Brazil’s Life Expectancy to Equal Japan’s by 2050

Brazilians’ life expectancy, which currently stands at 70.4 years, should be prolonged to 81.3 years in 2050, basically the same level as in present-day Japan, which leads the global longevity ranking.

Brazil is 89th on the list based on estimates for 2000, according to a survey of 192 nations conducted by the United Nations (UN). Around the globe, the UN calculated life expectancy at 65 years in 2000 and 74.3 years in 2045-2050. 

These data are drawn from “Brazilian Population Projections by Sex and Age for the Period 1980-2050, 2004 Revision,” released on August 30 by the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE).

According to the study, the increase in the average Brazilian life span is due to medical advances and improvements in the general living conditions of the population.


“In 1940 Brazilians’ average life span was 45.5 years; 40 years later this expectation had risen 17 years,” the publication states.

For its part, the infant mortality rate in Brazil continues to fall, as a result of mass vaccination campaigns, prenatal examinations, breast-feeding, and health services provided by community agents.

In 1970 the country registered around 100 deaths for every group of 1000 live births. By 2000 this rate had fallen to 30 deaths per 1000, which is still high by Southern Cone standards.


The comparable rates in Argentina, Chile and Uruguay are 21, 12, and 15, respectively. Among the 192 UN member states, Brazil ranks 100 on this index.

The study points out that, beginning in 1980, violent deaths started to affect the age structure of mortality rates, particularly for young, adult males.


In 2000, for example, the mortality rate among young people in the 20-24 age bracket was four times greater among males than females.

Agência Brasil
Reporter: Cristiane Ribeiro
Translator: David Silberstein

Tags:

You May Also Like

Forecast Still On: Brazil’s GDP to Grow 3.4% This Year

In its March Conjunctural Bulletin, published Wednesday, March 8, Brazil’s Institute of Applied Economic ...

Brazil’s Amazon Handicraft Industry Eyes the US and the Foreign Market

Brazilian entrepreneur Murillo Foresti, a representative of Coexcafe, a company from Canada that imports ...

Brazil’s Civil War: 81 Killed, Hundreds of Hostages, Curfew Considered

Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva met this Monday, May 15, with the ...

Brazil and US Sign Agreement on Money Laundering

Brazil will sign today, in London, a cooperation agreement in the judicial area with ...

Apex to Promote Exports of Brazilian Machinery

The Brazilian Export Promotion Agency (Apex) and the Brazilian Machinery Manufacturers Association (Abimaq) signed ...

Brazil: Bank Workers Strike and Protest in the Streets

Bank workers in Brasilia, capital of Brazil, met in a general assembly and voted to continue ...

Some Brazilians in Germany Have Only One Dream: To Go Back Home

The weekly German newsmagazine Der Spiegel has just published a long article about the ...

Soybean Accelerates Brazil’s Deforestation

The Socio-Environmental Institute (ISA) and the Brazilian NGO Forum published a study demonstrating a ...

How About Some Portuguese?

Even the basic verb to be can be difficult for someone learning Portuguese since ...

Argentina Is Brazil’s Second Best Buyer and Seller

Brazil’s Secretary of Foreign Trade of the Ministry of Development, Industry, and Foreign Trade, ...