Food prices stay below inflation in 2025

After years of acceleration, food prices in Brazil are set to rise less than general inflation in 2025. Fipe data shows deflation in the food group in November, with a 2.4% year-to-date increase up to October, below the 3.3% general index in São Paulo. Good harvests of products like rice, beans, and milk explain the price drops.

From January 2020 to October 2025, cumulative general inflation was 63%, well below the 96% for food, but the trend is now reversing. Fipe released data on Tuesday (18) showing deflation in the food group in November, with a 2.4% year-to-date rise up to October in São Paulo, below the 3.3% general IPCA index. This slowdown is expected to continue into 2025, with food prices rising less than the overall inflation rate.

The price drops stem from abundant harvests. Rice hit a record production of 12.8 million tons in 2025, per Conab, leading to a 23.3% price decline in the first ten months. Beans, aided by strong first-crop supply, fell 7% in supermarkets. Long-life milk prices dropped 1.5% at retail, due to field investments and favorable weather, according to Cepea.

Other items show mixed trends. Soy oil, despite a record 171 million-ton harvest, declined only 2.3%, with 59 million tons crushed by Abiove, some going to biodiesel. For meats, pork is down 6.1%, beef 1.5%, while chicken is up 2.4% through October. In natura products like potatoes, onions, and garlic fell 27%, but legumes rose 20% and fruits 0.6%.

The wheat harvest was poor at 7.7 million tons, boosting imports and raising pasta and flour prices by 2%. In coming weeks, meat demand is set to increase with year-end holidays and Chinese chicken imports.

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