Brazil inflation falls to 8.48pc
Brazil's inflation continued its slow fall in September in a positive sign for the new government as it wrestles to end the worst recession in nearly a century.
The 12 month rate fell to 8.48 percent, down from 8.97 in August.
For the month, prices rose just 0.08 percent, far less heated than the 0.44 percent increase recorded in August.
It was the smallest monthly increase since July 2014, when prices rose 0.01 percent and the lowest increase for a September since 1998.
Food prices, which helped lead the overall rate by shooting up 9.11 percent between January and August, slipped slightly in September. Transport costs also fell fractionally, while housing rose 0.63 percent from August and health costs rose 0.33 percent.
The easing off of price rises will be welcome to regular Brazilians who have been hammered by inflation, rising joblessness and a profound economic slowdown. President Michel Temer has vowed to take painful austerity measures to return the economy to health.
The lower inflation will also boost expectations for the Central Bank to start cutting interesting rates which have been pegged unchanged at 14.25 percent for the last year.
Inflation in Brazil fell in June by 0.35 percent to an annual rate of 8.84 percent, but remains almost double the government target, official figures showed on Friday.
This was an improvement from May, when inflation hit 9.32 percent, temporarily reversing a three-month falling trend.
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