BCN-03 Brazil closes out 2017 with record trade surplus

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BCN-03

BRAZIL-ECONOMY-TRADE-POLITICS

Brazil closes out 2017 with record trade surplus

BRASILIA, Jan 3, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Brazil’s road to economic recovery has
passed another milestone with official data showing Tuesday that the country
finished 2017 with a record trade surplus 40.5 percent higher than in the
previous year.

The $67 billion surplus was in line with market projections and within the
$65 billion to $70 billion range forecast by the government.

Brazil’s economy is projected to grow two percent this year, according to
an annual report by the United Nations-backed Economic Commission for Latin
America and the Caribbean (CEPAL) released last month.

That is unspectacular but solid — and far better than the 0.2 percent
expected for 2017, or the two years of of its worst-ever recession preceding
that.

The government’s own projections are slightly more optimistic: three
percent in 2018 and 1.1 percent in 2017.

Economy Minister Henrique Meirelles said last month that the improvement
was owed to better “fiscal control, the approval of a freeze on public
spending and reforms in general.”

The country’s key interest rate is now at a record low of seven percent,
half of what it was in late 2016. Inflation is now considered a minimal risk.

Brazil’s center-right president, Michel Temer, has spearheaded austerity
cuts, looser labor laws and a big privatization program to boost the economy,
Latin America’s largest.

But Temer remains unpopular with voters, clouding the political outlook
ahead of presidential election this year.

The frontrunners for the election so far are leftist former president Luiz
Inacio Lula da Silva and rightwing former army officer Jair Bolsonaro.
Neither man is much welcomed by investors.

BSS/AFP/MR/ 0954hrs