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Brazil Has Never Seen Its Key Interest Rate So Low: 10.25% PDF Print E-mail
Written by Newsroom   
Thursday, 30 April 2009

Brazilian real The Central Bank of Brazil cut its benchmark interest rate Selic for a third-straight time to a record low of 10.25% as it seeks to prevent the sluggish economy from contracting further this year.

Monetary policy makers voted unanimously to lower the rate to 10.25% from 11.25%. The move follows cuts of 150 basis points last month and 100 basis points in January. A basis point equals 0.01 percentage point.

"Assessing the macroeconomic scenario and with a view to extend the process of monetary easing, the Copom unanimously decided to lower the Selic rate to 10.25 percent, without bias," policy makers said in their statement without any further elaboration.

The Brazilian Central Bank is seeking to revive growth as record job losses and plunging output threaten the government's 2% growth target, a goal already cut from 4% at the start of the year. In the last quarter of 2008, Brazil's economy shrank 3.6% and private economists are forecasting the economy to contract by 0.5% this year.

"Today's cut, despite being smaller than the past one, reflects the central bank's aggressive monetary policy and is consistent with the economic disruption" said Roberto Padovani, chief economist at Banco WestLB in Sao Paulo.

Slower inflation will allow policy makers to keep cutting the Selic rate at their June meeting, economists say. The benchmark interest rate will drop to 9.25% by year-end, according to the median estimate in April 24th Central Bank survey of about 100 economists.

Brazil's broadest measure of inflation, the so-called IGP-M price index, fell 0.15% this month, the Getúlio Vargas Foundation said Wednesday. The index, which measures consumer, construction and wholesale prices, has dropped in three of the first four months of 2009.

The Central Bank targets inflation of 4.5% with a leeway of plus or minus two percentage points.

Just last week, the government's IBGE statistics agency said the jobless rate stood at 9% in March, equal to about 141,000 people, up from 8.5% in February and the highest level since September 2007. There are currently 2.1 million people seeking work.

Earlier, the IBGE said the country's industrial production plunged 17% in March, compared to March 2008 - the worst decline for Latinamerica's largest economy since record-keeping began in 1991.

Mercopress

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Comments (3)Add Comment
Be Wise.....
written by dnbaiacu, April 30, 2009
Don't take the bait! smilies/angry.gif
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Politicians dealing in Half truths: Not ONLY interest rates Selic but ALSO BANK SPREADS need to CHANGE
written by DU 48, May 02, 2009
According to Laerte Martins,writing in the ACIC (Associacao Comercial e Industrial de Campinas,15 April), it's the Brazilian bank spread rates which need to be reduced.

Marcos Cintra (Harvard and FGV) also cites other emerging countries- China, Argentina, Korea, Chile, Malaysia with spreads of 6% compared with 30% on average in Brazil.(Folha de Sao Paulo ' It's the spread stupid ' 3/2/09.)

Originally, Spread in English is in fact a small part added to the interest.In Brazil the spread is always MORE than the interest..Banks reply that 'administative costs' have to be included.
(Reducao do Spread Bancario:Miragem e sofisma ideologico capitalista, Monitor Mercantil,Paulo Guilherme Hostin Sämy 30/03/09)
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Better yet....because only 10 % correct....
written by ch.c., May 04, 2009
the sad reality is that the SELIC RATE is at a MULTI YEARS HIGH....when compared to developed nations central banks interests rates.
Before the crisis, the SELIC was at around 12 %, US AND EU rates at 5 % respectively 4 %, or a spread of 7-8 %

Now the SELIC is at 10,25 %, and the U.S. rates at 0,25 or a spread of 10 % NOW !!!!!!!

Your Central Bank rates are STILL WAY TOO HIGH....TO COMPETE EFFECTIVELY. Even when measured with Australia, New Zealand, Chile, Mexico just to name a few.

YOU INTERESTS RATES WENT HIGHER NOT LOWER....COMPARATIVELY.

And as DU 48 said, on top of that you have to add the facts Brazil has the World Highest Banks SPREADS, WHICH MAKES COMPARISONS EVEN MUCH WORSE !
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