|
|
 |
 |
Brazil Is Rich, Brazilians
Are Poor
|
|
Brazil's
per capita income continues to grow. According to the
UN, that index has risen by US$ 40 to US$ 7,700. The problem
is the distribution of income among Brazilians. More than
8
percent of the Brazilian population survives on less than
US$1 a
day. Another 22 percent have to make do with a mere US$ 2.
Nasi Brum
A report released by the UN Development Program shows that
Brazil's per capita income has risen US$ 40, to US$ 7,770
(it was US$ 7,730 last year). The report goes on to say that
Brazil's problem is to transform wealth into well-being for
the population.
With regard to the Human Development Index, Brazil is in
72nd place in a list of 177 nations. Last year the country
was in 65th place. If only per capita income was considered,
Brazil would rise to 63rd place on the list. Brazil's per
capita income is the same as the average for the world, and
slightly higher than the average for Latin America.
However, when other items are factored in, such as education
and life expectancy, Brazil drops in the list. One problem
is that 22 percent of Brazil's population lives on less than
US$ 2 a day. Another 8.2 percent lives on less than US$1
a day.
In the latest survey, life expectancy in Brazil rose from
67.8 years to 68. There was a significant improvement in
education, with 92 percent of school age children in the
classroom, and the illiteracy rate went down to 13.6 percent.
At the end, Brazil's not-so-hot life expectancy of 68 proved
to be the factor that lowered the country's Human Development
Index. Just to get an idea of how bad that is, if the list
was only based on life expectancy, Brazil would be in 111th
place.
The HDI is based on three factors: education, live expectancy
and income. It is a simple method used to measure development. "It
works out to the minimum needs of a population," explains
José Carlos Libânio, a UN aide. "It measures
access to knowledge, health and money."
Commenting on the results, presidential Chief of Staff,
José Dirceu, said: "We should look to the future
and take this report as another sign that the country needs
urgently to invest in social, sanitation, living and transport
programs and to create jobs and distribute wealth."
UN Campaign
For the first time, Brazil will participate in a worldwide
UN campaign to improve the lives of the planet's most needy
by drumming up support for what is known as the Millennium
Development Goals, which were set up by 191 countries, including
Brazil, in the 2000 UN General Assembly.
The Millennium Development Goals, which are supposed to
be achieved by the year 2015, include eliminating extreme
poverty and hunger, making elementary education universal,
the promotion of sexual equality, women's rights and maternal
health, combating HIV/AIDS, malaria and other diseases, protecting
the environment and setting up a worldwide partnership for
development.
Brazil's participation begins on August 9, the anniversary
of the death of social activist, Betinho.
Brazilian Protest
Two years ago, the then president of the Institute of Applied
Economic Research (Ipea), Roberto Martins, complained saying
that Brazil's Human Development Index was higher than the
UN said it was.
"The UN Development Program, which conducts the index
survey, is using outdated numbers on the situation in the
country. With updated numbers that the Brazilian government
has, the HDI would be 0.769," said Martins. The UNDP
says it is 0.757.
UN representative Libânio explained, however, that
the HDI is calculated using statistics from international
agencies and that there are differences between those numbers
and numbers that governments use.
According to him, the data shows that Brazil is producing
more riches, but that it is badly distributed. Brazil is
third in the world in wealth concentration.
A Youngster Look
Young people who took the writing test in last year's National
High School Examination (Enem/2003) believe that social inequality
is the main cause of violence in Brazil. Hunger, income maldistribution,
and urban ghettoization were identified as factors that aggravate
the process of inequality and lead to violence in society.
The results of the study were announced this month by the
Ministry of Education's Anísio Teixeira National Institute
of Educational Research (Inep/MEC), in charge of administering
the writing tests.
Last year's theme was: "Violence in Brazilian society:
how to change the rules of this game?" Over 600 teachers
corrected the compositions written by 1.2 million students
and transcribed the passages they had in common. Lack of
schooling and family disorganization were also mentioned
by the students as causes of the problem of violence.
For Maria Stella Grossi, a sociologist who teaches in the
Faculty of Social Sciences at the University of Brasília
(UnB), the fact that the students identified social inequality
as one of the causes of violence demonstrates a degree of
maturity in the way they regard the issue. According to her,
young people tend to blame violence on the poverty of the
population.
"It's a slightly more sophisticated way for young people
to view the problem. It means a slightly more complex understanding
of the issue, since it ends up condemning the poor population
as the source of violence," judges the sociologist,
who has been studying society's opinion on violence for over
10 years.
From her standpoint, despite the progress, it is necessary
to point out the growing participation of members of the
middle and wealthy classes in the statistics on violence,
not just as victims, but as perpetrators.
"This is a fact that needs to be stressed, because,
otherwise, we can get the impression, which is still somewhat
biased, that those who are disadvantaged provoke the violence," the
specialist warns.
Another point underlined by Grossi is the fact that young
people perceived the lack of schooling as one of the causes
of violence. "It is not so much the lack of schooling
as the lack of schools, a gap whose consequences, sooner
or later, can lead to violent behavior," she explains.
The Enem examination is held every year for the purpose
of evaluating the quality of instruction absorbed by students
who are finishing secondary school or who have already graduated
and desire to test their knowledge.
Nasi Brum works for Agência Brasil (AB), the official
press agency of the Brazilian government. Comments are welcome
at lia@radiobras.gov.br.
Translated from the Portuguese by Allen Bennett.
Email:
moun@moun.com |