Brazil offers USD 129 million for independent truckers from state bank


Devdiscourse News Desk | Updated: 16-04-2019 22:02 IST | Created: 16-04-2019 20:56 IST
Brazil offers USD 129 million for independent truckers from state bank
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Brazil's government pledged 500 million reais ($129 million) of loans from a state bank for independent truckers on Tuesday, amid other measures designed to avoid a threatened strike, but remained silent on their underlying complaint about fuel prices. At a news conference, presidential Chief of Staff Onyx Lorenzoni and Infrastructure Minister Tarcisio Freitas announced the concessions to truckers angry about high diesel prices, but were mum on any possible changes to Petroleo Brasileiro SA's fuel pricing policy.

They said a Tuesday afternoon meeting involving President Jair Bolsonaro will deal with the thornier issue of diesel pricing at Petrobras, as the state-run oil firm is known. Bolsonaro's call to Petrobras Chief Executive Roberto Castello Branco last week led the company to call off a sharp diesel price increase and revived investor fears about political influence at the firm, hammering its share price.

The episode underscored the leverage of truckers in Brazil, which relies overwhelmingly on road freight to get agricultural exports to port and keep its economy humming. A trucker strike over high diesel prices last year paralyzed Brazil's economy for weeks, led to the departure of the then-CEO at Petrobras and handicapped an already unpopular government.

Bolsonaro, who took power in January, was one of the most prominent politicians to throw his weight behind truckers' complaints last year and has been sensitive to their demands. In addition to the financing line for truckers from state development bank BNDES, government officials announced on Tuesday that they had earmarked 2 billion reais for the maintenance and completion of key highways.

Freitas pledged to finish paving Brazil's BR-163, a major route for transporting grains to Brazil's northern ports. Preferred shares of Petrobras fell slightly on the Sao Paulo stock exchange during the press conference, but were still up 3.3 percent in early afternoon trade, more than a 1.7 percent rise for the benchmark Bovespa index.

($1 = 3.89 reais) (Reporting by Ricardo Brito; Writing and additional reporting by Gram Slattery; Editing by Dan Grebler)

(With inputs from agencies.)

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