Brasilia, Jun 29 (IANS/EFE): President Dilma Rousseff Thursday unveiled a 115-billion-reais ($57 billion) loan programme aimed at reinforcing agriculture's role as a lever of Brazilian economic growth.
Rousseff defined the plan for the 2012-13 season as "a new tool against the global crisis" that will underpin the government's efforts to create employment and mitigate the effects of economic turmoil abroad.
"This plan will show that Brazil is one of the few countries that can create new jobs amid the very serious sovereign debt crisis affecting the world," she said during the ceremony at the Planalto presidential palace, describing agriculture as a strategic sector.
Rousseff said the public and private loans, which represent a 7.5 percent increase over the 2011-12 season, will spur increased productivity while safeguarding protected ecosystems because "growth is not and cannot be incompatible with environmental preservation".
"I can proudly say that Brazil is a country that produces, expands its production, uses technology and does so with full respect for the environment," Rousseff said, adding that the new plan will be guided by the precept "living earth and respected nature".
Agriculture Minister Jorge Mendes Ribeiro said nearly 60 percent of the plan's funds will be allocated to finance programmes to improve distribution chains and market products.
Special attention will be paid to family farming, which currently accounts for nearly 70 percent of the country's food production.
The interest on the loans, meanwhile, will fall from 6.5 percent in the previous agricultural season to 5.5 percent in 2012-13.