Study Shows Less Inequality in Brazil But Also General Decline in Income

Social inequality is at its lowest level since the 1960 Census. This is one of the major findings of a new study released today, June 8, by the Getúlio Vargas Foundation (FGV).

The study, which is based on the National Household Sample Survey from the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (PNAD-IBGE), with data from 2004, indicates that, since the beginning of the present decade, the country has been making progress in reducing the inequalities between rich and poor.

The study also shows that while average income in Brazil rose 3.6% in 2004, the income received by the poorest part of the population grew 14.1%.

The study, entitled "Growth for the Poor: The Brazilian Paradox," was conducted by the FGV, together with researchers from the United Nations (UN) International Poverty Center, and will be presented by professor Marcelo Nero, head of the FGV’s Center for Social Policies.

In an interview with the Agência Brasil, Neri affirms that the study demonstrates that the decline in inequality that occurred in 2004 continues a trend that began in 2001 in the direction of an improvement in the distribution of income.

"The most recent PNAD shows that the pie was better distributed. Over the last ten years, however, income growth was a deception for Brazilians in general.

"The situation is somewhat paradoxical: Over this period the average income of the Brazilian population as a whole declined 0.63% annually, while the income earned by the poorest segments grew 0.73% in per capita terms, that is, discounting population growth."

Agência Brasil

Tags:

You May Also Like

Cardoso’s Legacy in Brazil: Radical Democracy

Now that Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva has taken office and continued ...

Brazil President Condemns as Protectionism US and EU Injection of Capital in Economy

In Germany, Brazilian president Dilma Rousseff once again criticized the excessive resources being injected ...

Brazil Drafts Conservation Plan for Pantanal, a Mankind’s Patrimony

In December, 2005, Brazil’s Minister of Environment, Marina Silva, signed an act establishing the ...

Brazil’s 2006 Account Surplus Reaches US$ 2.5 Bi, 37% Less Than Last Year

Brazil’s foreign accounts continue on the upswing, and the country’s balance of payments, which ...

The Presence of Ancient Egypt in the Brazilian Press

Pyramids, Sphinxes and pharaohs. These and other elements of Ancient Egypt are included in ...

Brazilian Chicken Exports to Middle East Grow 69% to Close to US$ 1 Billion

According to figures disclosed July 14 by the Brazilian Poultry Exporters Association (Abef), the ...

Brazil to Repeat Plentiful Harvest of 2004

The 2005 harvest in Brazil should attain 119.48 million tons, practically the same as ...

NGO’s File Suit to Force Brazil to Break AIDS Drug Patent

Brazil’s Ministry of Health estimates that 600,000 Brazilians are carriers of the HIV virus. ...

Brazil Finally Gets a Tourism Surplus

This year, from January to August, Brazil’s tourism revenue rose 36.5%, compared to the ...

Democracy Undressed

Brazil longs for radical changes that will reorient  its future, while radically adhering to ...