Economy June 25, 2026 09:07 AM

Central Bank Sees Inflation Returning Near Target by End-2028 Despite Stronger Near-Term Pressures

Monetary authority raises near-term inflation outlook and growth forecast while holding later-2028 projections steady

By Nina Shah
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Brazil's central bank updated its inflation and growth projections, forecasting annual inflation of 3.1% in the fourth quarter of 2028 - close to the 3.0% target - while significantly revising inflation higher through 2027 amid resilient activity. Policymakers also lifted the growth forecast for this year to 2.0% and noted factors such as normalizing food prices after El Niño effects, a higher real interest-rate path, and demand-supporting fiscal and credit measures.

Central Bank Sees Inflation Returning Near Target by End-2028 Despite Stronger Near-Term Pressures
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Key Points

  • Central bank projects inflation at 3.1% in Q4 2028, close to the 3.0% target, while raising near-term inflation estimates through 2027.
  • Policymakers increased the 2024 growth forecast to 2.0% from 1.6%, citing strong agricultural and commodities output and demand-supporting fiscal and credit measures.
  • The bank cut interest rates last week - a third straight cut - lowering the policy rate by 25 basis points to 14.25% and left future moves open amid a worsened inflation outlook.

BRASILIA, June 25 - Brazil's central bank on Thursday released revised projections showing that inflation is expected to be close to the official 3.0% target by the end of 2028, even as forecasts for earlier periods were materially increased.

In its latest monetary policy report, the bank said annual inflation is projected at 3.1% in the fourth quarter of 2028, marginally above the 3.0% goal. The report left the remaining quarters of 2028 unchanged from the March outlook, with inflation seen at 3.2% in both the first and second quarters and at 3.1% in the third quarter.

Despite those late-2028 readings, the central bank raised its inflation estimates across all quarters of 2026 and 2027, reflecting what policymakers described as stronger-than-expected price pressures, a hotter economy and higher oil prices. The bank noted a sharp upward revision through 2027 - its current policy-relevant horizon - while maintaining the later-2028 path unchanged from the previous report.

Officials attributed the longer-term convergence toward the target in part to an expected normalization of food prices after increases linked to El Nino-related factors, and to a higher real interest-rate path than had been assumed earlier. At the same time, they signaled that near-term price momentum has strengthened.

The central bank also raised its GDP growth forecast for this year to 2.0%, up from 1.6% in the prior projection. Policymakers cited robust farming and commodities production and "fiscal and credit stimulus" as drivers of stronger activity, noting that these measures are being rolled out by President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva to support demand ahead of his October re-election bid.

Markets were unsettled last week when the central bank cut its policy rate for the third consecutive meeting, trimming the Selic rate by 25 basis points to 14.25%. The institution left its future course open, even as it warned of a notable deterioration in the inflation outlook.

The report recalled that prior estimates had put fourth-quarter 2027 inflation at 3.7%, above the target for the bank's policy horizon at that time. The central bank acknowledged that policymakers had been focusing on inflation one quarter ahead - a stance that many economists judged to be a stretch in order to justify continued interest-rate reductions.


What the report shows

  • Inflation expected at 3.1% in Q4 2028, with Q1 and Q2 at 3.2% and Q3 at 3.1% - unchanged from March for 2028.
  • Significant upward revisions to inflation across 2026 and 2027 due to stronger price pressures, a hotter economy and higher oil prices.
  • Annual growth forecast for the year raised to 2.0% from 1.6%, supported by farming, commodities and fiscal and credit stimulus.

Risks

  • Elevated inflation through 2026 and 2027 - revisions point to stronger price pressures and a hotter economy, which may affect consumer purchasing power and real incomes (impacts sectors such as agriculture, commodities and consumers).
  • Volatility in food prices tied to El Nino-related effects - normalization is expected, but near-term shocks could sustain inflationary pressure (impacts agriculture and food markets).
  • Policy uncertainty after rate cuts despite a deteriorating inflation outlook - the combination of monetary easing and fiscal and credit stimulus may complicate inflation control (impacts financial markets and banking sector funding and margins).

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