diverted away from the real economy and into financial speculation.
2. Overvalued Exchange Rate and Re-Primarization
An overvalued real discourages domestic manufacturing by making imports cheaper than locally produced goods. This dynamic accelerates the “re-primarization” of exports, shifting Brazil’s economic focus toward commodities such as soybeans, iron ore, and meat rather than higher value-added industrial products.
This trajectory was not inevitable. While Brazil pursued high interest rates and a strong currency, countries like South Korea, China, and Taiwan adopted the opposite strategy with the adoption of low interest rates and competitive exchange rates, forcing capital into productive investment. In Brazil, industrial policy efforts were repeatedly undermined by macroeconomic decisions.
Credit in Brazil: From Development Tool to Financial Extraction
Within this framework, credit has shifted away from its developmental role and become primarily a mechanism for financial extraction.
Brazilian households face some of the highest interest rates in the world, often reaching four-digit annual percentages. Long repayment terms mask the true cost of borrowing, trapping families in cycles of chronic indebtedness. Social guarantees, such as severance funds, are increasingly used as collateral, eroding their original protective function.
At the same time, development banks, once central to industrialization and long-term investment, have seen their role reduced. Subsidized, long-term credit has been dismantled, weakening the countercyclical capacity of these institutions and limiting strategic investment.
Recent Economic Performance and Forecasting Errors
Despite all the structural challenges, Brazil’s economy showed resilience. GDP grew 0.1% in the third quarter, driven by stronger-than-expected performance in industry (0.8%) and agribusiness, while services lagged.
Over the past four years (2021–2024), economists have consistently underestimated Brazil’s economic performance. This pattern of forecasting errors can be attributed to three factors:
- Underestimation of post-pandemic recovery, which was faster than in most Latin American economies.
- Misjudgment of structural reforms implemented between 2015 and 2021, which raised potential GDP.
- Underestimation of fiscal stimulus, particularly during the 2022–2024 period, which generated excess demand.
Inflation in Brazil: Explaining the Puzzle
Inflation has performed better than expected, falling toward the upper tolerance limit of 4.5%, with projections around 4.4% by year-end. This outcome can be explained by three key factors:
- Global dollar devaluation, which reduced import prices and strengthened the real.
- A record agribusiness harvest in 2023, lowering food prices nationwide.
- Structural changes in the labor market, including labor reform, population aging, and the rise of gig economy jobs.
As a result, service inflation has remained contained despite historically low unemployment, and also despite the country's well-known problem of low productivity.
Brazil’s Economic Outlook for 2026
The ongoing deceleration suggests that monetary policy is achieving its intended effect, fueling expectations of a gradual SELIC rate-cutting cycle. Market consensus points to a reduction of around three percentage points, bringing the rate from 15% to 12%. Even so, this would leave Brazil with a real interest rate near 8%, maintaining a contractionary stance.
Fiscal challenges remain unresolved. Although the government aims to achieve a primary surplus, credit rating agency Moody’s downgraded Brazil’s outlook from positive to stable, citing worsening debt dynamics, rigid spending structures, and slow progress in expenditure cuts. A lasting fiscal solution is likely to be postponed until after the 2026 elections.
Meanwhile, Brazil’s stock market has reached successive record highs, driven by expectations of falling interest rates. Analysts argue that Brazilian equities remain undervalued, especially compared to US markets, where valuations, particularly in AI-driven tech stocks, appear increasingly stretched.
Why Structural Reform Is Essential
Brazil’s core economic challenge is not merely technical, but political. Sustainable growth requires better coordination between fiscal and monetary policy, a broader set of tools for the Central Bank beyond interest rates, and the restoration of credit as a driver of productive investment rather than financial rent extraction.
Without addressing capital flow volatility, excessive financialization, and the erosion of development institutions, Brazil risks remaining trapped in a cycle of high interest rates, weak investment, and limited long-term growth. The critical question is no longer whether Brazil can endure high interest rates, but how long it can afford their social and economic costs.
Brazil’s R$760 Billion Infrastructure Bet: Can Private Capital Rebuild the Country’s Economic Backbone?
Furthermore, Brazil is rolling out a R$760 billion national infrastructure plan to reverse years of underinvestment and rebuild the foundations of economic growth. With public infrastructure spending far below the 2% of GDP needed just to maintain existing assets, the country is turning to private capital as the main engine of modernization.
The strategy prioritizes transport and logistics, followed by sanitation, energy, and social infrastructure, and relies on incentivized infrastructure debentures to attract domestic and foreign investors. Projects already underway range from highway concessions linking agribusiness regions to ports to large-scale sanitation expansion affecting millions of Brazilians.
The roadmap is ambitious. The challenge now is execution, and whether stable rules and contract certainty can sustain long-term investment.