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Brazil Lula's Good Heart: 40,000 Public Jobs, Dole to 9 Million Families PDF Print E-mail
Written by Augusto Zimmermann   
Thursday, 30 March 2006 18:46

Brazilian woman receives Bolsa Família monthly allowanceClientelism, a patron-client relationship that rests on personal loyalties and quid pro quo between individuals of normally different social status, is a reality that has existed in Brazil since its first day as a colony. Indeed, when seafarer Pero Vaz de Caminha wrote to Portugal's King D. Manuel on 22 April 1500 officially informing him of the country's discovery, he considered the occasion opportune to request of the monarch a good job for his nephew.

Due to the fact that clientelism is widely associated with corruption, and accordingly the abuse of positions of public responsibility for private gain, the weak condition of the rule of law in Brazil comes naturally as a historical by-product of the clientelism practiced by the Portuguese colonizers.

Unlike a country like the United States, where its first settlers possessed a strong commitment to the rule of law, the first settlers in Brazil, in contrast, tried to disrespect the law and did not acknowledge basic notions of public service and public trust.

These colonizers, explains law professor Keith S. Rosenn, "bequeathed the Brazilians a weak sense of loyalty and obligation towards the body politic, and a strong sense of loyalty and obligation towards family and friends".

During the colonial period, the Portuguese Crown was largely dependent on the landed aristocracy for the development of Brazil's economy and for its military security. Landowners administered justice in their lands and possessed their own private militias for the purposes of maintaining public order.

Being independent of the law, they became paternal protectors of the population surrounding their homes. As history professor Márcio Valença explains: "The landowner's authority... depended on his capacity to impose his rule. This depended, among other things, on having his own private militia, a number of armed men to offer protection to his clients and protect his own property and interests against the incursions of competing landowners and other threats.

"The patron-client relationship was based on mutual exchange and the expectation of both sides that it would provide future yields. The patrão provided resources, protection and links to the outside world... The 'client' offered support and obedience... The patron-client system depended on the interaction between individuals and favoured informal flexible relationships".

When Dom Pedro I, the eldest son of the Portuguese king, declared Brazil's independence on 7 September 1822, he then organized a powerful state bureaucracy recruited from members of the rural aristocracy. But as early as 1885, people like liberal leader Joaquim Nabuco were already complaining of those bureaucrats producing a "rotten system" through which it sucked all the nation's resources in order to "redistribute them to its clients".

With the fall of constitutional monarchy on 15 November 1889, local rural bosses became the mediators between citizens and the government. These local bosses maintained their traditional power by demanding the personal loyalty of those under their paternal protection. The economic security and social wellbeing of individuals flowed directly from their personal dominion.

There was indeed a certain sense of noblesse oblige on their part, with their vassals developing a sense of personal loyalty to them. As the late American anthropologist Charles Wagley explains: "Frequently the local political boss, the coronel was a sort of patrão to his followers, who received favors and expected future favors. A lower-class worker without a patrão of the kind or another was a man without a protector in time of need. The patrão provided some measure of social security - generally the only form available to the worker".

The process of industrialization initiated in the 1930s created a large urban class that ended up developing apart from the old influence of the landed aristocracy. It did not, however, alter certain patterns of clientelistic behavior, as those in power are still expected to be "generous" towards their supporters and personal acquaintances.

In reality, the change in terms of social structure did not modify traditional clientelistic practices, because those who moved from the countryside to the cities ended up preserving their old tendency to view all relationships, including those with public officials, in personal (clientelistic) rather than impersonal (legal) terms.

A prosperous rural oligarch called Getúlio Vargas was the first political leader to capitalise on the preservation by new urban classes of the clientelistic mind-set inherited from the countryside.

In 1938, he masterminded a coup that installed the Estado Novo (New State), a personalist dictatorship where he assumed the role of a paternal ruler who directly appealed to the popular masses in Brazil as the great benefactor of the working people.

According to Joseph A. Page: "Upon assuming the presidency after the revolution of 1930, he set about creating a relationship of dependency not only between government and private enterprise... but also between government and labor. This relationship turned out to be a mirror image of the traditional tie between haves and have-nots in rural Brazil.

"Peasants who moved to the cities encountered a social structure quite different from the one to which they were accustomed. They have to live in amorphous slums and, as Brazil industrialized, to toil in impersonal workplaces. Thus it was easy for Vargas to substitute the government as the authority figure that would take care of the needs of employees, just as the landlord... had done in the countryside".

In today's Brazil many are those who still believe their political leaders are morally bound to provide supporters with extra-legal "favores". These expected favours can come in the form of such things as T-shirts, bags of basic foodstuff, bags of cement, beer, telephone lines, musical instruments, and paint for buildings.

A recent survey of city councilors in Rio de Janeiro has found that 40% of these politicians owned multi-service centers for the purposes of providing voters with free yoga classes, massages, gyms, dental care, and so forth.

The electoral process in Brazil can fairly be described in terms of clientelistic bargains which eventually include the purchase of votes. This is so because many citizens consider it "absolutely normal" to receive money from politicians.

A 2002 survey carried out by the prestigious IBOPE on behalf of Transparency International found that no less than 6% of all Brazilian voters in 1999 had received pay-offs in exchange for votes during that year's municipal elections.

A politician once tried to justify corruption by suggesting that he needed money to finance certain "obligations" of his mandate. "When people come to me," he explained, "I must have money to help them."

Without a doubt, one of the most common "favors" voters in Brazil ask of politicians is the provision of a public job. This is far more valuable than the equivalent post in a truly democratic government subject to the rule of law.

In fact, public jobs are "common currency" in Brazilian politics, serving as a type of "income-generating property" to pay off supporters and place them within positions of the state machinery that can be useful to the political bosses.

As Rosenn explains, "political clientage, whose roots go back to the patrão system of traditional rural Brazil, still dominates the bureaucratic structure.

"One who owes his job to political clientage is less likely to be averse to doing [illegal] favors for family and friends. Moreover, the influx of large numbers of untrained and unqualified personnel has itself generated more red tape, partially to give superfluous employees something to do, partially to diffuse responsibility so that fixing blame for incompetence becomes more difficult... Large numbers of civil servants have at least one other daytime job; substantial numbers show up only to collect their paychecks."

The Lula administration has deeply developed this sort of clientelism by employing within the state machinery around 40,000 members and supporters of the ruling PT party.

A retired STF chief justice, Maurício Corrêa, explains that even the most highly technical jobs are going to unqualified party members, who nonetheless must give a levy constituting up to 20% of their salaries to the party.

By thus being indirectly financed by taxpayers of all ideological inclinations, the governing PT has now, unsurprisingly, become far richer than all other parties put together.

Another good example of clientelism currently taking place in Brazil consists in the distribution of money to poor families in the form of a supposed anti-poverty programme called Bolsa Família (family fund).

This programme is held by the federal government and provides small cash to around 8.7 million Brazilian families, roughly a fifth of the country's population. Such "generosity" offers no real solution to their problem of poverty, although it allows them to consider the government a paternal provider to them, although such excess in government spending is one of the main reasons public debt, taxes and interest rates are so high. Real interest rates in Brazil are among the highest in the world, with its government grabbing an estimated 38% of GDP in the form of taxes and contributions.

Some practical measures that have been suggested for reducing the problem of clientelism are things like the reduction of public jobs currently held by political appointees, and the ending of spending schemes for congressmen who get more funding when the government needs their votes.

But, while these measures seem really important, they are unlikely to be supported by the very same politicians who are the main beneficiaries of clientelistic schemes.

Augusto Zimmermann is a Brazilian Law Professor and the author of the well-known books Teoria Geral do Federalismo Democrático (General Theory of Democratic Federalism - Second Edition, 2005) and Curso de Direito Constitucional (Course on Constitutional Law, Fourth Edition - 2005). His e-mail is: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .

Comments (18)Add Comment
This article demonstrates...
written by Guest, March 31, 2006



...how deep rooted is the Brazilian corruption.
It became a normal way of life.
By now it is in the blood and genes pf Brazilian.
So much, that as the article says, it is normal to receive money or goods equivalent from their elected politicians.
Therefore every Brazilian is against corruption with their "wordings" but every Brazilian is Pro
corruption when they are themselves the beneficiaries.

The conclusion is simply that there is NOOOOOOOO way that corruption will be reduced during the next several decades.
Saying the opposite is pure lies and wrong expectations.

CUSTO BRAZIL defines it all.
Brazilians invented this expression, no one else.
NEW
written by Guest, March 31, 2006
These politicians who act as paternal guardians to their citizens have patronized and made them dependent on them, and this demeaning at the very least.

Why are they treating these citizens like children? What Brazil needs is a new system where real solid opportunites can emerge and a genuine sense of mobility.

This outdated model of goverance, vast iniqualites and unfair distribution of Brazils wealth has not encouraged real economic growth or made this nation prosperous, so this wide gulf between the rich elite, and these so-called peasants has to be reviewed to avert national unrest in future.

Just because a system or model has been in place for centuries. Does not make it OK, or does not mean that it cannot be changed.
...
written by Guest, March 31, 2006
"substantial numbers show up only to collect their paychecks"


I know a brazilian that has one of these "jobs", his mother is a judge. He only makes 700 reais from this so-called job, but still, he only goes to pick up his check once a month. They call that here a "brinde".
THEY CALL THAT A BRINDLE
written by Guest, April 01, 2006
Thanks for the comment but this is absurd and an insult to decent people.

Who on earth do these people think they are? Talk about living in a Brazilian Bubble?

No one should listen to these people who encourage this kind of behaviour as it is evident they are no example to NO ONE.

"Talk About Feeding These Pigs of Corruption." It is an absolute disgrace.

As for that Judge, she can carry on with her Kangeroo Court and notorious Brazilian injustice.
...
written by Guest, April 01, 2006
I live in the capitol of a state in north brazil, there is a guy here who has a very powerful local position with the federal gov't. ALL of his family, wife, children, etc., all have federal gov't. jobs, NONE of them passed the "consurso" to have these positions. The worst case is with one of his sons, who is mentally retarded, he was working for the TRT, Tribunal Regional do Trabalho, for several years and receiving over 10,000 reais per month!!! All he did all day was sit and fingerpaint!!!

They finally removed him from the TRT, but his old man put him in another branch of the gov't.

Truly ludicrous this behavior, unreal that it's allowed to exist. His entire family, with his salary including, have to make in the neighborhood of 60,000 reais per month!! Not to mention they've taken these positions from qualified brazilians that have actually recieved the education, passed the tests, and have the competence to fill these jobs!
A DOG EAT DOG NATION
written by Guest, April 01, 2006
Thanks for the comment this is truly scandalous.

I will confuss though that up until early this year, I knew hardly anything about Brazil apart from football, carnival and Brazils licentious conduct. Since then, the more I have read about Brazilian society, the more I am genuinely surprised.

How many people are there who hold these kinds of posts whilst screwing up this country in the process?

If these so-called lawmakers want to promote these negative qualities then good luck to them. But, it is a real shame and insult to all those qualifed, educated individuals who deserve much more than these donkey's who have got their positions through nepotism.

No wonder the poor are doing whatever they can to survive?

Lawmakers should leave the poor to their own devices if those who should know better are doing much worse than themselves....

...
written by Guest, April 02, 2006
Excellent article which provides a splendid introduction to how Brazil works in a few concise words. Every American and European which finds the Brazilian social-political system utterly incomprehensible should read this first. Unfortunately, one has to draw the conclusion that there is little hope of significant change in the forseeable future.
...
written by Guest, April 02, 2006
just within the last couple months here in brazil they passed a law stating where all JUDGES had to remove any relatives they had in federal gov't. positions. The judges attempted to block this immediately but the legislative body here passed another law that stated if the judges blocked or delayed this legislation from taking effect immediately and the judges who had children, wives, etc in gov't. positions weren't immediately removed, the judges themselves would ultimately be responsible and could lose their jobs. This ended up going through....thank god. But now, as my brazilian friends say, "now what about all the other postions where they exploit nepotism!!"
IMPUNITY RULES IN BRAZIL
written by Guest, April 03, 2006
Thats good news. At least they're trying to do something constructive for a change and should address the other matters raised by your Brazilian friends.

My question is, don't these lawmakers or the rich elite know what they have done to Brazil over many centuries? When one thinks of Brazil you get a picture of corruption, nepotism, vast iniqualites, unfair distrubutions of wealth and more and it seems to encourage unscrupulous morals which has damaged this countries rep**aion, e.g if one is a murderer run to Brazil and hide, and lets not forget about Ronnie Biggs and that Lebanese woman who was recently implicated in the murder of the former Lebanese President who felt quite comfortable living in Brazil, I wonder why? Foreign nationals explioting tax laws and the disrespect they show to Brazils society because of the governments apathy. Foreign tourists, mostly men, who travel in their droves to Brazil to exploits its children and the destitute because no one cares about them. Now Brazil has sent a Cosmanaut into space and suddenly remembers Santo Dumount whilst advertising Brazil in the process. This could have been done much cheaper here on earth but we are talking about Brazils boastfullness and the over the top Brazilian mentality.I guess impunity rules in Brazil.

Thanks for your openness and honesty, Brazil has a long way to go.


You\'ve Gotta Love the ...
written by Guest, April 03, 2006
American criticism: Always inconsequential and warpped, never constructive!

Shame on all of you, sons and daughters of butcher Bush.

Always,

keol
American criticism, not
written by Guest, April 03, 2006
Always inconsequential?Everyone is American to Brazilians or whoever you are. Sorry to disappoint but you're incorrect.

I'm far from being a fan of American politics, but they can't be that bad if Brazil has had a love hate relationship with America for years... can they? And btw, what about all the good work some Americans do to help the poor, in business, the media and so on even though they know there is culture of apathy. Give credit where its due and be thankful for their gestrue. Yea, some Americans are arrogant conceited a-holes but some of them are OK. Learn to listen to the ones who are down to earth and talking sense, then decide.

As for butcher Bush, as you put it, he will be accountable someday, it is only a matter of time. Apologies for being so cynical, but if I wasn't I could not cope with some of the warped minds on this site.
...
written by Guest, April 03, 2006
Oh for all you who are wondering KEOL is Magyar for c**ksucker . . .
...
written by Guest, April 03, 2006
I'm not cynical and I can just barely cope with the warped minds on this site. I have never met someone in life who is this cynical about Brazil. They have almost crushed my dreams. I wonder that they don't depress themselves? They must be rich! (And white of course)
...
written by Guest, April 04, 2006
Does colour have to come into everything? Sure Brazil has some good points but most of it is a JOKE..

Btw, Brazil put itself in this position so the cynicism is deserved.

When Brazil changes its mindset they wil get more positive feedback....
Oh for all you who are wondering...
written by Guest, April 04, 2006
... KEOL is Magyar for c**ksucker . . .hehehe

Love you too son. Now then, stay downwind from me, would you? My nose is not a trash can.

Kisses & Huggies

keol
...
written by Guest, April 04, 2006
"American criticism: Always inconsequential and warpped, never constructive!

Shame on all of you, sons and daughters of butcher Bush.

Always,

keol"


LOL...and shame on you keol, for trying to do everything to deflect attention from the horrific reality that exists here in brazil, to brazlians by brazilians. Instead, just like a typical brazilian, let's look for a scapegoat. Much easier, let's point our fingers, it's the U.S., the EU, or the portuguese and how brazil was settled 500 years ago justifying the immoral,corrupt behavior of the masses in brazil!

A true patriot does and says things that are not "popular" at the beginning of any revolution or significant change. Only after it gains momentum then it is easy for those to jump on the bandwagon.

I can only imagine your bandwagon hopping if ever the masses here take repsonsibility for their own plight and stop pointing fingers and actually begin to make changes for the greater good of the brazilian people.
...
written by Guest, April 04, 2006
It will happen. It happened in other parts of Latin America, why not there?

El Mallku of Bolivia, Subcomandante Marcos of Mexico, Hugo Chaves of Venezuela, Che Guevara of Argentina. That many people can not sit underneath that few people for long. At least I don't think.
...
written by Guest, April 07, 2006
El Mallku of Bolivia, Subcomandante Marcos of Mexico, Hugo Chaves of Venezuelaand Che Guevara of Argentina are or were (thanx Che) all murderous scumsuckers.

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