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Brazil Fiscal Targets 2027: 39% Court-Ordered Debt Joins New Framework

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What Brazil's 2027 Budget Guidelines Mean for Fiscal Discipline

Brazil's government has taken a significant step in its ongoing efforts to stabilize public finances by submitting the 2027 Budget Guidelines Bill, known as the PLDO 2027, to Congress on April 15, 2026. At the heart of this proposal is a primary surplus target of 0.5% of GDP, equivalent to approximately R$73.2 billion. A key feature is the decision to incorporate 39.4% of court-ordered debt payments, or precatórios, into the fiscal target calculation—a move that exceeds the constitutional minimum of 10% and signals commitment to transparency and discipline.

This approach maintains the nominal amount excluded from the target at R$57.8 billion, the same as in 2026, despite the option to exclude up to 90%. Total precatórios payments are projected at around R$95-99 billion, stemming from final judicial rulings against the federal government. By including a larger share, the effective primary surplus adjusts to 0.1% of GDP, balancing headline ambitions with practical realities.

The PLDO assumes moderate economic growth of 2.56% and inflation of 3.04% for 2027, reflecting conservative projections to ensure target compliance. These guidelines are part of a broader consolidation path started in 2023, projecting surpluses rising to 1.5% of GDP by 2030.

The New Fiscal Framework: A Primer on Brazil's Economic Guardrails

Brazil's New Fiscal Framework, or Novo Marco Fiscal, was approved by Congress in August 2023 as Complementar Law 200/2023. It replaced the rigid spending cap from 2016 with a more flexible system tying expenditure growth to revenue increases and inflation, aiming to anchor public debt while allowing room for social investments. The framework sets progressive primary surplus targets: 0% in 2024, 0.5% in 2025, 1% in 2026, and beyond.

Primary surplus refers to government revenues minus non-interest expenses, excluding debt interest payments. Achieving it is crucial for stabilizing gross public debt, currently projected at 83.6% of GDP in 2026 under President Lula da Silva's administration—an increase of 11.9 percentage points since he took office.

The framework includes automatic triggers if targets are missed, such as limiting new tax benefits or payroll growth, ensuring corrective action. For 2027, with elections in 2026 approaching, these rules underscore continuity regardless of who governs next.

Decoding Precatórios: The Court-Ordered Debt Challenge

Precatórios are court-mandated payments ordered after final, unappealable judgments against the government, often from labor disputes, tax refunds, or expropriations. Brazil's backlog has ballooned due to years of deficits and judicial activism, reaching over R$100 billion annually in recent years. In 2023, the Supreme Federal Court (STF) granted a temporary waiver, excluding most from fiscal rules through 2026 to avoid derailing targets.

This created fiscal space but drew criticism for undermining discipline. Total stock for 2027: R$95-99 billion, including small claims (RPVs under R$60,000 settled faster). Without management, they threaten surpluses, as seen in 2026's expected effective deficit of -0.4% of GDP.

  • Historical Growth: From R$40 billion in 2016 to over R$120 billion projected without reforms.
  • Stakeholders: Creditors (pensioners, workers) wait years; government faces cash crunch.
  • Regional Impact: States and municipalities also struggle, with federal rules influencing subnational finances.

The 2025 Constitutional Amendment: Paving the Way for Gradual Reintegration

Constitutional Amendment 136/2025 (PEC dos Precatórios) addressed the crisis by excluding precatórios from the spending cap from 2026 but mandating gradual reintegration into fiscal targets starting 2027: minimum 10% of the total stock annually, cumulative until 100% by 2036. This hybrid approach eases immediate pressure while committing to full accountability.

Government interpretation applies 10% to the full stock (~R$9.5-9.9 billion minimum for 2027), not just excluded portions. Economists like Felipe Salto praise the structure but note hasty approval risks loopholes. For 2027, 39.4% inclusion (R$37-39 billion approx.) demonstrates proactive stance.

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Breaking Down the 2027 Numbers: Targets, Exclusions, and Assumptions

The PLDO details a headline primary surplus of 0.5% GDP (R$73.2B), with 39.4% precatórios inside (~R$37.4B of R$95B total) and R$57.8B outside. Effective surplus: 0.1% GDP. Assumptions:

Indicator2027 Projection
GDP Growth2.56%
Inflation (IPCA)3.04%
Gross Debt/GDP86.0%
Primary Expenses/GDP18.5-19%

Medium-term: Surpluses to 1.0% (2028), 1.25% (2029), 1.5% (2030); debt peaks 87.8% (2029), falls to 83.4% (2036).

Projected gross public debt as percentage of GDP for Brazil 2026-2036

Government Rationale: Balancing Discipline and Social Priorities

Planning Minister Bruno Moretti explained: "Even though we could have worked with 90% outside, we chose to maintain 2026 levels for continuity." Finance Exec Sec. Rogério Ceron added the trajectory ensures debt stabilization. Acting Finance Minister Guilherme Mello called it structural recovery, not cyclical.

Triggers from 2025 deficits activate: no new tax breaks, personnel growth <0.6% real. Minimum wage to R$1,717 (+2.5% real).

Expert Views: Praise for Step Forward, Calls for Deeper Cuts

Economists welcome the 39.4% inclusion as positive, exceeding minimum and stabilizing debt path. Felipe Salto (Warren Rena): Amendment flawed but government must prevent space for extra spending; raise inclusion if needed. Valor Globo analysts note points like precatórios volume but say adjustment insufficient without clear cuts.

Markets: Mildly positive; no sharp reactions, but reinforces credibility post-2026 elections.

Economic Context: Debt Rise Amid Growth Challenges

Brazil's economy faces headwinds: 2026 debt 83.6% GDP, rising to 86% in 2027. Fitch forecasts 8.1% general deficit 2026. Revenue recomposition targets 2010s levels; expenses capped below 2016-2019 averages. Growth 3.5-4% projected 2027-2030 supports path.

Check the official PLDO 2027 page for annexes on metas fiscais.

Implications for Businesses, Investors, and Citizens

  • Businesses: Stable debt aids borrowing costs; triggers limit tax breaks.
  • Investors: Peak debt 2029 then decline boosts confidence.
  • Citizens: Protects social programs; minimum wage rise aids low-income.
  • Risks: Judicial growth, election spending pressures.

Read full analysis in Reuters.

Future Outlook: Path to Sustainability and Challenges Ahead

By 2030, 1.5% surplus and debt at ~83% GDP mark success. Challenges: Post-election fiscal slips, inflation (projections rising), global shocks. Gradual precatórios reintegration to 100% by 2036 demands vigilance. Brazil's framework positions it for EM leadership if executed.

National Congress of Brazil in Brasilia, seat of fiscal decisions

Stakeholders urge monitoring: IFI warns of 2027 squeeze without reforms. Balanced execution key to growth, inequality reduction.

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Frequently Asked Questions

💰What is Brazil's primary fiscal target for 2027?

The headline target is a primary surplus of 0.5% of GDP, or R$73.2 billion, adjusted for precatórios exclusions to an effective 0.1%.

⚖️Why include 39.4% of precatórios in the fiscal target?

Exceeds 10% minimum from 2025 amendment; keeps excluded nominal at R$57.8B like 2026, showing discipline. See official PLDO.

📜What are precatórios and why do they matter?

Court-ordered payments post-final judgments; backlog pressures budgets. Gradual reintegration starts 2027 to full by 2036.

📈How does the new fiscal framework work?

Ties spending growth to revenues/inflation; progressive surpluses; triggers for misses like tax break limits.

📉What is the projected debt trajectory?

86% GDP 2027, peak 87.8% 2029, down to 83.4% 2036.

🔢What economic assumptions underpin PLDO 2027?

GDP growth 2.56%, inflation 3.04%; conservative for compliance.

🧠Expert opinions on the 39% inclusion?

Positive for exceeding minimum; calls for deeper cuts to avoid slippage. Felipe Salto notes amendment flaws but praises caution.

💼Impacts on businesses and investors?

Stabilizes debt, lowers borrowing costs long-term; triggers curb incentives.

⚠️Risks to achieving 2027 targets?

Election spending, judicial growth, global shocks; triggers mitigate.

🚀Future surpluses and consolidation?

1.0% 2028, 1.25% 2029, 1.5% 2030; structural recovery emphasized by officials.

👥How does this affect social programs?

Preserves investments; minimum wage +2.5% real to R$1,717.