Brazil
economy grew 0.9% in 2012
The
Brazilian economy grew at its slowest pace for three years in 2012,
according to official figures.
BBC,
3
March, 2013
Gross
domestic product (GDP), which measures the value of all the goods and
services produced, grew 0.9% in the year, the Brazilian Institute of
Geography and Statistics (IBGE) said.
At
the start of the year, the government was predicting 4.5% growth.
President
Dilma Rousseff has been trying to stimulate the economy with tax cuts
and low interest rates.
Most
of the year's growth came in the final three months of the year, when
the economy grew 0.6%.
In
2011, Brazil notched up growth of 2.7% and overtook the UK to become
the world's sixth-biggest economy.
But
on the basis of 2012's figures, Brazil has now fallen back to seventh
place, even though the UK's economy only grew 0.2% in 2012, according
to figures released on Wednesday.
Thanks
to a decline in the value of the Brazilian currency, the real, the
country's economy shrank in dollar terms to $2.2tn, the IBGE said,
while the UK's grew to $2.3tn.
Brazil
is not the only member of the Bric group of economies that is
experiencing a slowdown. Russia, India and China are also finding
that GDP growth has recently slowed more than expected.
"Slower
growth in the Brics is likely to shave half a percentage point off
global GDP growth over the next five years relative to the past
decade," said Mark Williams of Capital Economics.
"For
Brazil, the issue is that consumer spending, which for years was the
driver of growth, can no longer continue to increase at rapid rates.
"Brazilian
households spend roughly a fifth of their income servicing debt - far
more than over-leveraged US households did before the financial
crisis. This debt burden has understandably started to take a toll on
their spending."
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