Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Brazil's Farm Debt Squeeze Exposes Weak Links In A Global Food Power


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points

  • Brazilian farms carry about R$188 billion ($35 billion) in debt, equal to roughly two and a half harvests of cash.
  • High interest rates and tighter credit are forcing many producers to cut investment, delay purchases and seek court protection.
  • Strain in Brazil's fields can push up global food prices and weaken a sector that once looked unstoppable.

Brazil is often sold as an agricultural success story: record soybean cargoes leaving northern ports, new land coming into production, and supermarket shelves abroad stacked with Brazilian beef, coffee and orange juice.

Behind that bright picture, 2025 has exposed a darker side: farms loaded with debt and running out of cheap credit. Sector specialists estimate that agribusiness now owes around R$188 billion ($35 billion) in financial debt.

That is money that would normally take two and a half harvests to generate. In good years, this is manageable. In a year of squeezed margins and patchy weather, it becomes dangerous.



Interest rates are the first problem. The basic cost of money hovers near 15% a year, but once banks add risk premiums for rural borrowers, many producers pay more than 20%.

In some corn regions, gross profit per hectare has fallen from roughly R$1,010 ($187) to about R$79 ($15) in a single season. After land and financing costs, losses can approach R$1,900 ($352) per hectare. That is not a business; it is a slow bleed.

The second problem is access to credit. Brasília announced a record Plano Safra above R$500 billion ($93 billion), yet early disbursements have been weaker than last year.

Farmers complain of forms, delays and banks quietly tightening standards. A special R$2.45 billion ($454 million) rescue line for those hit by extreme weather helps, but barely dents the overall debt mountain.

Fertilizer demand tells the same story from another angle. Companies started 2025 expecting about 4% growth in deliveries; now they talk about 1–2%. In tonnes, the market is bigger, but the real measure – nutrients applied to the soil – is barely higher than last year.

Long-term projections still see demand near 60 million tonnes by 2030, yet roughly a third of Brazil's fertilizer imports continues to come from Russia, leaving farmers exposed to geopolitics as well as prices.

For expats and foreign readers, this matters because Brazil is not just another producer; it is a pillar of world food supply. If indebted growers cut back on technology, fertilizers and risk management, yields will slip and price shocks will spread far beyond the Brazilian countryside.

The country's great agricultural machine can keep feeding the world, but only if finance, regulation and politics stop loading so much hidden weight onto the people who actually work the land.

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The Rio Times

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