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%.
A
recession is usually defined as two consecutive quarters of contraction.
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
World Cup failed to lift Brazil's economic output
The
data showed that civil construction, manufacturing and investment especially
suffered during the second quarter.
'Worrying slowdown'
"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.
The
second quarter figures prompted analysts to revise down expectations for
full-year figures.
"That
said, we now expect no growth in the Brazilian economy in 2014, despite
moderate growth in the global economy."
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.
BBC Business
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