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Brazil's economy falls into recession, latest figures show | Brazil's economy falls into recession, latest figures show |
(35 minutes later) | |
Brazil has fallen into recession, just a month before the general election, latest figures show. | Brazil has fallen into recession, just a month before the general election, latest figures show. |
Economic output, GDP, fell by 0.6% in the three months to June, worse than analysts had predicted, and revised figures for the first quarter of the year also showed a fall of 0.2%. | Economic output, GDP, fell by 0.6% in the three months to June, worse than analysts had predicted, and revised figures for the first quarter of the year also showed a fall of 0.2%. |
A recession is usually defined as two consecutive quarters of contraction. | A recession is usually defined as two consecutive quarters of contraction. |
The news will be damaging for the government of President Dilma Rousseff. | The news will be damaging for the government of President Dilma Rousseff. |
According to the most recent poll, Ms Rousseff would lose to a rival candidate, environmentalist Marina Silva, if October's election went to a second round. | |
The World Cup, held in June and July, was not regarded as generally good for business, says the BBC's Wyre Davies in Rio de Janeiro. | |
"There were more days off for employees and many traditional tourists stayed away," he says. | |
"The problem is that, with elections due in early October, the economy is increasingly seen as President Dilma Rousseff's weak point." | |
The data showed that civil construction and manufacturing especially suffered during the second quarter. | |
"This recession shows the exhaustion of a growth model that has been centred on internal consumption," said Eduardo Velho, chief economist at investment firm INVX Global in Sao Paulo. | |
"It is a good picture of what the economy is suffering - a slowdown in industry, a fall in investment, rising inventories. The recovery from here will be slight," he continued, saying that deep reforms would be needed whoever wins the next election. | |
Analysis: Katy Watson, business reporter, Sao Paulo | |
A decade ago, Brazil was the darling of emerging economies. The country reaped the benefits of soaring commodity prices and government spending helped millions of poor Brazilians enter the middle class - the future looked bright. | |
But it's a very different picture now. Investor and consumer confidence has fallen, just like industrial output and retail sales are struggling too. | |
The World Cup may have taken people's minds off economic worries temporarily, but the issue is now top of the agenda. There is just over a month to go before the presidential elections and today's figures will be seen as an opportunity for candidates hoping to unseat President Dilma Rousseff. | |
They'll use the R-word to try to convince voters that their economic policies are a better alternative for the country's future. |