CFP warns of future risks despite surplus in 2024

The Public Finance Council (CFP) emphasizes that, despite a fiscal surplus of 0.7% of GDP in 2024, fiscal policy remained expansionary and countercyclical, which could jeopardize the sustainability of public finances in the future.
The positive balance was driven largely by the exceptional performance of the Pension Funds and the Regional and Local Administration.
However, the deterioration of the Central Administration’s balance, which recorded a deficit of 1.5% of GDP, and the sharp growth in personnel and social benefit spending indicate lasting costs that could put pressure on the budget. Public revenue, while robust, grew unevenly, particularly for ICMS (Tax on Goods and Services) and IRPJ (Corporate Income Tax), and the tax burden reached 35.6% of GDP.
The CFP warns that, in 2026, the country is expected to return to deficits—estimated at 1% of GDP—and public debt is unlikely to resume its downward trend, jeopardizing compliance with European fiscal targets.