Brazil's President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva talks with Brazil's Secretary of Social Communication Paulo Pimenta during a ...
By Fabio Teixeira and Luciana Magalhaes -Electric vehicle producer BYD brought hundreds of Chinese workers on irregular visas ...
After months of rancor, ties between President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and Brazil's central bank look poised for an era of ...
Brazil's Finance Minister Fernando Haddad said on Tuesday that the country's economic growth likely hit 3.6% in 2024, while ...
President Lula of Brazil has announced a key change in his communications team. Sidonio Palmeira, who worked with Lula during the 2022 campaign, will replace Paulo Pimenta as the presidential ...
Brazil’s government is weighing additional spending cuts after a much-anticipated package of reductions failed to soothe investor worries about President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva’s commitment to ...
Yuval Vagdani, an Israeli Defense Forces soldier, who survived Hamas’s attack on the Supernova festival on Oct. 7, was forced ...
Latin America is becoming a battleground of government spending extremes, drawing calls from smaller nations to tighten the ...
Paulo Pimenta has announced his departure as the Brazilian presidential spokesman, with Sidonio Palmeira set to succeed him. Palmeira, who counseled President Lula during his successful 2022 campaign, ...
After serving a customer a bowl of acai with fried fish in Belem's market, Sandra da Costa wipes her hands excitedly.- ...
Lula will be in Uruguay on Dec. 5-6, for the Mercosur gathering. During his trip, he hopes to visit Mujica, Orsi's mentor. The new head of state will be inaugurated on March 1, 2025.
Brazil's Treasury forecasts the country's gross debt will have climbed by 10 percentage points over Lula's term to 81.7% of GDP by 2026, considered exceptionally high among emerging-market peers.