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Submit your Research - Make it Global NewsFrom Decline to Recovery: A Timeline of Brazilian Scientific Output
Brazil's scientific production, tracked meticulously through databases like Scopus, experienced a notable downturn between 2021 and 2023. In 2021, the country published a peak of 82,440 articles affiliated with Brazilian institutions. This was followed by an 8.2% drop in 2022 and a further 7.3% decline in 2023, marking two consecutive years of contraction attributed to funding constraints, institutional disruptions, and a broader slowdown in researcher productivity since the mid-2010s. These challenges reflected systemic issues, including budget cuts to key agencies like the National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico, CNPq) and the Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Education Personnel (Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior, CAPES), which had previously fueled Brazil's rise as a global research powerhouse.
The decline wasn't uniform; while overall output fell, certain fields showed resilience. This period highlighted vulnerabilities in the ecosystem, such as overreliance on federal funding and regional disparities in research infrastructure. However, by late 2024, early indicators pointed to stabilization, setting the stage for the robust recovery observed in full-year data.
2024 Marks a Strong Rebound: Over 73,000 Publications
The turning point came in 2024, when Brazil's scientific output surged back with 73,220 articles published—a 4.5% increase over 2023 levels. This rebound positioned the country as one of few nations reversing recent declines, with growth observed across 29 of the top 32 institutions producing over 1,000 articles annually. São Paulo state institutions dominated, underscoring the concentration of research capacity in the Southeast.
Researcher density also advanced impressively, reaching 932 authors per million inhabitants in 2024, nearly five times the 205 figure from 2004. This metric illustrates the maturation of Brazil's human capital in science, supported by expanded graduate programs and international collaborations.
| Year | Publications | Growth Rate |
|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 82,440 | - |
| 2022 | ~75,900 (est.) | -8.2% |
| 2023 | ~70,100 (est.) | -7.3% |
| 2024 | 73,220 | +4.5% |
Breaking Records in Citations: Enhanced Global Impact
Beyond sheer volume, 2024 saw Brazilian research achieve record citation levels, signaling improved quality and international relevance. While exact aggregates vary by database, Scopus data reflected heightened impact, with fields like engineering and medical sciences drawing unprecedented references. Institutions such as the University of São Paulo (Universidade de São Paulo, USP) reported citation surges, contributing to Brazil's stable global footprint. This citation boom—up significantly from 2023—demonstrates that recent papers are not only more numerous but also more influential, aiding Brazil's competitiveness in high-stakes areas like artificial intelligence and renewable energy.
For context, top Brazilian researchers featured prominently in Clarivate's Highly Cited Researchers 2025 list, with dozens from universities like the Federal University of Minas Gerais (Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, UFMG). Such recognition underscores a shift toward higher-impact outputs, even as volume recovers from lows.
Top Universities Leading the Charge
Public universities spearheaded the recovery, with 15 institutions accounting for roughly 60% of national output historically—a trend continuing into 2024. USP led with nearly 13,000 articles (+2.7%), followed by the São Paulo State University (Universidade Estadual Paulista, Unesp) at 5,152 (+6.6%), and the State University of Campinas (Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Unicamp) at 4,277 (+4.9%).
- USP: 17th globally in Leiden Ranking 2025 for research production and impact, topping Latin America.
- Unicamp: Excelled in teaching and research per Folha Ranking, second nationally.
- Unesp: Strong growth in multidisciplinary outputs.
- Emerging risers: Federal University of Pelotas (Universidade Federal de Pelotas, UFPEL), Federal University of Santa Catarina (Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, UFSC).
These powerhouses, concentrated in São Paulo, highlight the need for decentralizing resources to foster nationwide excellence. Aspiring researchers can explore opportunities at these leaders via university jobs or faculty positions.
Field-Specific Growth: Engineering and Beyond
Growth permeated nearly all areas, led by engineering and technologies (+7.1%). Natural sciences dominated volume (top field), followed by medical sciences. Humanities lagged with declines, while energy, AI, and health tech surged, aligning with national priorities like the Brazilian Artificial Intelligence Plan (Plano Brasileiro de Inteligência Artificial, PBIA).
This diversification strengthens Brazil's contributions to global challenges, from climate modeling via the Jaci supercomputer to precision medicine.
Record Investments Fueling Momentum in 2025
The recovery gained steam from unprecedented 2025 investments. The National Fund for Scientific and Technological Development (Fundo Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico, FNDCT) averaged R$10 billion annually (2023-2025), with R$14.66 billion approved for 2025 alone—R$8.39 billion disbursed by mid-year via Finep. CNPq supported 97,200 scholarships (R$2.32 billion), while programs like Pró-Infra (R$1.5 billion) upgraded 75 projects across 42 institutions.
PBIA allocated R$23 billion (2025-2028) for AI leadership, alongside R$6.5 billion for mega-projects like Sirius and RMB reactors. These inflows—reversing prior cuts—directly boosted output, infrastructure, and talent repatriation (R$1 billion over five years).Government Report on Investments
Persistent Challenges and Regional Disparities
Despite progress, hurdles remain: output trails 2021 peaks, growth slowed to 3.4% annually (vs. 12% pre-2014), and concentration in São Paulo exacerbates inequalities. Funding volatility, brain drain, and evaluation pressures persist. Solutions include decentralizing FAPs (state foundations), enhancing international ties, and policy stability via PEC 26/2025.
Brazil's Steady Global Standing
Brazil held 14th place among 54 nations publishing >10,000 articles, behind China (971,400, +14.5%) and the US (485,200, +3%). BRICS peers like India advanced rapidly, but Brazil's citation resilience and researcher density offer competitive edges. Full Bori-Elsevier Report.
Career Implications for Higher Education Professionals
This resurgence opens doors for postdocs, lecturers, and professors. With investments prioritizing AI and biotech, demand rises for specialized talent. Check postdoc opportunities, lecturer jobs, and Brazil-focused academic positions on AcademicJobs.com. Craft a standout CV to join top unis like USP.
Looking Ahead: Sustained Growth and Innovation
2025's record funding promises continued expansion, potentially surpassing pre-decline highs by 2027. Focus on applied research—e.g., national EV buses, genomic tests—will drive socioeconomic impact. Researchers: leverage research assistant roles and career advice. Engage via Rate My Professor and explore higher ed jobs to contribute to Brazil's scientific renaissance.
Photo by Daniel Granja on Unsplash

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