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Brazil Families Face Record Indebtedness as Interest Rates Rise

Brazil Families Face Record Indebtedness as Interest Rates Rise

Brazil’s overall consumer debt reached an all-time high, just as loans become more expensive amid an aggressive central bank campaign to raise interest rates. 

Outstanding household debt reached 59.9% of total wages in June, the highest level since data started being published by the central bank in 2005. The total debt, ranging from short-term credit card loans to mortgages, increased by 10.6% from a year ago, the bank said on Monday. 

Brazil Families Face Record Indebtedness as Interest Rates Rise

“We’ve seen overall household debt rising every month, breaking records,” Fernando Rocha, the head of the central bank’s statistics department, told reporters at a news conference. “It’s a trajectory we are constantly monitoring.”

Rising demand for credit has so far been met by financial institutions, with credit card payments and loans to buy cars rising the most.

While personal loan default rates have remained little changed at 4.2% in August, analysts at JPMorgan & Chase Co worry that high debt levels by consumers could derail the economic recovery as borrowing costs rise further. 

“We remain concerned that the high level of indebtedness could weigh on households’ balance sheets and affect the pace of domestic demand ahead, especially given the expected tightening of monetary policy,” economist Cristiano Souza wrote in a research report. Improvements in the labor market could help mitigate the impact on economic activity, he said. 

An increase in jobs creation -- thanks to a accelerating vaccination campaign against Covid-19 -- has so far helped to keep monthly expenses for the payment of loans at a stable level near 30%, according to central bank’s Rocha. 

Policy makers led by Roberto Campos Neto have lifted the benchmark Selic rate by 425 basis points since March to battle inflation that’s running at more than 10% per year. The central bank considered average interest rates, which rose to 29.9% in August, “in line” with the current tightening of monetary policy. 

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.