According to official data released on Tuesday, bank loans in Brazil rose 10.2% in 2025, exceeding a central bank forecast and driven by a larger-than-expected increase in household borrowing following government credit support.
The outcome also diverged from policymakers’ expectations at the end of last year, when borrowing costs were seen as one of the main constraints on credit growth in Latin America’s largest economy.
The sharp expansion in lending followed the introduction of wide-ranging reforms by President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva’s government in 2025 to expand eligibility for payroll-deducted loans for private-sector employees and to include middle-income families in subsidised home purchase programmes.
Government credit push meets tight monetary policy
This credit growth occurred in the context of an extremely tight monetary policy environment.
To guide inflation back toward its 3% target, the central bank has kept its key interest rate at 15% since July last year, the highest level in nearly 20 years.
Slower loan growth was expected to stem primarily from high interest rates, a view reflected across more cautious official projections.
Last month, central bank policymakers projected the total value of outstanding loans to end the year up 9.4%, down from a growth rate of 11.5% in 2024.
Those projections assumed that elevated borrowing costs would weigh on both household and corporate demand, offsetting any support from government programmes.
Credit expansion is driven by households
According to the data, household lending rose 11.6%, exceeding the central bank’s December forecast of 10.4% and becoming the main driver of overall credit growth.
The performance reflected the impact of policies aimed at expanding consumer access to financing, particularly through payroll-linked products and housing-related initiatives targeting middle-income borrowers.
Corporate credit increased 8.1% over the year, but at a slower pace.
Although overall lending volumes continued to rise, this outcome was broadly in line with the central bank’s 8.0% projection, suggesting that businesses remained more exposed to tight financial conditions and high interest rates than households.
Outlook framed by policy tradeoffs
The gap between household and corporate borrowing highlighted how credit conditions over the year were shaped by policy choices.
Although interest rates remained high in an effort to curb inflation, government support was redirected toward consumers, pushing total lending above levels anticipated by the authorities.
As a result, overall credit growth exceeded the central bank’s forecast, even as it cautioned about the rising cost of debt.
The data also suggested no immediate deterioration in financial conditions, with some evidence of a modest increase in default ratios and spreads, which remained only marginally higher.
Taken together, this pointed to an economy partly constrained by a hawkish monetary policy but partly supported by selective credit expansion, leading to aggregate credit growth in 2025 that outpaced policymakers’ expectations.
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