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Brazil government now expects 2026 inflation to be above central bank’s target

By Thomson Reuters Jul 15, 2026 | 1:00 PM

BRASILIA, July 15 (Reuters) – Brazil’s government raised its inflation forecast for this year to 5.1% on Wednesday from 4.5% projected in May, putting ​consumer prices above the central bank’s target ‌of 3%, with a tolerance band of 1.5 percentage points in either direction.

The Economic Policy Secretariat at the Finance Ministry, which produces the government’s official forecasts, said supply-side pressures continued ‌to ​weigh on food prices, noting ⁠that fresh products such ⁠as milk, rice and beans posted increases above their historical patterns.

The ministry also said inflation in manufactured goods accelerated, driven by higher prices for ​personal care products, while services inflation remained elevated.

It added, however, that underlying inflation measures have shown ⁠a slowdown in recent months.

The ⁠government kept its forecast for economic growth ​at 2.3% this year, saying activity remained resilient through ​May, but stressed that high real interest rates ‌are poised to restrain the pace of growth ahead, with their full effects taking time to filter through the economy.

Brazil’s central bank cut interest rates ⁠by 25 basis points in June for a third consecutive meeting, taking the benchmark Selic rate to 14.25%, and left ⁠the door ‌open for its next policy decision ⁠in August while reiterating that borrowing costs ​need ‌to remain at restrictive levels to ​bring inflation ⁠back to target.

For 2027, the government raised its inflation estimate to 3.6% from 3.5% previously, while trimming its forecast for gross domestic product growth to 2.5% from 2.6%.

(Reporting by Marcela Ayres; Editing by Franklin Paul ​and Emelia Sithole-Matarise)