Brazil’s Industrial Production Unexpectedly Drops Amid Recession

Brazil’s industrial production fell in November for the sixth consecutive month, raising concerns about the extent of the recession in Latin America’s largest economy

Shipping containers inside the BTP port terminal, the largest export terminal for Brazilian products.
By Andrew Rosati
January 06, 2022 | 09:23 AM

Bloomberg — Brazil’s industrial production fell in November for the sixth consecutive month, raising concerns about the extent of the recession in Latin America’s largest economy.

Brazil's industrial production fell for sixth straight monthsdfd

Output fell 0.2% from the month prior, compared with the median estimate for a 0.1% gain from economists in a Bloomberg survey. From a year ago, production was down 4.4%, the national statistics agency reported on Thursday.

Double-digit inflation and aggressive interest rate hikes have sapped momentum from Brazil’s industry and also the nation’s overall post-pandemic recovery. At the same time, problems in global supply chains and extreme weather swings, from droughts to floods, have worsened growth prospects, prompting some economists to warn of an extended recession in 2022.