Brazil's Lula threatens central bank autonomy after hawkish words

Reuters

Published Feb 02, 2023 07:26PM ET

Updated Feb 02, 2023 07:41PM ET

By Maria Carolina Marcello

BRASILIA (Reuters) -Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva on Thursday issued his latest threat to the autonomy of the country's central bank a day after it floated the possibility of keeping interest rates at a six-year high for a longer-than-expected period.

Lula, who had previously described central bank independence as "nonsense," said he could review its autonomy by the end of the term of the current central bank governor, Roberto Campos Neto.

Selected by right-wing former President Jair Bolsonaro, Campos Neto had his mandate extended to the end of 2024 under a new law established in 2021 granting the central bank formal autonomy.

The central bank's policy statement issued late on Wednesday specifically said it could keep its benchmark Selic rate at its current 13.75% for longer than markets expected due to fiscal risks under Lula.

"So I want to know what independence was for," Lula said during an interview with local channel Rede Tv. "I'm going to wait for this citizen to finish his mandate so that we can make an assessment of what the independent central bank meant."

"What is on the agenda is the interest rate issue," he added, suggesting that the central bank should seek a "Brazilian standard" for inflation rather than a European one.