Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Brazil's Economy Edges Up In August, But Momentum Stays Fragile


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Brazil's economy inched forward in August as the Central Bank's monthly activity index (IBC-Br) rose 0.4% from July on a seasonally adjusted basis, after a revised 0.52% drop the month before.

The gain was smaller than the median market call of roughly 0.7% and leaves activity only 0.1% above August last year. For 2025 so far, the index is up 2.6%; over the 12 months through August, it has grown 3.2%. The figures were published on Thursday, October 16, 2025.

The story inside the headline: factories and services did the lifting while farming slipped. Industry expanded 0.8% in the month and services rose 0.2%. Agriculture fell 1.9%, offsetting part of the improvement.

A taxes component increased 0.7%, and excluding agriculture the composite advanced 0.4%. Even so, the three-month moving average dipped 0.11%, and activity over the three months ended in August was about 1.0% lower than the prior three-month period-evidence that momentum remains soft.


Brazil's IBC-Br Signals Slow, Uneven Expansion
The story behind the story: IBC-Br is the Central Bank 's high-frequency proxy for growth, not the country's official GDP (which the statistics agency IBGE reports quarterly).

Because the two are built differently, month-to-month divergences-especially in sector breakdowns-are normal. What matters for decision-makers is the direction and persistence of the moves.

August's reading suggests Brazil is still expanding, but slowly: factories are stabilizing, services are inching forward, and agriculture is a drag.

Why this matters beyond Brazil: as Latin America 's largest economy and a major food and metals exporter, Brazil's growth path shapes regional trade, global commodity flows, and investment plans.

A modest, uneven upturn tends to keep hiring and capital spending cautious, which can temper import demand and delay large projects.

If industry and services keep improving and agriculture steadies, the quarterly GDP picture should firm; if not, the slowdown narrative persists.

Bottom line: a small step in the right direction, but not enough to declare a turn. The next few monthly prints-not one data point-will tell whether Brazil is regaining traction or merely catching its breath.

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