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Rio de Janeiro

Brazil’s Government claims the need of pension system reforms to avoid recession

Brazil’s Economy Ministry has just released a report on which warns that the economy will slip into recession next year and official interest rates could more than double unless Congress approves measures to reduce the deficit in the country’s pension system.

The warning comes days after President Jair Bolsonaro presented his ambitious social security reform plan to Congress, which aims to save over 1 trillion reais ($295 billion) in the next decade.

Overhauling the creaking social security system is seen as critical to shoring Brazil’s public finances, boosting investor confidence, fostering growth and keeping interest rates and inflation under control, most economists say.

In its first official forecast on the potential impact on the economy over the next five years of reform or no reform, the Economy Ministry laid out starkly contrasting scenarios.

«In the event of no pension reform, GDP growth in 2019 will be 1% lower and Brazil will enter recession in the second half of 2020, approaching the level of losses seen in the 2014-2016 period», the ministry’s economic policy division warned in the report.

It said growth this year would slump to 0.8% from 1.3% last year — far weaker than the market consensus of around 2.5% and much worse than the 2.9% «best case» scenario of reform being passed.

Recessionary forces would also deepen over coming years if the pension system stays unchanged, the ministry said. The economy would shrink by 0.5% in 2020, by 1.1% in 2022 and as much as 1.8% in 2023.

The document also adds that benchmark interest rates will soar past 11% by year end from the current record low of 6.50% , and as high as 18.5% by 2023. Most economists expect rates to be on hold for the rest of this year.

But if reform is passed, growth will accelerate, job creation will surge and interest rates will fall, the Economy Ministry predicted.

The benchmark Selic rate could be reduced to a new low of 6.0 % later this year while the economy could create as many as 8 million new jobs by 2023, it said.

Economists have already factored in pension reform into their forecasts and say the outlook is not that strong even if something is approved this year, most likely a diluted version of Bolsonaro’s bill.

Corporate and household balance sheets have not been fully repaired since the 2014-16 recession, the international picture is cloudy, and not everyone is convinced the new administration will deliver on its pledges.

Original Story:Reuters |Jamie McGeever
Photo: FreeImages.com/Bruno Leiva
Edition:Prime Yield

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