Countries/Brazil/Multilateral Agreement

Brazil

MODERATE

Multilateral Agreement

Scoring: V1.8.1
Updated: 4/13/2026

Brazil shows moderate signals for multilateral agreement. 63,994 historical precedent windows were identified across all four pattern length tiers (short, medium, long, and institutional). This means Brazil's economic indicators are following trajectories that, in other countries, preceded multilateral agreement events. The most recent matching event in the curated database was in 2024.

63,994
Precedent Windows
Historical trajectory matches
0.54
Peak Salience
Moderate signal
4
Active Tiers
of 4 pattern length tiers
2024
Last Event Year
Most recent matching event

Signal by Pattern Length Tier

Different pattern lengths capture different dynamics. Short patterns (3–8 years) detect policy cycles and fiscal crises. Long patterns (21+ years) detect structural and institutional trajectories.

S
Short-term (3–8 years)
7,910 precedents · salience=0.54
M
Medium-term (9–20 years)
17,083 precedents · salience=0.46
L
Long-term (21–40 years)
27,753 precedents · salience=0.45
XL
Institutional (41+ years)
11,248 precedents · salience=0.30

What This Means

QGI found 63,994historical cases where other countries' economic indicators followed a trajectory that subsequently led to a multilateral agreement event. Brazil's current indicator trajectory matches these historical patterns.

This does not mean Brazil will experience multilateral agreement. It means the economic conditions that historically preceded such events in other countries are present in Brazil's current data. Analysts should examine the underlying evidence and apply domain expertise.

QGI surfaces economically-grounded risk candidates that analysts should examine. Risk tiers reflect historical precedent density, not probability forecasts.