Posts

Smaller base, agriculture, investment, and public sector actions explain higher growth in these regions, study shows

01/17/2024


Angelo Ozelame — Foto: Divulgação

Angelo Ozelame — Foto: Divulgação

The total wage bill of Brazilian households is expected to grow more in the North, Northeast, and Central-West regions than in the Southeast and South of the country in the coming years, according to a study by Tendências Consultoria entitled “Classes of Income and Consumption in Brazil: 2023-2033.” The study takes into account the real total wages, excluding inflation.

In the period from 2023 to 2027, the consultancy forecasts that the Brazilian total wages will grow by 3.4% per year. The rates are expected to be 4.6% in the North and 4.1% in the Northeast and Central-West. The same pattern appears in the estimates for the period from 2028 to 2033, when the North (4.1%), the Northeast (4%), and the Central-West (3.9%) are expected to report a greater annual increase in total wages than the South (3%) and the Southeast (3.3%) of the country.

It is not unusual for the country’s total wages to grow at different rates in the five major regions. Experts point to several factors in this scenario of uneven growth of total income from a regional perspective.

The head of the study, Tendências’s economist Lucas Assis, said that the regions with the fastest growth in total wages benefit from a smaller base, which makes growth easier than in areas that are already consolidated, but that each of them also has specific reasons for the movement.

In the Northeast, the outlook is for increased public and private investment. The return of the Growth Acceleration Program (PAC) tends to benefit the region, he said, as does the expansion of production capacity in several sectors, especially oil and gas.

“If in 2022 and 2023 total wages in the Northeast benefited from income transfer programs and increases in the minimum wage, in the coming years the main influences will be public and private investment, which may benefit the local labor market. No further expansion of transfer programs is expected,” he said.

In the North, the boost will come from public administration—with a significant presence in the local GDP—and the concession of highways and ports. The maturation of investments in the iron ore mining industry will also play a role. “With the reduction of logistical hurdles, the region is also expected to attract investment,” he added.

Agriculture, in turn, is behind the income growth expected for the Central-West, said Mr. Assis. “The Central West is the country’s main agricultural frontier and will continue to grow over the next decade. Reducing transportation bottlenecks will further stimulate production in the region,” he said.

In the Central-West, this faster pace of income growth will be sustained by people like Ângelo Ozelame and Daniel Latorraca. They are part of the AgriHub network of entrepreneurs, linked to the Mato Grosso Federation of Agriculture and Livestock (Famato). They show the spread of agribusiness in the economy. Mr. Ozelame is the founder of Escola Agro—a school with courses aimed at agribusiness suppliers—and Lucro Rural—a financial management platform for agribusiness, working in the commercial, financial, and tax areas. The 34-year-old comes from a family of small farmers in Espumoso, Rio Grande do Sul state, has a degree in Agronomy from the Federal University of Pelotas (UFPel), and worked for several years as an analyst at the Mato Grosso Institute of Agricultural Economics (Imea) in Cuiabá, the state capital.

He opened Escola Agro while he was still employed, but a year later, in 2018, he began to dedicate himself fully to the business. In 2020, he opened a second business. His income is now 10 times higher than before he became a businessperson, he said. In 2023, Lucro Rural ended the year with six times more customers than the previous year, as well as R$25 billion in invoices processed in customer service. “More than the financial aspect, I’ve gained a lot of knowledge. The potential of the sector is huge, not only because of the growth prospects for agribusiness but also because of its financial and tax complexity. We help producers make decisions from the front gate, on the economic side,” said Mr. Ozelame.

Economist Daniel Latorraca saw financial services as an opportunity to work with agribusiness. He founded Creditares, a company that presents itself as a financial services hub for rural producers through financial advisors, the so-called “agrobankers.” The platform currently offers loans and will expand its portfolio to include insurance and hedging tools for operations on the futures market. “I have been following the evolution of agriculture and its impact on the economy in recent years, especially in Mato Grosso. So much so that I was encouraged to take the plunge. In my spreadsheets, agribusiness will continue to grow. If it is going to grow, it is going to need more credit,” said Mr. Latorraca.

However, this more significant income growth in the Northeast, North, and Central-West does not mean a reduction in regional inequalities in the country, said Mr. Assis. This is because the total wages of the Southeast and the South will continue to grow. “Regional disparities are likely to persist for at least the next decade. Even though the most vulnerable regions are experiencing greater income growth than the Southeast and South, the latter regions are also growing. As all regions grow, regional inequality is likely to remain big,” he said.

The regional dynamic of faster income growth in the Northeast, North, and Central-West goes hand in hand with faster income growth in the higher income classes than in the D/E class, according to the Tendências Consultoria study. This is because the economic recovery tends to benefit the richest, who also benefit from returns on investments, rents, and corporate profits.

For 2024, the consultancy predicts an increase of 2.9% in the country’s total wages. While in classes D/E this variation is 1.4%, the pace is over 3% in the other classes: A (3.2%), B (3.4%), and C (3.6%). Between 2023 and 2027, the average annual growth in classes D/E is 2.2%, half of the 4.4% of class A. Since there are no official criteria in the country for defining income classes, Tendências uses the following parameters: class A (monthly household income of more than R$24,200), B (between R$7,800 and R$24,200), C (between R$3,200 and R$7,800) and classes D/E (up to R$3,200).

In the analysis of class A, Mr. Assis said that there is an impact both from the increase in the average income of this group and from the increase in the number of households at the top of the pyramid, reflecting migration from other classes. At the other end of the spectrum, classes D/E, no major change in income transfer programs is expected to affect the ability of the total wages to expand. “In the long run, the higher income classes should still lead this income growth. There is an expected migration of households from the lower classes to the higher ones, but it’s still a very slow process,” said Mr. Assis.

Mr. Assis highlighted the difference between now and the 2000s, when there was a rapid rise of the poorest and an increase in the middle class. “This last decade in Brazil has been marked by two negative shocks: the recession of 2015/2016, and the pandemic. So, this growth in the next few years is a positive scenario compared to the last decade, but it’s different from the 2000s,” he said.

*Por Lucianne Carneiro — Rio de Janeiro

Source: Valor International

https://valorinternational.globo.com/

Company won the auction of two public-private partnerships to build sewage systems in Ceará

09/29/2022


Rogerio Tavares — Foto: Divulgação

Rogerio Tavares — Foto: Divulgação

Aegea Saneamento will prioritize expanding in Brazil’s North and Northeast regions, said Rogério Tavares, the group’s chief institutional affairs officer.

On Tuesday, the company won the auction of two public-private partnerships to build sewage systems in Ceará, taking on about R$6.2 billion in investments to universalize services in 24 cities. The group won both contracts by offering discounts of 27.5% and 37.9% on the maximum remuneration to be paid for the services.

“The Northeast and the North regions are our priorities. I wouldn’t say the same thing about the other regions because in those we have little,” the executive told Valor on Wednesday.

“Everything will depend on what concrete opportunities arise. We will analyze them to see if they make sense, just like we will analyze projects in other places, but we will give more attention to these regions. Especially because most of the [country’s basic sanitation] deficit is there,” he said.

With the victory, the company, which had already consolidated itself as the largest private-sector group in basic sanitation in Brazil, now has operations in 178 cities and serves about 25.5 million people. In the Northeast region, Aegea already had municipal contracts in Crato (Ceará), Teresina (Piauí) and Timon (Maranhão). In the North region, the main asset is Manaus (Amazonas), but there are other municipalities in the portfolio, four of them in Rondônia and two in Pará.

Asked about Aegea’s financial situation with the two new contracts, Mr. Tavares said that the company will calmly support the new investments. The plan is to make a typical financing structure, with about 20% to 30% of own funds and loans with state-owned banks, or raise money in the capital market. The specific conditions, he said, will depend on the market situation at the time of contracting the loans.

He also highlighted that the debt-to-EBITDA ratio will remain below the limit of 3.5 times. The indicator was 2.57 times at the end of the second quarter.

The company is still willing to compete for new auctions, the executive said. “We will always study projects and, if it makes sense, we will participate.”

However, he stressed that there are no other concrete opportunities on the radar. Plus, the election season hinders the prospect of new projects this year. “This [Ceará’s] was the last clearly defined auction. From here on, nothing has a set date.”

“There is a possibility of [privatizing] Corsan [Rio Grande do Sul’s basic sanitation company], but we are not sure yet. An opportunity may still arise, but we will see. The end of the year is coming, with an election in the middle of the road. It is a complicated period. If it comes, we will study it,” he said.

In the executive’s view, regardless of the outcome of the elections at the federal and state levels, more business opportunities are expected for 2023. “I don’t think there will be any change in the process. After an initial period of three months [at the beginning of the new terms], things should start moving forward smoothly again.”

As for secondary-market opportunities, Mr. Tavares said the company has nothing on the radar.

*By Taís Hirata — São Paulo

https://valorinternational.globo.com/