Thursday, Apr. 16, 2026
Does Brazil need to borrow nearly 8% of its GDP to pay interest on its debt?
According to the Brazilian Central Bank, interest payments on Brazil’s debt reached 8.05% of its GDP in 2025, up from 7.69% in 2024. This is larger than the primary deficit, the gap between revenue raised and non-interest expenses, of 0.42% of GDP. The sum of these two represents the total deficit, the amount the Brazilian federal government had to borrow in 2025.
These large interest payments reflect both high net debt (65% of GDP) and high interest rates on Brazilian government bonds. Brazil’s inflation-adjusted interest rate, 9.23%, is well-above the 2.33% forty-country average and second highest after that of Russia (9.88%).
Brazil’s ability to raise extra tax revenue is constrained by its tax burden – its 32% tax revenue-to-GDP ratio is the highest of Latin American countries, although lower than the 34% OECD average.
This fact brief is responsive to conversations such as this one.
Sources
- Banco Central do Brasil Fiscal statistics
- Peter G. Peterson Foundation What Is the Primary Deficit?
- IMF Brazil
- OECD Brazil
- MoneYou Ranking Mundial de Juros Reais
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