
Brazil - Economy, Agriculture, Trade | Britannica
3 days ago · Brazil is one of the world giants of mining, agriculture, and manufacturing, and it has a strong and rapidly growing service sector.
Economy of Brazil - Wikipedia
As of 2024, the Brazilian economy is the third largest in the Americas in nominal terms, and second largest in purchasing power parity. It is an upper-middle income developing economy.
Brazil's Economic Activity Starts Q4 on Weaker Footing
1 day ago · BRASILIA, Dec 15 (Reuters) - Brazil's economy started the fourth quarter on a weaker footing, central bank data showed on Monday, as analysts closely monitor activity indicators to ...
Brazil | World Bank Group
Brazil’s economy has shown resilience, with average growth exceeding 3% over the past three years. Robust private consumption—supported by social transfers—has driven demand, while services and …
Brazil economy starts fourth quarter on weak foot as activity index ...
1 day ago · Brazil economy entered fourth quarter with surprise contraction, adding to signs that activity is cooling under tight monetary policy.
Brazil economic outlook | Deloitte Insights
Nov 20, 2025 · Despite near-term challenges to growth, Brazil’s economy is likely to rebound next year. Falling inflation will allow the central bank to ease policy, which will likely improve domestic demand. …
Brazil Economic Snapshot | OECD
5 days ago · This snapshot offers an overview of Brazil's economic situation, GDP and inflation projections, growth prospects, and structural reform priorities.
Brazil's economy grows 0.1% in Q3 of 2025 - MercoPress
Dec 6, 2025 · Brazil's economy expanded by 0.1% in the third quarter of 2025 compared with the previous quarter. Year-on-year, Brazil's Gross Domestic Product (GDP) —the measure of the total …
Brazilian Economic Indicators | IBGE
For the first time ever, this release consolidates, in a single report, the major short-term economic indicators produced by the IBGE.
Brazil’s Economic Activity Falls as High Rates Weigh on Growth
Nov 17, 2025 · Brazil’s economic activity fell slightly more than expected in September, a sign that growth is flagging under double-digit borrowing costs.