×

Brazil eyes new debt relief with federal guarantees for consumers

By Thomson Reuters Apr 7, 2026 | 1:14 PM

By Bernardo Caram

BRASILIA, April 7 (Reuters) – Brazil’s government is preparing a new credit renegotiation program backed by federal guarantees to curb rising household debt, two sources with ​direct knowledge of the matter said.

The initiative, expected to ‌be announced this week, revives a strategy used early in President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva’s term. The sources requested anonymity because the plans are not yet public.

The move comes as Lula pushes measures to ease ‌pressure ​on household budgets ahead of October’s election, ⁠with his lead over ⁠main rival Senator Flavio Bolsonaro narrowing to a statistical tie in runoff polls.

The previous “Desenrola” program, rolled out between late 2023 and 2024, offered guarantees via a government fund for low-income ​borrowers earning up to two times the minimum wage. By absorbing part of the default risk, it encouraged lenders ⁠to grant steeper discounts and extend ⁠credit for debt settlement.

The new program is expected ​to target delinquent borrowers, especially low-income households, as well as individuals ​current on payments but with high debt commitments, one of ‌the sources said. It will also include a dedicated track for micro, small and medium-sized enterprises, the source added.

To reduce borrowing costs, the government is likely to inject funds into the ⁠Operations Guarantee Fund, also used in Desenrola, the sources said.

One option under discussion is channeling “forgotten” funds left in the financial system into the ⁠program, one of ‌the sources said. These funds currently total ⁠10.5 billion reais ($2.03 billion), according to central bank ​data.

Central ‌bank figures show household debt service reached 29.3% ​of income ⁠in January, matching October 2025 and marking the highest level since the series began in 2011.

Participants in the new renegotiation scheme will also face restrictions on online betting, the sources added.

($1 = 5.1679 reais)

(Reporting by Bernardo Caram in Brasilia, Writing by Marcela Ayres, Editing ​by Rod Nickel)