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UN Agency Forecasts 0.4% Growth for Brazil

UN Agency Forecasts 0.4% Growth for Brazil
UN Agency Forecasts 0.4% Growth for Brazil

The gross domestic product in Brazil will grow by 0.4% this year, according to forecasts by the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean. The United Nations agency estimates an average GDP growth of 1.1% in 2017 for the entire region.

ECLAC pointed out the need for macroeconomic policies to enable long-term growth and to promote structural changes in the region’s economy. For the agency, it is also important to increase public revenues as well as public investments, riotimesonline reported.

 “This means moving toward countercyclical frameworks for fiscal policy that defend and promote public and private investment. This involves revising fiscal rules so they continue to serve as pro-stability instruments, but also as pro-investment,” Alicia Barcena, ECLAC’s executive secretary said during Thursday’s press conference in Chile.

According to the latest ECLAC economic report, after two years of contraction, growth in the region will occur because the economies have benefited from an overall more positive international growth context and an improvement in the prices of raw materials exported by the region.

The document shows that all countries in the region will have positive growth rates this year with the exceptions of Venezuela (GDP -7.2%) and Suriname and Saint Lucia, (GDP -0.2%).

The ECLAC growth estimate for Brazil falls between the government’s GDP forecast for this year, of -0.5%, and market estimates, that forecast a 0.34% growth. In 2016, Brazil’s GDP registered a retraction, falling by -3.6%.

For government officials the latest indicators confirm the stabilization of the economy and the resumption of growth after a two-year recession.

 

 

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