13/01/2025
Ana Paula Vescovi
Director of Macroeconomics at Santander Brazil
Brazil is becoming increasingly attractive for investments in energy transition and vehicle electrification.
The country's strategic reform programme is advancing with a historic revision of the taxation of goods and services and a new fiscal regime. This promises simplification and introduces an innovative electronic collection system.
Another milestone that will shape Brazil in 2025 is the approval of the regulated carbon market, creating a legal framework for carbon credit trading. This development not only advances the climate and economic agendas but also encourages companies to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. It promotes innovations in sustainable technologies and leverages the country’s huge capacity to generate high-quality carbon credits at competitive prices.
Although a slowdown in GDP growth is expected, economic activity will remain resilient, driven by domestic demand and agricultural production. The agricultural sector is set for another record year, with the grain harvest projected to exceed 2023 production by 5.8%, reaching 311 million tons.
The labour market continues to strengthen, with unemployment rates expected to continue falling to a new historic low of around 6% in the first half of the year. This can be attributed to the impact of 2017 reforms, the emergence of new forms of part-time and intermittent work and fiscal stimulus measures.
Investments in key sectors such as sanitation, logistics and oil production will continue on an upward trend, driven by recent regulatory reforms. The green transition remains strategically important.
The absence of much idle capacity is likely to increase inflationary pressures, which could force a tightening of monetary policy. The banking sector will face challenges in transitioning to IFRS9, an international standard that regulates the classification, measurement and growth of financial instruments that will have implications for risk classification rules and provisions.
These factors, combined with high interest rates, may put pressure on the cost of capital and dampen the appetite for new loans.
Several factors will contribute to an economic slowdown throughout the year. High and growing public debt remains a concern, and financial markets may face volatility as the political room for manoeuvre to approve measures to control public spending growth diminishes. Risk aversion in domestic markets is likely to subject the Brazilian real to pressure.