Many of Brazil's biggest retailers, homebuilders and carmakers are cutting jobs as Latin America's largest economy teeters on the edge of recession, a fresh blow to President Dilma Rousseff's re-election bid. For years, low unemployment was key to Brazil's emergence as an economic power and important gains in the fight against poverty.
The unemployment rate remains near record lows of around 5 percent and the leftist Rousseff regularly touts it as a success of the ruling Workers' Party over the last 12 years. But after a decade of good news, the labour market is showing signs of weakness, possibly depriving her of a trump card in the October election. Industries from textiles to steel have been trimming payrolls since last year due to weak economic growth, cost inflation, high taxes and a tough exchange rate.
Now jobs are disappearing in retail, construction and food processing, which had been reliable engines for growth and new employment over the last decade. Even automakers, one of the big beneficiaries of Brazil's economic boom last decade, have cut thousands of jobs as they idle assembly lines in the face of slumping consumer demand. The economic slowdown has deepened since the World Cup soccer tournament that ended last month, threatening to undercut Rousseff's re-election campaign as retail workers like 27-year-old Evandro Dias lose their jobs.
"Sales were horrible ahead of the Cup, but everyone thought things would rebound. Instead they got even worse, so here I am," said Dias, who stopped by a Sao Paulo union on a recent afternoon to register his layoff from an electronics retailer. The low jobless rate is due in part to a shrinking labour force as more young Brazilians pursue higher education and technical training. Many economists expect unemployment to rise as government figures show formal job creation slowing to its weakest pace in over a decade.
Brazil's economy added less than 12,000 net payroll jobs in July, the slowest pace for the month in 15 years, according to official data released on Thursday. Most new jobs were low-skill service and agricultural hirings. Big companies have been careful to avoid mass layoffs, cutting a few hundred workers at a time or leaving empty posts unfilled, but the cumulative effect is seeping into the election campaign.
"We're not generating good-quality jobs here - or even low-quality ones, according to the latest data," Senator Aecio Neves, a pro-business former state governor and one of Rousseff's top rivals, said in a recent TV interview. Ahead of the October 5 election, Rousseff is selling the message of economic good times and greater opportunities under Workers' Party rule. It is a key reason behind her lead in opinion polls even though growth has slowed to less than 2 percent per year during her own four-year term and inflation is running at around 6.5 percent.
Neves and environmentalist Marina Silva, who announced her presidential candidacy this week, are focusing on the sluggish economy in their campaigns and are almost certain to force Rousseff into a runoff vote on October 26. A recent poll showed that unemployment is already the third biggest concern of voters, after healthcare and crime. Rousseff has a strong lead in polls for the first round but looks vulnerable in a likely runoff vote, especially if she faces Silva.
"What matters more than the numbers is the news flow," said Ricardo Ribeiro, a political analyst at MCM Consultores. "If word of layoffs get through to the voter, it could create anxiety about what's going to happen next in the labour market." Job cuts are even appearing among "national champions," the nickname for companies atop Brazil's strongest industries due in part to government-sanctioned mergers.
Retailers alone eliminated a net 78,264 formal jobs in the year through July, compared to average growth of 41,000 in the same period of the prior three years, official data shows. No 1 retailer GPA SA, Brazil's biggest private-sector employer, eliminated about 3,000 jobs from April to June, its biggest quarterly cut in over 15 years, according to a Reuters analysis of earnings reports.
GPA ended 24-hour service at its supermarkets in April and has been closing home appliance stores following a merger that created its Via Varejo SA division. Executives say workers at stores with cutbacks were offered opportunities elsewhere. Ricardo Patah, the head of Sao Paulo's retail workers union, said the only reason things are not worse is that shop owners are wary of firing now and then having to rehire for the year-end holiday season.
"If this were the beginning of the year, you can be sure the knives would be out, slashing even more jobs," Patah said. "Next January could be the worst ever for retail layoffs if this crisis extends through the rest of the year." In the first real test of post-World Cup demand, sales ahead of Father's Day, which falls in August in Brazil, dropped for the first time in five years. Former GPA chairman Abilio Diniz has also brought a cost-cutting campaign to his new boardroom at BRF SA, the world's biggest poultry exporter.
As chairman at BRF, Diniz tapped chief executive Claudio Galeazzi, known as "Scissor Hands" for running layoffs at companies from retailer Lojas Americanas SA to ceramics maker Cecrisa. As part of a plan to streamline operations and increase production overseas, BRF reported 73 million reais ($32 million) in second-quarter rescission costs for "staff adjustments."
BRF declined to elaborate on the layoffs. Galeazzi said this month he plans to step down at the end of the year. Civil construction, which created an average 200,000 jobs per year from 2010 to 2013, has added just 18,000 net jobs over the past 12 months, as the country's biggest developers scale back new projects due to weak demand.
In Bahia and Pernambuco, the biggest states in the north-eastern stronghold of the Workers' Party, construction companies have cut over 14,000 jobs this year. New project launches by homebuilders in the second quarter, a leading indicator for construction jobs, fell 25 percent from a year earlier, according to J.P. Morgan Securities analysts. "There is no outlook for improved hiring among builders by the end of the year," said economist Danilo Garcia of national industry group CNI, which runs a monthly construction survey.
Public concessions of ports, roads and railways, Rousseff's big bet for an economic rebound this year, have failed to pick up the slack from a weaker housing market, Garcia noted. In Rio de Janeiro, the site of public works projects ahead of the 2016 Olympic Games, builders cut loose 2,500 workers in July. Even in industries where Rousseff has been pouring on fiscal stimulus for years, the tide is turning at the worst moment for her politically.
The auto industry, which contributes a fifth of Brazil's industrial output, has enjoyed tax breaks and cheap credit under Rousseff but cut its workforce by nearly 5 percent from January to July as domestic demand dried up and exports tumbled. Carmakers from Volkswagen AG to PSA Peugeot Citroen have trimmed payrolls with paid leave and employee buyouts as they idle assembly lines. Some workers are putting up a fight. A metalworkers union has challenged General Motors Co over what they call a plan to furlough as many as 1,000 jobs at a plant 60 miles (100 km) outside of Sao Paulo. GM has promised not to permanently cut those workers for 10 months, but union leaders warn it is a plan to eliminate jobs. GM said the measure is aimed at adjusting production levels to weaker demand from Brazilian consumers.
Government officials who extended tax breaks for automakers in June said the companies had agreed to avoid mass layoffs, but Antonio Ferreira de Barros, the head of the union in Sao Jose dos Campos, said verbal agreements had not prevented job cuts. "Even with all these incentives, President Dilma didn't have the courage to protect our jobs," said Barros. "If the company doesn't back down, we're planning marches, strikes, protests in Brasilia. We'll follow her campaign all over the country until we get her attention."