Brazil: 20% Jobless in São Paulo


Brazil: 20% Jobless in São Paulo

Almost 2 million people or 20 percent of the economically active
population are without a job in
the São Paulo metropolitan area,
Brazil’s most dynamic economic center. Nationwide, the
unemployment rate was 13 percent in August, practically
stable in relation to July, when the rate was 12.8 percent.

by:

Elisângela Cordeiro

 

Unemployment in the São Paulo metropolitan area rose to 20 percent of the economically active population (PEA)
in the month of August. This represents 1.969 million people. The rate was 19.7 percent in July. These data were released
by the Seade Foundation, in partnership with the Inter-Union Department of Statistics and Socio-Economic Studies (Dieese).

According to the study, the number of unemployed people increased by 35 thousand, as a result of the entry of 27
thousand people on the job market and the loss of 8 thousand jobs. The reduction in income of people with jobs amounted to 1.6
percent, ending up at R$ 898 (US$ 299). The reduction in the average income of salaried workers was 1 percent, ending up at
R$ 967 (US$ 322).

Nationwide, the unemployment rate was 13 percent in August, practically stable in relation to July, when the rate
was 12.8 percent. Compared with August, 2002 (11.7 percent), there was a 1.3 percent increase. These data come from the
Monthly Employment Survey, released September 24 by the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE).

Compared with last August, unemployment among young people between 16 and 24 years old rose 3 percent, ending
up at 26.3 percent. For the 25-49 age group, the rate stood at 10 percent, a 1 percent increase. For the 50+ age group, the
rate was 5.4 percent, an increase of 0.4 percent.

The survey shows that in August the average salary of workers rose 1.5 percent in comparison with July, but it fell
13.8 percent in comparison with August, 2002.

On a somewhat rosier note, the average real income of workers in August was R$ 847.90, 1.5 percent more than in
July, according to the Monthly Employment Survey released by the IBGE. Based on the same comparison, there was a 2.2
percent increase in income among private sector workers with signed working papers and a 5.1 percent increase among private
sector workers without signed working papers, while the average real income of self-employed workers fell 3.9 percent.

In comparison with August, 2002, income fell in the six metropolitan areas surveyed. In Recife, the decline
amounted to 19.2 percent; in Salvador, 5.4 percent; Belo Horizonte, 12.5 percent; Rio de Janeiro, 18.1 percent; São Paulo, 12.2
percent; and Porto Alegre, 8.5 percent. The income of private sector workers with signed working papers fell 9.5 percent; that of
informal workers (without signed working papers) in the private sector, 4.7 percent; and that of self-employed workers, 21 percent.

Stock Market Up

On another front, foreign investments on the São Paulo stock market have risen 77.4 percent over the last 12
months. From the 1st to the
20th of September, R$ 4.4 billion (US$ 1.47 billion) entered the stock market (compared to R$ 3.4
billion—US$ 1.1 billion—in August), and R$ 3.6 billion (US$ 1.2 billion) migrated out, for a surplus of R$ 832 million (US$
277 million). With that result, there is now a cumulative surplus from January to September of R$ 4.2 billion (US$ 1.4 billion).

 

Elisângela Cordeiro works for Agência Brasil (AB), the official press agency of the Brazilian government.
Comments are welcome at lia@radiobras.gov.br

You May Also Like

Brazil’s Loot at the World Bank: US$ 1.5 Billion

The vice-president of the World Bank, Vinod Thomas, said yesterday that the Bank has ...

Enrique V. Iglesias

Brazil Can Learn with Iglesias How to Take the Leap into the Future

Although younger than the Argentine Raúl Presbisch, the Brazilian Celso Furtado and the Chilean ...

Calling US Hypocrite Is Not the Best Way for Brazil to Save the Amazon

On July 21, 2008, a researcher from the  Council on Hemispheric Affairs (COHA) met ...

Brazil Is Betting Civil Construction Will Get 9% Boost, in 2010, Well Above 5% GDP

One of the Brazilian sectors to be in the center of attention in 2010 ...

For Lula, Brazil Is Island of Stability in Inflation-Plagued Planet

Inflation in Brazil is "under control." The assurance comes from Brazilian President, Luiz Inácio ...

It Was a Long Goodbye, But Help, Rio’s Sex Temple, Is Closed

Help, the notorious night club in Copacabana, in the South side of Rio, that ...

For Brazil’s Ex-President Cardoso Mercosur Never Took Off Due to Overbloated Ambition

Fernando Henrique Cardoso, Brazil’s former president (1995-2003), believes that Mercosur “needs to be reborn ...

World’s Largest Cattle Fair, Expozebu, Starts Its 73rd Edition in Brazil

The city of Uberaba, in the interior of the southeastern Brazilian state of Minas ...

Brazil and Neighbors Ask for Help to End Foot and Mouth Disease

The mutual effort by the member countries of the Southern Agricultural Council (CAS) to ...

Payback Time in Brazil: Friends Get Cabinet Post

March 15th was the 20th anniversary of Brazil’s latest experiment with democracy. For the ...