|
Amazon Body Care |
|
|
Who's Online |
|
We have 165 guests online |
|
Statistics |
Members: 494
News: 11480
Web Links: 0
|
|
Related Items |
-
Brazil Expecting 3.5% GDP Growth for 2005
-
Brazil's GDP Growth on Target
-
Zero Population Growth in Brazil by 2062
-
Banks Upbeat about Brazil
-
Brazil's GDP Grows 4.2% in First Half
-
Brazil: Economic Policy to Be Kept Despite the Pain
-
Brazil Grows 7.8% This Year
-
Brazil Guarantees: Growth Will Be Over 4% in 2004
-
Over 80% of Brazilians Are Living in Cities
-
Brazil's Primary Account Surplus Well Above IMF Target
-
Brazil's Domestic Market Picks Up Strength
-
Brazil Expecting 7.18% Growth This Year
-
Market in Brazil not Bullish for 2005
-
In Brazil Air Gets Better, But Forest Fires Grow Worse
-
2.3%: In 2005 Brazil Grew at Half the Rate of 2004
-
Brazil to Grow 5.5% This Year
-
Brazil Needs Reforms, Says Country's Industry Leader
-
Brazil Happy with Economy and Hopeful for 2005
-
Brazil's Lula Signs Public-Private Partnership Law
-
Brazil's Industrial Growth the Greatest in 20 Years
-
Cars Lead Brazil's 8.3% Annual Growth
-
Brazil's Growth Recipe: Exports Up and Inflation Down
-
Brazilians Getting Better Wage Increases
-
Brazil's Challenge Is to Grow, Says Minister
-
Foreign Capital Jumps Ship in Brazil
-
For IMF, Brazil is Reaping Fruits of Discipline
-
Final Numbers In: Brazil's Economy Grew Mere 2.3% in 2005
-
Brazilian Real Hits 35-Month High Against Dollar
-
Sachs: Brazil Can Grow 5% a Year, But It Needs More
-
Capital Goods Lead Brazil's Little Growth
-
Brazilian Stocks React to Bad News and Slip
-
Some Banks Saying Brazil Won't Grow More than 2.5% in 2005
-
London Blasts Shake Brazilian Market
-
Brazilian Industry Expecting 3.2% GDP Growth for Brazil in 2005
-
Brazil Central Bank's Survey Shows the Industry's Upbeat Mood
-
Brazilian Minister Criticizes High Interest Rates
-
US Treasury Secretary in Brazil to Discuss Growth
-
Brazilian Industry Blames High Interests for Slow Growth
-
Despite Fears, Industrial Production Grows for the Fourth Month in a Row in Brazil
-
In Brazil See-Saw Is Up While Lula Ponders Whether to Run Again
-
Fueled by Ethanol and Phone Rates Brazil's Inflation Goes Up to 6.30%
-
Brazil's Economy Hasn't Been That Good in Decades, Says Finance Minister
-
Lula Pats Himself on the Back for Brazil's Booming Economy
-
Brazilian Industry Grows 3.3%, a Lower than Expected Rate
-
Is Brazil Growing Fast? Other Developing Countries Are Growing Much Faster.
-
Number of Jobs Remains Stable in Brazil and Income Goes Up Slightly
-
Brazil's Finance Minister Promises Long Cycle of Growth
-
Analysts Lower Expectations to a 3% GDP in Brazil
-
Brazilian Finance Minister Forecasts Long Growth Cycle for Brazil
-
Brazil to Grow a Mere 2.3% in 2005, Says IPEA
-
Estimates for Brazil's Growth and Investments Fall Sharply
-
Economic Institute Joins the Bears: Brazil to Grow a Mere 2.3%
-
Brazil's Finance Minister Sees 'Vigorous Growth" and 1.5 Million New Jobs in 2006
-
Not Promise But Guarantee from Lula: All Will Be Better in Brazil, in 2006
-
For Lula, 2006 Will Bring the Brazil He Dreams Of
-
Brazil Is Ready to Grow 15 Years Uninterrupted, Says President Lula
-
Brazil Grows a Paltry 2.4% in 2005, the Lowest in LatAm
-
Slow-Growing Brazil Is Holding Back LatAm's Expansion
-
Brazil's Central Bank Chief Betting 2006 Will Be Very Good
-
Taxes and High Interests Are the Main Bad Guys in Brazilian Economy
-
Forecast Still On: Brazil's GDP to Grow 3.4% This Year
-
Industry Leader Warns that Brazil Needs to Invest More
-
Instead of Waiting to Grow to Share Brazil Is Sharing to Grow, Says Lula
-
1.44%: First Quarter Inflation in Brazil. Thanks to Cheaper Food.
-
IMF Forecasts Puny 3.5% Growth for Brazil and 6.9% for Developing Nations
-
World's Flu Doesn't Give Brazil Pneumonia Anymore, Says Minister
-
Finance Minister Expects 4.5% Growth in Brazil's GDP
-
Argentina's 7.6% Growth Pushes LatAm Up, Despite Brazil's 4% Increase
-
With World's Worst GDP Growth Brazil Sees 2006 Industry GDP Downgraded to 2%
-
Brazilian Industry Grows Slightly in 9 Regions and Shrinks in 5
-
Brazil to Grow 3% or Less This Year, Say Experts
-
Tired of Being Emerging Power Brazil Will Go Over the Speed Limit, Vows Lula
-
Tax Cuts and Spending Caps to Make Brazil Grow 5% a Year
-
Brazil's Per Capita Income Tumbles from 41% to 28% of First World's Take
-
Brazilian Industry Tired of Growing Slower than Rest of the World
-
Brazil's Rich-Poor Gap Shrinks and So Does Everyone's Income
-
2006 Brazilian GDP Downgraded to 2.74%
-
Computer, Iron and Oil Lead 3.1% Expansion in Brazil Industry
-
Brazil's Lula Unveils Today His 5%-a-Year Growth Package
-
Brazil's 2.9% Growth Is the Worst in South America
-
A Bullish Brazil Betting on 4.2% Growth for 2007
-
Experts Say Brazil Won't Grow More than 4.1% This Year
-
Brazil's Birthrate Falls from 6.2 to 2.3 Kids Per Woman
-
Market Analysts Up Their Bets for Brazilian Economy
-
Brazilian Industry Shows Best Growth in Two Years
-
Led by Industry Economy Grows 5.4% in Brazil
-
Brazil Lula Blames Global Instability on US's Casino Mentality
-
Forecast for Brazil: 4.5% GDP Growth with 4% Inflation
-
After One Month Decline Brazil Economy Jumps Back on Uphill Track
-
Despite Reduced Planted Area, Brazil's Agriculture Grows 2.9%
-
Brazil GDP Expected to Grow 4.71% This Year and 4.33% the Next
-
Brazil Exports Grow 16%, Way Over World's Average, But Still 1% of Global Trade
-
Trouble in US and EU Won't Slow Down Brazil, Says Minister
-
Brazil's GDP Grows 5.4% While Investments Jump 13%
-
Job Market Grows 5% in Brazil
-
Brazil Fears Inflation While GDP Grows 5.8%
-
Brazil Industry Loses Steam
-
Brazil Grows 6% in First Half and Expects 5.5% Growth in 2008
-
Brazil Sees 5,3% Growth with Domestic Market Making Up for Export Losses
-
600 Pages of Suggestions on How to Improve Brazil's Service Sector
-
Brazilian Finance Minister Compares Global Crisis to 1929 Crash
-
Half of Brazilians Are Middle Class, Finance Minister Announces
-
UN Hints Brazil May Grow a Mere 0.5% in 2009
-
70% of New Companies Fail in Brazil
-
Lula Still Hopeful Brazil Will Grow 4% in 2009
-
JPMorgan: Brazil Is in Recession and Will Grow Mere 1.5% This Year
-
After Zero or Negative Growth Brazil to Expand 4%, Says Veteran Guru
-
Brazil Finally Admits It Might Get Stuck on Zero GDP Growth in 2009
-
Latest Revised Official Numbers See Brazil Growing a Mere 1% in 2009
-
Thanks to Auto-Industry Brazil Grows 0.3% in June
-
Brazil Industry Has Worst Semester Since 1975
-
Brazil's GDP Grows 1.9% Compared to First Quarter
-
Brazilians' Buying Spree Yanked Brazil Out of Recession
-
For Economist Brazil Is Controlling Inflation But Not Fostering Growth
-
2009 Brazil GDP Grows 0.01% and Industry Contracts 7.5%, Say Markets
-
IMF Revises Forecast and Says Brazil in 2010 Will Grow Over 3.5%
|
|
Contribution |
| Have you got news? Do you have news, comment or story on Brazil you want to share with Brazzil? Just send it our way to brazzil@brazzil.com. | |
|
|
|
The Latest from Brazzil Magazine |
|
|
|
|
8.3%! Brazil Hadn't Grown That Much in 18 Years. |
|
|
|
|
Written by Émerson Luiz
|
|
Thursday, 10 February 2005 |
|
Thanks to some revisions by the IBGE (Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia and Estatística - Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics) 2004 has become the best year the Brazilian economy has seen in 18 years, growing at a fast clip of 8.3%.
The 8.3% expansion is superior even to the progress in 1994, the year the Plano Real was established. That year the economy grew by 7.6%. The growth was led by the sectors of durable goods, including appliances and automobiles and of capital goods, including machines and equipment. In contrast with the sector of non-durable consumer goods like food, which had an increase of only 4%, the production of capital goods advanced 19.7%, and the one of durable goods grew by a robust 21.8%. The whole Brazilian industry experienced growth in 2004. Twenty six of the 27 segments researched showed to be in expansion. These results were possible thanks to growing exports, a bigger offer of the credit and investment in production.
The autoindusty sector, for example, experienced a 27.6% growth when compared to the previous year. Compared to November December production had a positive variation of 0.6%.
This recuperation in the last month of the year was led by the recovery of the segments that depend on income like semidurables (clothes, shoes) and non durables, which had a 3.4% growth. Other sectors had a more modest performance. The 18-year record also happened due to the several revisions made by the IBGE. This way, November, which previously presented a 0.4% fall became a 0.3% increase. October also went up from 0% to 0.2% and September changed from 0.2% to 0%. Almost every month had is results reviewed upwards. Silvio Sales, IBGE's industry coordination chief, explained that the revisions are a result of a methodology that requires seasonal adjustment. According to him it's customary that the companies send new information after the IBGE has closed its monthly research. “The market knows about the procedures adopted by us, and a lot of forecasts already incorporate possible revisions”, he said. For him, methodolgy is the only reason behind so many revisions.
BrM
|
|
|
|
|
Home
|
|
Brazzil Magazine - Since 1989 trying to understand Brazil |
|
|
|
|
|