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Brazil's Broad Inflation Gauge Fell In 2025-And That's Only Half The Story
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points
Brazil ended 2025 with a rare number: the IGP-DI, one of the country's most watched“general price” measures, slipped 1.2% from January to December. At first glance, it reads like deflation. In reality, it is a snapshot of two Brazils moving in opposite directions.
The index is a blend. Most of it tracks producer and wholesale prices, where commodities dominate. That component, the IPA, fell 3.61% in 2025, its first negative annual result since 2023.
The driver was external: mineral, metal, and energy commodities softened abroad, pulling down Brazilian production costs. Over time, that easing filters into parts of the food chain.
But daily life is priced elsewhere. The consumer component of IGP-DI, the IPC, still rose 4.0% in 2025. Costs tied to housing and services stayed firm, limiting how far the headline index could fall.
Residential electricity tariffs climbed 16.26%. Health and insurance plans rose 6.16%. Meals in bars and restaurants increased 7.76%. Construction costs also kept rising: the INCC ended 2025 up 5.92%.
December showed the same push and pull. IGP-DI rose 0.10% in the month. Iron or jumped 4.1%, lifting the producer basket. Soymeal rose 4.28% and corn gained 1.09%, a reminder that food prices can re-accelerate seasonally into early 2026.
Why does this matter beyond Brazil? Because IGP-DI is used in many contracts, rents, and corporate price adjustments. A falling headline can ease indexation pressure and improve the inflation story told to investors.
Yet the stubborn services-and-tariffs side signals the harder challenge for 2026: keeping inflation on a glide path when wages, demand, and administered prices resist cooling.
IGP-DI fell 1.2% in 2025, mainly because global commodities cooled and producer prices dropped.
Inside the same index, consumer prices still rose 4.0%, with tariffs and services doing much of the damage.
The gap matters in 2026: cheaper goods help, but sticky services can keep inflation and rates elevated.
Brazil ended 2025 with a rare number: the IGP-DI, one of the country's most watched“general price” measures, slipped 1.2% from January to December. At first glance, it reads like deflation. In reality, it is a snapshot of two Brazils moving in opposite directions.
The index is a blend. Most of it tracks producer and wholesale prices, where commodities dominate. That component, the IPA, fell 3.61% in 2025, its first negative annual result since 2023.
The driver was external: mineral, metal, and energy commodities softened abroad, pulling down Brazilian production costs. Over time, that easing filters into parts of the food chain.
But daily life is priced elsewhere. The consumer component of IGP-DI, the IPC, still rose 4.0% in 2025. Costs tied to housing and services stayed firm, limiting how far the headline index could fall.
Residential electricity tariffs climbed 16.26%. Health and insurance plans rose 6.16%. Meals in bars and restaurants increased 7.76%. Construction costs also kept rising: the INCC ended 2025 up 5.92%.
December showed the same push and pull. IGP-DI rose 0.10% in the month. Iron or jumped 4.1%, lifting the producer basket. Soymeal rose 4.28% and corn gained 1.09%, a reminder that food prices can re-accelerate seasonally into early 2026.
Why does this matter beyond Brazil? Because IGP-DI is used in many contracts, rents, and corporate price adjustments. A falling headline can ease indexation pressure and improve the inflation story told to investors.
Yet the stubborn services-and-tariffs side signals the harder challenge for 2026: keeping inflation on a glide path when wages, demand, and administered prices resist cooling.
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