Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Brazil's Inflation Finally Edges Back Inside The Target Band


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points

  • Brazil's IPCA inflation is now expected to end 2025 around 4.4%, finally back inside the official target band.
  • A stronger currency, cheaper food and lower electricity surcharges did the heavy lifting, supported by a tight monetary policy.
  • Services inflation and a very hot labour market keep pressure high, raising doubts about how long this respite will last.

For the first time in four years, Brazil looks set to close the year with inflation technically“inside the target.” The Central Bank 's Focus survey now points to IPCA of about 4.4% in 2025, just under the 4.5% ceiling of the 3% ±1.5 percentage-point band.

That would be a symbolic win after a long stretch of overshoots and noisy political fights around interest rates. This improvement follows a rule change that forces the Central Bank to explain itself whenever 12-month inflation spends six straight months outside the band.

In letters to the Finance Ministry, president Gabriel Galípolo blamed earlier misses on strong activity, a resilient jobs market, entrenched inflation inertia, unanchored expectations, a weaker real, higher processed food prices and more expensive electricity.

The message was clear: the problem was broad and persistent, not a statistical accident. Since mid-2025, the picture has shifted. The real has recovered, taking pressure off imported goods.


Inflation Cools but Risks Persist
Global and domestic food prices cooled. The electricity tariff flag moved from red to yellow in December, trimming the extra charge on power bills and knocking about 0.1 percentage point off year-end inflation forecasts.

Private houses cut their projections for the last two months of the year and now cluster between 4.2% and 4.4%. Official IBGE data confirm the trend.

Monthly IPCA readings are running low, while 12-month inflation has slipped toward the top of the target band. The preview index, IPCA-15, has hovered around 4.5% in 12 months, suggesting the disinflation is not a fluke.

The stubborn part is services. Prices in restaurants, rents and health plans still rise far faster than the headline index, fuelled by low unemployment and strong demand. That is why the Selic rate remains painfully high and is expected to stay in double digits next year.

For Brazilian families, slower inflation means prices keep rising, but less brutally. For borrowers, it opens the door to future rate cuts, if the political class resists the temptation of looser fiscal policy.

For investors, a return to the target band rebuilds credibility but also highlights how fragile the achievement is. If services costs, energy tariffs or public spending spike again, Brazil could quickly find itself back on the wrong side of its own rules.

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The Rio Times

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