
Brazil’s External Deficit Narrows as FDI Inflows Surge; Colombia Fiscal Warning Mounts
A smaller-than-expected current account gap and robust direct investment underscore Brazil’s external resilience, while a watchdog in Bogotá flags a larger fiscal hole.
Brazil’s current account deficit narrowed more than markets anticipated in May, reaching $3.185 billion, the central bank reported on Friday. The result was well below the median forecast of a $4.2 billion shortfall and marked the smallest May deficit since 2024. Over twelve months, the gap contracted to 2.6% of gross domestic product, the lowest level since October 2024, as a widening trade surplus and a surge in foreign direct investment reinforced the country’s external accounts.
The improvement was driven by a $7.0 billion goods trade surplus, with exports rising 6.4% year-on-year. However, the services deficit widened to $5.2 billion, pressured by a $1.3 billion travel shortfall as Brazilians’ spending abroad outpaced foreign visitors’ outlays. Net income payments to the rest of the world remained elevated at $5.5 billion, including $4.2 billion in profit and dividend remittances. Crucially, net foreign direct investment inflows jumped to $8.0 billion in May, more than double the figure a year earlier, and covered the current account deficit with room to spare. Portfolio flows, by contrast, recorded a net outflow of $5.5 billion, driven by sales of equities and domestic fixed-income securities.
Viewed from Bogotá, the fiscal picture is less reassuring. Colombia’s independent fiscal watchdog, the CARF, warned that the government’s medium-term fiscal framework underestimates spending and overestimates revenue. The committee projects the fiscal deficit could reach 4.1% of GDP, double the government’s 2.1% estimate, and that net public debt will hit a record 61% of GDP. The CARF calculates that an adjustment equivalent to 3.7% of GDP is needed to meet the official deficit target of 0.5% of GDP, a challenge that will fall to the incoming administration.
In Morocco, fiscal pressures are also building. The budget deficit widened to 30.1 billion dirhams ($3.0 billion) in the first five months of 2026, up from 26.7 billion a year earlier, as spending on goods, services and debt interest outpaced revenue growth. The ordinary balance swung into deficit, eroding a surplus recorded in the same period of 2025. For Brazil, the central bank projects a full-year current account deficit of $56 billion (2.1% of GDP), with the next quarterly monetary policy report providing an updated assessment. In Colombia, the new government’s fiscal strategy—whether spending cuts or a tax reform—will be the next milestone to watch.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 2 languages
Brazil's current account deficit shrank more than expected in May, helped by rising exports and robust foreign direct investment. However, fiscal fragilities linger in Latin America, with Colombia's government criticized for overly optimistic revenue projections and rising public debt.
Morocco's budget deficit widened to 30.1 billion dirhams by May as expenditure grew sharply, outweighing a moderate rise in revenues. The deterioration underscores persistent fiscal strains in the Maghreb region.
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