Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Haddad Weighs Leaving Brazil's Finance Ministry To Script Lula's 2026 Re-Election


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points

  • Finance Minister Fernando Haddad says he may leave his post in 2026 to work full-time on President Lula's re-election campaign.
  • Haddad is seen as the main budget-minded voice inside a government that constantly pushes for more social spending and public works.
  • His possible exit raises questions about Brazil's fiscal rules, debt path and the balance of power between pro-market and spend-first factions.

    Brazil's most important economic official now says he might step aside to help keep his boss in power. In an interview with O Globo, Finance Minister Fernando Haddad confirmed that he has already told President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva that he wants to work on the 2026 re-election effort.

    He added that leaving the ministry is“a possibility,” though nothing is set. Lula reacted warmly and promised to support“whatever decision” Haddad makes.

    Haddad insists he does not want to be a candidate for any job. Instead, he offers to design Lula's government program and campaign strategy, putting himself in the engine room of a fourth Lula run in a sharply polarised country.



    To understand why this matters, you need to know who plays which role in Brasília. Haddad is the one who talks about numbers: debt, deficits and how much the state can really afford.

    He built Lula's new fiscal framework, which ties spending growth to revenue and sets targets for the primary result, and he spent two years pushing tax changes to raise income without blowing up the economy.
    Government Split Over Debt and Rates
    Markets slowly shifted from distrust to seeing him as a cautious, technical figure who holds back more aggressive spending plans. Lula, by contrast, speaks first about more money for social programs, infrastructure and state-led projects.

    He has publicly downplayed the need to hit a zero deficit and backed ideas to loosen fiscal rules in the name of“investment” and“social justice.”

    Inside the government, there is a constant tug-of-war between this spend-heavy instinct and the small group around Haddad arguing that Brazi cannot simply ignore debt levels and interest rates.

    The story behind the story is 2026. On one side, Lula prepares another campaign built on state activism. On the other, conservative and market-friendly names, including members of the Bolsonaro camp, are manoeuvring to present themselves as guarantors of order, security and fiscal restraint.

    If Haddad leaves the Finance Ministry to join Lula's campaign, it will signal that the spending wing has gained ground inside the government just as the election heats up.

    Brazil is Latin America's largest economy, a major food and minerals exporter and a big emerging-market debtor. If the country's main budget hawk walks away from the Treasury, it could weaken the currency, keep interest rates high and inject new volatility into global portfolios that hold Brazilian bonds and stocks.

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  • The Rio Times

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