- Does the debt have a solution? The map of exits
- Cutting spending: the adjustment nobody wants to make
- Growing out of it: the only painless exit
- Taxing those who can: the politically viable exit
- The Selic knot: why Brazil pays the world's highest real interest rate
- The inflationary exit: the default that doesn't call itself one
- What if nothing works? The honest verdict
The question that titles this series is the only one that really matters: after watching Brazil's gross debt surpass 80% of GDP and the country spend roughly R$ 1 trillion in interest alone in a single year, is there still a way back? Or has Brazil already entered a slope where each passing year makes the correction harder — until the only remaining exit is printing money, letting inflation melt the debt, and impoverishing everyone in the process?
This article is the map. It won't hand you wishful thinking or easy promises. It will show that there are exactly four levers to reduce a public debt — not a fifth — and that each carries a concrete cost: in money, in time, and above all, in votes. Over the next six articles in the series, each lever is dissected with what would actually need to happen for it to work. Here, you assemble the full picture.
The summary, before diving in
- Debt/GDP rises on its own when the interest the country pays exceeds its economic growth rate. In Brazil, that gap is enormous.
- There are only 4 exits: cutting interest rates, growing GDP, generating a surplus (cutting spending or raising revenue), and letting inflation erode the debt.
- The only painless one is growth — but it is the slowest, takes a decade, and cannot fix the short-term bill on its own.
- The fast ones hurt — and governments that apply strong fiscal pain tend to lose the next election to whoever promises to re-inflate the debt.
- The "easy" exit is the worst: inflation is a disguised default that hits the poor hardest.
- There is a viable path — but it is a combination, demands years of discipline, and depends on overcoming the political paradox itself. That is what this series is about.
If you are not yet clear on how debt works mechanically — bonds, auctions, rollover, why printing money causes inflation — start at the foundation: How Brazil's Public Debt Works (explained from scratch). This series assumes you already have that mental model.
1. Today's Numbers: Where Brazil Stands
Before talking about solutions, it is necessary to see the scale of the problem through cold numbers. These figures anchor the entire series — end of 2025 and early 2026.
Sources: Central Bank of Brazil / National Treasury, IBGE, and Tesouro Transparente (data from 2025 and Apr/2026). Gross debt closed 2025 at 78.7% of GDP and kept rising.
Look at the combination. The country collects a record tax burden of 32.4% of GDP — high by emerging-market standards — and still spends more than it takes in. General government expenditures hit 46.9% of GDP, the highest level in 16 years. In other words: Brazil's problem is not "too little revenue." It is too much spending, and expensive spending — because the fastest-growing item is precisely the interest on the debt itself.
2. The Equation That Decides Everything
All debates about public debt — from any country, in any era — reduce to a single relationship. Without grasping it, any "solution" is guesswork. With it, it becomes obvious why Brazil is where it is.
Debt/GDP rises when
(real interest rate − growth rate) > primary surplus
In plain language: if the interest the country pays on its debt (net of inflation) exceeds how fast the economy grows, the debt expands automatically through rollover alone. To prevent this, the government must run a budget surplus large enough to cover that gap. When there is no surplus — when the budget runs a deficit — the snowball only accelerates.
Imagine a debt of 80% of GDP, a real interest rate of ~8% per year (high Selic minus inflation) and an economy growing at ~2.5%. The difference (8% − 2.5%) applied to that 80% generates pressure of roughly 4.4% of GDP per year from interest alone. For the debt to simply stop growing, the government would need a primary surplus of 4.4% of GDP. But Brazil does the opposite: it runs a deficit. That is why the debt never stops — and why each year without adjustment digs the hole deeper. (Simplified illustration to demonstrate the mechanics.)
From this equation emerge, without any magic, the four and only four possible exits. Each one moves a different variable: the interest rate, the growth rate, the budget balance, or — through the back door — the real value of debt via inflation.
3. The Four Exits — and What Each One Costs
Here is the heart of the map. For each lever, three gauges: how much it solves (effectiveness), how much it hurts politically (cost), and the speed at which results appear. This is the honest reading of why Brazil never simply picks "the best option."
① Cutting interest rates medium cost
Brazil pays one of the highest real interest rates on the planet. Every percentage point drop in the Selic (Brazil's benchmark rate, set by the central bank) relieves billions from the debt burden. But rates do not fall by decree: they only drop sustainably when the market trusts that public finances are on track. Without a credible fiscal anchor, forcing the Selic down merely sends inflation and the exchange rate soaring — and rates bounce back up.
② Growing GDP the only painless one
When the economy expands faster than debt grows, the debt-to-GDP ratio falls without anyone losing income — the ideal outcome. The catch: structural growth cannot be switched on overnight. It hinges on productivity, investment, trade openness, education, and legal certainty. It takes a decade to move the needle. It solves the long run, not next quarter's bill.
③ Running a surplus: cut spending or raise revenue high cost
This is the lever that works genuinely and quickly — and for that reason the most painful. Cutting expenditures means touching Social Security (Previdência Social), civil servant salaries, constitutional earmarks, and transfer programs — roughly 90% of the budget is mandated by law. Raising revenue means taxing those who currently pay little. Both have constituencies, and constituencies vote. This is where economics collides head-on with politics.
④ Letting inflation erode the debt the trap exit
The debt is denominated in reais. Allow inflation to rise and its real value shrinks — the bill "disappears" on paper. No congressional majority required, no obvious villain to blame. It is the path of least political resistance. And it is the worst of all four: it works like an invisible tax that falls hardest on those least equipped to protect themselves. It is the default that dares not speak its name.
Compare the gauges side by side and Brazil's dilemma becomes stark: the most effective and fastest exit (③) is the most expensive in votes; the painless one (②) is too slow; and the politically cheap one (④) destroys wealth. It is no coincidence the country keeps kicking the can. The obstacle is not a shortage of economists who know the answer — it is the electoral calculus of whoever would need to execute it.
4. The Political Paradox — the Real Knot
This is the part that separates serious analysis from campaign rhetoric. Picture a government that does the "right" thing: cuts spending, restrains benefits, streamlines the state. On paper, the debt begins to ease. In practice, the results of those measures take years to appear in citizens' wallets — while the pain (worse public services, lower transfers, a visible squeeze) arrives immediately.
The timing mismatch is fatal: the pain of adjustment is immediate and visible; the benefit is distant and diffuse. In an electorate where tens of millions depend on direct transfers and feel every penny, a strong adjustment is, in ballot-box language, a one-way ticket to the opposition benches. The successor who promises to "give back what was taken" — spending more, re-inflating debt — starts ahead. This pattern has played out across many countries, and it is what makes fiscal correction as rare as it is necessary.
This is not a critique of "the left" or "the right": it is political economy, the mechanics of incentives that apply to any government. Those who adjust pay the price. Those who spend reap the reward — until the bill comes due. And when it finally does, it is rarely the politician who pays: it is the population, through inflation. Understanding this mechanism means understanding why "everyone knows what needs to be done" and almost no one does it.
5. Is There Actually a Viable Path?
Yes — but not through any single lever in isolation. It is a combination, stitched together with enough political skill to make the adjustment bearable enough to survive an election cycle. The prescription that economic literature and the few historical success stories (Brazil after the Plano Real, certain European consolidations) suggest goes roughly like this:
A credible fiscal anchor
A spending rule that is actually respected lowers interest rates (lever ①) without the central bank having to force it — and lower rates immediately ease the largest expenditure item.
A growth agenda
Productivity reforms (②) that push GDP growth above debt growth. This is what makes adjustment painless over the long run.
Adjustment through the "fair" side
Cutting privileges and tax exemptions (R$ 618 billion in tax breaks) and taxing those who pay little does less electoral damage than cutting from the poorest (③).
Protect those who need it
Shielding the most sensitive social spending keeps the adjustment politically alive — and avoids the shortcut of inflation (④).
Notice: the key is not the most "technically pure" measure, but the politically sustainable sequence. Adjust through privileges and revenues from those who can bear it, protect the bottom of the pyramid, and use growth to dilute debt over time. It is slow, it is hard, and it requires a government willing to absorb a calculated political cost — but it is the difference between recovery and a slide toward inflation.
6. What Happens if None of This Occurs?
The "do nothing" scenario is not stability — it is drift. If adjustment keeps being postponed, the debt equation is unforgiving: debt rises, interest rates rise alongside it (markets charge more to finance a country that will not fix its books), and room for health, education, and investment spending shrinks, consumed by the interest bill. At the end of that road lies exit ④ — inflation — not as a choice, but as a destination. The series dedicates two full articles to that outcome and the final verdict.
Scenario A — Disciplined recovery
A respected fiscal anchor, productivity reforms, adjustment through privileges. The debt stabilizes and begins falling within a few years. Requires rare political continuity across administrations.
Scenario B — Perpetual muddling through
Small and belated adjustments, enough to avoid acute crisis but not enough to reverse the trend. High and rising debt, mediocre growth, expensive credit. Brazil lives with the illness without curing it — for a very long time.
Scenario C — The inflationary correction
Confidence breaks, debt financing becomes so expensive that the government's hand is forced. Inflation returns to erode savings and wages, "resolving" the debt through broad impoverishment. The disguised default.
The preliminary verdict
Yes, a viable path exists — but it is narrow, slow, and politically costly. There is no magic button, no year when the debt "solves itself," and no solution that does not hurt someone. The good news is that the painless exit (growth) and the fair exit (cutting privileges, not rights) exist and are achievable. The bad news is that they require something rare: a country willing to tolerate an adjustment whose payoff only materializes after the next election.
In the end, the question shifts from "can Brazil recover?" — it can, the math allows it — to "will Brazil choose to pay the price of recovery before inflation collects the tab instead?" The next six articles in this series break down each path so you can form your own answer.
Part 2 — Cutting spending: the adjustment nobody wants to make (and where the money really is)
Quick questions
Can Brazil "collapse" like Greece or Argentina?
It is different. Greece owed debt in euros (a currency it does not control) and Argentina held heavy dollar-denominated debt — that is why they faced outright default. Brazil's debt is almost entirely in reais, and the government can always issue reais. The risk here is not a formal default, but high inflation and a confidence crisis that send interest rates and the exchange rate surging. A severe crisis, but of a different nature.
Why isn't growing alone enough?
Because structural growth is slow and, as long as the real interest rate is far above the growth rate, debt expands faster than GDP can dilute it. Growth is necessary, but by itself it cannot outpace the short-term interest bill. That is why the real solution is a combination: grow and adjust and bring rates down.
Would cutting the Bolsa Família cash-transfer program solve the debt?
No. Bolsa Família costs roughly R$ 158 billion — significant, but small next to the R$ 1 trillion in interest payments and the R$ 1 trillion in Social Security (Previdência Social) costs. The bulk of the budget sits in mandatory expenditures and the interest bill, not in transfer programs. Pointing to social spending as "the cause" is looking at the wrong part of the ledger — this is one of the points the series explores in detail.
⚠️ Disclaimer and sources (click to expand)
Analytical and informational content, with no political affiliation and no investment recommendation. The effectiveness, political cost, and speed gauges for each lever are qualitative assessments for educational purposes, not quantitative projections. The "snowball in numbers" is a simplified illustration of debt dynamics. Data from 2025 and Apr/2026, subject to revision. Primary sources: Central Bank of Brazil (debt and Selic), National Treasury / Tesouro Transparente, IBGE (GDP and tax burden), Agência Brasil, InfoMoney, and the Brazilian Senate (2025 Budget). For investment decisions, consult a certified financial professional.