“Brasil Mais Produtivo” Program Instituted
November 16, 2023 “Brazil More Productive” Program Instituted
On November 16, 2023, Brazil's federal government officially instituted the Brazil More Productive (*Brasil Mais Produtivo*) program, committing BRL 2 billion to help industrial MSMEs boost productivity and accelerate digital transformation. It's not a cash transfer program — instead, you'd receive specialized consulting, workforce training, and digital tools through partner institutions like Senai and Sebrae. The program targets up to 200,000 companies and runs through December 31, 2026, and there's plenty more to uncover about how it all works.
Key Takeaways
- Brazil More Productive (Brasil Mais Produtivo) was officially instituted on November 16, 2023, targeting industrial sector productivity improvements nationwide.
- The program allocated BRL 2 billion to deliver specialized consulting, digital transformation, and supply chain efficiency support to industrial firms.
- It aims to reach up to 200,000 industrial companies, targeting over 90,000 services delivered to micro, small, and medium-sized enterprises.
- Key delivery partners include MDIC, Senai, Sebrae, ABDI, BNDES, Finep, and Embrapii, coordinating consulting assessments and service delivery.
- The program runs through December 31, 2026, with eligible firms having annual revenues up to BRL 300 million.
What Is the Brazil More Productive Program?
If you're running an industrial SME, this program directly targets your operations. It connects you to specialized consulting services through innovation hubs, strengthens your digital literacy, and improves your supply chain efficiency.
Partner institutions—including Senai, Sebrae, ABDI, BNDES, Finep, and Embrapii—deliver workforce training and operational upgrades designed to cut costs and optimize resources.
The program runs through December 31, 2026, and aims to reach up to 200,000 industrial companies nationwide. For additional context on related policies and initiatives, tools like Fact Finder by category can help surface concise, organized information across topics such as Politics and Science.
Why Brazil Launched the Brazil More Productive Program
Brazil didn't launch the Brasil Mais Produtivo program without reason—industrial SMEs across the country were struggling to adopt digital tools, optimize operations, and compete effectively in an increasingly technology-driven economy.
Outdated processes, limited access to specialized consulting, and low productivity were weakening the sector's economic resilience. For businesses carrying debt, understanding the true cost of financing through tools that calculate total interest paid over a loan's lifetime can be critical to making smarter investment decisions in modernization efforts.
Which Industrial SMEs Qualify for Brazil More Productive Support?
Addressing those weaknesses required a program with clear eligibility criteria, so not every company qualifies for Brasil Mais Produtivo's support.
The program's eligibility thresholds are based on annual revenue and sector targeting within Brazilian industry. If your company is a microenterprise, you'll need annual revenue up to R$360,000. Small businesses must fall between R$360,000 and R$4.8 million, while medium-sized firms qualify with revenue above R$4.8 million up to R$300 million.
Beyond revenue, your company must operate in the industrial sector, since the program specifically targets manufacturing and industrial SMEs rather than service or commercial businesses.
If you meet both the revenue and sector requirements, you're positioned to access specialized consulting services designed to improve your operations and accelerate your digital transformation. This kind of structured, targeted intervention mirrors approaches seen in other national initiatives, such as Afghanistan's 1971 effort that combined improved storage infrastructure with farmer training to address systemic agricultural weaknesses across rural districts.
Where Does the BRL 2 Billion Actually Go?
With eligibility requirements in place, the natural next question is how the BRL 2 billion actually breaks down.
The program channels funds through in-kind grants, meaning you don't receive cash directly. Instead, participating firms access specialized consulting services funded by institutional partners like Senai, Sebrae, ABDI, BNDES, Finep, and Embrapii.
Budget transparency remains a priority, as the program targets over 90,000 services delivered to micro, small, and medium-sized industrial companies.
The broader platform aims to reach up to 200,000 firms nationally before the December 31, 2026 revocation date.
Evaluation metrics will matter here. The program's success hinges on measurable outcomes like resource optimization and cost reduction. If you're an eligible SME, you're receiving structured operational support, not a direct financial transfer.
How In-Kind Grants Work Inside Brazil More Productive?
Unlike cash transfers, in-kind grants under Brazil More Productive don't put money in your account—they fund the delivery of specialized consulting services directly to your business.
Through service vouchers, program partners like Senai and Sebrae deploy experts to your facility at no direct cost to you.
Here's how the process works:
- Your company applies and gets assessed through technology audits to identify productivity gaps.
- Program administrators issue service vouchers tied to specific consulting interventions.
- Accredited specialists deliver process improvement and digital transformation support on-site.
- Partner institutions—including BNDES, Finep, and Embrapii—absorb the service costs through the BRL 2 billion budget.
You receive measurable operational upgrades without managing funds, keeping the focus entirely on results.
Which Organizations Are Behind This Program?
Brazil More Productive draws its strength from a coordinated network of institutions, each bringing distinct capabilities to the program's delivery.
The Ministry of Development, Industry, Trade, and Services (MDIC) coordinates the effort, setting the policy direction at the national level.
You'll find industry associations like Senai and Sebrae playing central roles, with Senai handling technical training and industrial consultancy while Sebrae supports small business development.
ABDI contributes its expertise in industrial competitiveness, strengthening the program's strategic foundation.
On the financial side, BNDES, Finep, and Embrapii provide funding mechanisms that make service delivery possible across Brazil's industrial sector.
Together, these institutions guarantee that participating SMEs receive structured, specialized consulting backed by both technical knowledge and adequate financial resources.
How Brazil More Productive Plans to Reach 200,000 Companies
Reaching 200,000 industrial companies requires more than ambition—it demands a structured delivery system built on the institutional partnerships already discussed.
Brasil Mais Produtivo uses regional hubs and industry partnerships to scale service delivery efficiently across Brazil's industrial base.
Here's how the program structures its reach:
- Consulting services delivered through Senai and Sebrae networks
- Digital platforms enabling remote access for micro and small firms
- Regional hubs connecting local industrial clusters to program resources
- Industry partnerships channeling BNDES, Finep, and Embrapii funding directly to eligible SMEs
You can expect over 90,000 services targeting MSMEs specifically.
This layered approach lets the program penetrate diverse industrial sectors without duplicating effort, keeping delivery lean while maximizing the number of companies you can support nationwide.
What Digital Transformation Looks Like for Participating SMEs
Scaling delivery through regional hubs and digital platforms gets companies into the program—but what actually changes once they're in?
Through Brasil Mais Produtivo, you'll access specialized consulting that targets real operational gaps. Senai and Sebrae advisors help you implement workflow automation to cut repetitive manual tasks, freeing your team for higher-value work. You'll also build capacity through skills training sessions designed for your workforce's actual roles.
Data analytics tools let you track production performance and spot inefficiencies before they compound.
Improved customer engagement practices help you convert operational gains into stronger market positioning. None of this is theoretical—consultants work directly inside your processes.
The result is measurable cost reduction and resource optimization tailored to where your industrial SME actually stands today.
How to Access Brazil More Productive Before December 2026
With the program set to expire on 31 December 2026, you'll want to move quickly to secure your spot in Brasil Mais Produtivo. The access timeline is limited, so follow these enrollment steps now:
- Confirm eligibility — Verify your annual revenue falls within microenterprise, small, or medium-sized thresholds (up to R$300 million).
- Contact a partner institution — Reach out to Senai, Sebrae, ABDI, BNDES, Finep, or Embrapii directly.
- Request a consulting assessment — Program partners will evaluate your firm's productivity and digital transformation needs.
- Begin services — Access specialized consulting before the December 2026 cutoff.
Acting early maximizes your company's time to implement improvements and fully benefit from the BRL 2 billion in available support.