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Global Markets News
By Lula resumed an offensive agains the central bank in a
Thursday TV interview in which he suggested a review of the
institution's formal autonomy by the time bank chief Those remarks came a day after the central bank signaled it could hold interest rates at a six-year high for longer than markets expect due to fiscal risks under Lula. "The experience of interference in monetary policy, both from our history and examples from other countries, shows that its effect can be even more negative for inflation, unanchoring expectations and generating more inflationary pressure," she said. The dollar rose 1.8% against the Brazilian real, also
boosted by surprisingly strong U.S. jobs data. Analysts said Lula's comments were weighing on asset prices, with no truce in sight since the leftist president reiterated that "the interest rate issue" is on the agenda. Lula also suggested that the country should aim for a "Brazilian standard" for inflation rather than a European one. "I believe the insistence on this discourse against the
central bank and its inflation target could be a meaningful
negative inflection point for the country," wrote The central bank reaffirmed in its Wednesday policy statement "its commitment to set monetary policy to meet the targets" in what was read by many as a message of opposition to eventual changes in the official inflation goals. Vitoria acknowledged "The solution is not to reduce the benchmark interest rate
Selic by force, but the definition of a credible fiscal rule,
which shows the way to reduce the public debt, and then, yes, we
will have room for a drop in interest rates in
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