(The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a
columnist for Reuters.)
By Jamie McGeever
ORLANDO, Florida, July 30 (Reuters) - U.S. President
Donald Trump has tempered his most belligerent trade threats and
begun striking deals with major partners, meaning most countries
won't face the punishing tariffs announced on 'Liberation Day'.
Not so Brazil.
In fact, Brazil's trajectory has gone in the opposite
direction. On April 2, Brazil faced the minimum 10% tariff rate,
but if a deal is not reached by the end of this week, South
America's largest economy is staring at a whopping 50% levy.
That's significantly higher than the 15% rates negotiated in
both the U.S.-Japan and U.S.-European Union deals. Setting aside
China, the 50% charge would match the highest levy applied to
any country in the Liberation Day 'reciprocal' tariff program.
And, importantly, the impasse is rooted in politics, not
economics. Brazil is one of the few major economies with which
the United States runs a trade surplus. Indeed, it has done so
every year since 2007, with last year's goods surplus clocking
in at $6.8 billion on a total trade volume of $91.5 billion,
U.S. Census Bureau figures show.
Trump has tied the 50% tariffs to judicial moves in Brazil
against former president and ideological ally Jair Bolsonaro,
who has been accused of plotting a coup following the election
of leftist President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva. "LEAVE BOLSONARO
ALONE!" Trump wrote on social media earlier this month.
Diplomatic relations are frosty right now, and between Trump
and Lula they are downright icy. The prospect of them thawing by
the end of this week is negligible.
"Trade deals are a result of negotiations, but there is no
dialogue if the U.S. doesn't respond to our letters. I'm
worried," said one Brazilian government official.
THE TARIFF TOLL
Brazilian industry lobby, the CNI, estimates that the
imposition of 50% U.S. import tariffs could result in the loss
of over 100,000 jobs and knock off 0.2 percentage points from
Brazil's annual economic growth. Brazil's agribusiness lobby,
CNA, warns exports to the U.S. - the country's second-largest
trading partner - could fall by half.
And this is an especially delicate juncture for Brazil.
Foreign exchange flows have turned negative in June and
July, and this year's rally of Brazil's currency, the real, has
stalled. On top of this, foreign direct investment has slowed in
recent months.
That is a dangerous development because Brazil's current
account deficit of 3.4% of GDP in the 12 months through June was
more than double the deficit a year earlier. At current rates,
FDI inflows will no longer cover that gap.
REAL RATES
Given this backdrop, Brazil's central bank now finds itself
in a bind.
Inflation has risen over the last year to eclipse 5%,
putting it above the central bank's upper-band limit of 4.5% for
six consecutive months. In response, the central bank has hiked
the benchmark Selic interest rate to a two-decade high of 15%.
The central bank is expected to leave the Selic at 15% on
Wednesday, and is unlikely to have the wiggle room to cut for
several months. High interest rates are needed to get inflation
back in its box, attract deficit-plugging inflows from abroad,
and support the real.
But the domestic economic price is high. Inflation-adjusted
interest rates in Brazil are now around 10%, the highest in the
G20 - topping even those of Russia and Turkey - and among the
most restrictive real policy rates in the world.
High borrowing costs are, unsurprisingly, slowing credit
growth in Brazil, and in June a broad measure of default rates
on consumer and business loans rose to its highest level since
February 2018.
What's more, sizeable interest payments are the primary
factor behind the ballooning public debt, because nearly half
the country's debt is linked to the Selic rate. Federal public
debt expanded by 567 billion reais ($101.53 billion) in the
first half of this year, of which 393 billion reais was interest
payments.
Brazil's primary budget, excluding interest payments, is
close to balance. But the government's interest bill is fast
approaching 1 trillion reais a year, some 7% to 8% of GDP. This
is set to help drive the country's gross debt-to-GDP ratio above
82% next year from 76% currently.
For policymakers in Brasilia, detente with Washington can't
come quickly enough.
(The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a
columnist for Reuters)
($1 = 5.5843 reais)