Brazil
is one of the world’s largest and
most populous countries. It is the largest country in South America,
occupying
almost half of the continent and extending from north of the equator to
south
of the Tropic of Capricorn. Its largest city is São Paulo, and its
capital is
Brasília. Brazil’s large size and diverse population provide great
variety in
the natural environment, culture, and economy.
The nation’s natural beauty
is reflected in a wide
variety of geographic locations, from the distinctive dome shape of
Sugar Loaf
Mountain in the city of Rio de Janeiro, to the magnificent Iguaçu Falls
in the
far south, to the strange limestone formations in the state of Minas
Gerais in
the Southeast region. A broad contrast exists between the nation’s two
main physical
features: the densely forested lowlands of the Amazon Basin in the north
and
the generally open uplands of the Brazilian Highlands to the south. The
climate
is generally tropical, but areas located at higher elevations or farther
from
the equator tend to be more temperate. Vegetation varies from rain
forests to
pine forests to savannas and semiarid scrub. The forests are a rich
source of
timber. Brazil sustains a diverse agriculture, producing tropical crops
such as
sugar, coffee, and newly developed tropical varieties of soybeans. In
recent
years environmentalists have become increasingly concerned over the
future of
the Amazon region, where human encroachment has threatened the world’s
largest
intact rain forest.
Brazil’s population is
very diverse. This diversity is
the result of intermingling between Native Americans, Portuguese
settlers, and
African slaves, which produced a society of racial and ethnic
complexity.
Brazil is the only Latin American country settled by the Portuguese.
Before the
Portuguese arrived in 1500, many Native American tribes sparsely
populated the
country. In the mid-16th century the Portuguese began to
import
African slaves to work on agricultural production. The ethnic mix
between these
three groups, along with other European peoples who immigrated to Brazil
after
1850, has contributed to some distinctly Brazilian cultural forms,
especially
in music and architecture. Distinct cultures also continue to survive
among
Afro-Brazilians, non-Portuguese immigrants from Europe and Asia, and
isolated
pockets of Native Americans. However, Portuguese cultural influences
remain
strong, with Portuguese as the primary language and Roman Catholicism as
the
principal religion.
The economic development
of Brazil has been strongly
influenced by a series of economic cycles in which different resources
were
exploited in different parts of the country. The first commodity to be
exploited was the dyewood pau brasil (brazilwood), from which the
country takes its name. In the mid-16th century colonists introduced
sugar
cultivation, taking advantage of the good soil and tropical climate
along the
Northeast coast. Gold was discovered in the 1690s in what became the
state of
Minas Gerais. This provoked a gold rush that brought the first
significant settlement
of the interior and shifted the country’s economic focus and population
center
from the Northeast to the Southeast.
The gold began to be exhausted
in the
late 18th century, and there was a gap before the next, but most
important,
economic cycle. Coffee production dominated the economy from about the
mid-1800s to the 1930s. It was particularly important in São Paulo, and
was
closely linked to the building of railways into the interior. Since the
1940s
Brazilian society has undergone dramatic changes due to efforts—largely
encouraged by government policy—to boost industrialization and to
diversify the
economy. Brazil is now one of the most industrialized nations in South
America,
with a rapidly modernizing economy and a largely urban population.
Tropical
crops and minerals remain significant exports, but manufactured goods
are
increasingly important. Brazil has by far the largest economy in South
America.
Although Brazil holds
the potential to become an
economic powerhouse, social conditions stemming from Brazil’s early
years as a
plantation society have continued to cause inequalities in the
distribution of
wealth and power. A small and wealthy elite still controls most of the
land and
resources, and much of the population continues to live in poverty,
especially
in rural areas. Extensive slums have sprouted up on the outskirts of the
larger
cities as rural workers move to these areas seeking employment.
Until the 1960s the majority
of the people
lived in rural areas rather than in cities or towns, but that situation
is now
reversed. Some 84 percent of the population is now classed as urban, and
in
2005 Brazil had an urban population of 154 million.
Brazil was a Portuguese
colony from 1500 to 1822,
when it achieved independence. Unlike many Latin American countries,
Brazil’s
transition from colony to independent nation was a relatively peaceful
process
that spared the country bloodshed and economic devastation. After
becoming
independent, Brazil was ruled by an emperor. The abolition of slavery
took place
in 1888. The following year a bloodless revolution led by army officers
overthrew the emperor and established a federal republic.
Wealthy landowners in
the economically powerful states
of Southeastern Brazil dominated the republic until 1930, when another
revolution established a provisional government and led to a
military-backed
dictatorship; this dictatorship lasted from 1937 to 1945, when democracy
was
restored. Economic problems and political tension led to another
military coup
in 1964. The military regime remained in power until 1985, ruling with
particularly repressive methods from 1968 to 1974. The regime began to
relax
its controls in the early 1980s and moved to restore democracy. Since
then
Brazil has worked to reestablish democratic institutions.
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II
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LAND AND
RESOURCES
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Brazil occupies an immense
area along the eastern
coast of South America and includes much of the continent’s interior
region.
The factors of size, relief, climate, and natural resources make Brazil
geographically diverse. Planners divide the country into five
macro-regions:
(1) North, (2) Northeast, (3) Southeast, (4) South, and (5) Center-West.
The North includes most
of the Amazon Basin and
covers 45 percent of the national territory, but only 7 percent of the
population lives there. The Northeast is the eastward bulge of the
country. It
was the first area to be settled by Europeans. Its semiarid interior,
the sertão,
is largely given over to low-density livestock ranching. Much of the
population
of the Northeast lives in poverty. The mainly upland area of the
Southeast is
the demographic and economic core of the nation. Brazil’s two largest
cities,
São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro, are located here. The Southeast contains
only 11
percent of Brazil’s land, but 43 percent of the population lives there.
The
South is the smallest region. It is distinct not only because of its
temperate
climate, but also because it was primarily settled by European
immigrants in
the late 19th century, giving the region a culture that is more European
than
other areas of the nation. The Center-West is a landlocked, thinly
populated
region that includes Brasília, the national capital.
Two geographic features
dominate the landscape of
Brazil: the vast Amazon Basin, which spans the width of northern Brazil,
and an
extensive highland plateau, known as the Brazilian Highlands, which
covers most
of the South and Southeast. The Amazon Basin consists of a huge drainage
area
that contains the world’s largest river and the world’s largest tropical
rain
forest. The population remains sparse in this region due to thick
vegetation
and an oppressively hot and humid climate. The Brazilian Highlands is an
eroded
plateau dotted with irregular mountains and crossed by river valleys.
The
highlands separate Brazil’s inland regions from a narrow coastal plain
that
stretches from Ceará in the Northeast to the Uruguayan border in the
South.
In spite of Brazil’s size,
the broad pattern
of climate is less varied than might be expected. The equator passes
through
northern Brazil, running adjacent to the Amazon River. Because of its
equatorial location and low elevation, the extensive Amazon region has a
climate with high temperatures and substantial rainfall. Farther to the
south,
temperatures become slightly more moderate. The state of Rio Grande do
Sul in
the extreme south exhibits a more temperate climate, with seasonal
weather
patterns resembling those of the southern United States. Rainfall is
plentiful
in Brazil, except in the sertão, a semiarid region of the
Northeast that
is subject to occasional droughts.
Brazil contains a wealth
of mineral and plant
resources that have not yet been fully explored. It possesses some of
the
world’s largest deposits of iron ore and contains rich deposits of many
other
minerals, including gold and copper. Brazil’s fossil fuel resources are
modest,
but this limitation is offset by the considerable hydroelectric
potential of
the nation’s many rivers. Although Brazil is an important producer of
tropical
crops, areas of highly fertile land are limited, and only a small
proportion of
the land is actually under cultivation. There is substantial livestock
ranching, and the forests are important sources of timber, rubber, and
palm
oil.
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Natural Regions
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Much of Brazil lies between
200 and 800 m (700
and 2,600 ft) in elevation. The main upland area occupies most of the
southern
half of the country. It is an enormous block of geologically ancient
rocks that
rises from the northwestern region towards the southeast. As a
consequence it
has a steep edge near the Atlantic coast and in places drops in a single
escarpment of up to 800 m (2,600 ft). The northwestern parts of the
plateau
consist of broad, rolling terrain broken by low, rounded hills. The
southeastern section is more rugged, with a complex mass of ridges and
mountain
ranges reaching elevations of up to 1,200 m (3,900 ft). These ranges
include
the Serra da Mantiqueira, the Serra do Espinhaço, the Chapada
Diamantina, and
the Serra do Mar. The Serra do Mar forms a sharp edge along the coast
from Rio de
Janeiro south for about 1,000 km (about 600 mi) into Santa Catarina.
Behind the
Serra do Mar, an extensive plateau reaches through the state of São
Paulo and
into the southern states. The highest points in southern Brazil are the
Pico da
Bandeira (2,890 m/9,482 ft) and Pico do Cristal (2,798 m/9,180 ft), both
in the
Serra da Mantiqueira.
In the far north the Guiana
Highlands
cover only 2 percent of the country. These highlands form a major
drainage
divide, separating rivers that flow south into the Amazon Basin from
rivers
that empty into the Orinoco river system of Venezuela to the north. The
highest
point in Brazil—the Pico da Neblina (2,994 m/9,823 ft)—is in the
mountains of
the Guiana Highlands.
The most extensive lowland
is the Amazon Basin.
Most of its terrain is gently undulating, rarely rising more than 150 m
(490
ft) above sea level. Seasonal flooding occurs along the Amazon River and
its
tributaries in stretches of flat, swampy land called varzeas. A
second
major lowland is the Pantanal in western Mato Grosso near the border
with
Bolivia and Paraguay. Seasonal flooding occurs in this region along the
headwaters of the Paraná and Paraguay river system. It is a significant
area
for ranching, but has recently come to be recognized as an important
wetland
environment that needs to be conserved.
The third lowland area
is the coastal plain. In the
Northeast it may be up to 60 km (40 mi) wide, but in some places it is
very
narrow, and between Rio de Janeiro and Santos it disappears entirely.
This
coastal plain has been a major area of settlement and economic activity
since
colonial times, and 12 of the country’s state capitals are located along
it.
The plain widens in southern Rio Grande do Sul and extends into
Argentina.
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Rivers and Lakes
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Brazil has a dense and
complex system of
rivers. The most impressive river system is that of the Amazon and its
tributaries, ranked the largest in the world based on the volume of
water it
drains. The Amazon is the world’s second longest river, after the Nile
in Egypt.
Its major tributary, the Tocantins, joins the Amazon near its mouth. The
second
largest river basin in Brazil is that of the Paraná, which flows south
between
Argentina and Uruguay to empty into the Río de la Plata estuary. It
drains much
of the Southeast, South, and Center-West. The principal river of the
eastern
plateau region, the São Francisco, flows north through the highlands in
the
states of Minas Gerais and Bahia before turning east and entering the
Atlantic.
The remainder of the country is drained by a series of smaller and
shorter
rivers along the Atlantic seaboard.
The Amazon is navigable
to oceangoing ships as far
as Iquitos, in Peru, and its major tributaries are suitable for inland
navigation. Parts of the São Francisco and Paraná are also navigable.
However,
except in the case of the Amazon, river transport is relatively
unimportant in
Brazil. The rivers are more important as sources of hydroelectricity,
which
Brazil depends on for economic development because the country is short
of
solid fuel.
Most of Brazil’s large
lakes are created by dams
constructed to produce hydroelectric power or to provide water for
irrigation.
The largest lakes are Sobradinho, on the São Francisco; Tucuruí, on the
Tocantins; Balbina, on the Amazon; and Furnas, on the Paraná. The São
Francisco
is also used for irrigation, and there are a number of reservoirs in the
Northeast that provide irrigation and drinking water during the dry
season and
drought years.
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Coastline
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The nature of the Brazilian
coastline varies
considerably. In the North the mouth of the Amazon is the dominant
feature,
with major river channels, lowlands subject to seasonal flooding, swamps
of
mangrove trees, and numerous islands, of which Marajó is the largest.
The coast
of the Northeast is smoother, with substantial areas of beaches and
dunes along
the northern strip, and more varied forms—dunes, mangroves, lagoons, and
hills—south of Cape São Roque. Major features of this area are the mouth
of the
São Francisco River and Todos os Santos Bay.
The Southeastern coast
is also varied, with lagoons,
marshlands, sand spits, and sandy beaches. Particularly in the states of
Espirito Santo, Rio de Janeiro, and São Paulo, and in much of the South,
the
mountains are very close to the coast, leaving a coastal plain that is
narrow
or nonexistent. Only in Rio Grande do Sul does the plain widen again.
The major
natural harbors are those of Salvador, Vitória, Rio de Janeiro, Santos,
Paranaguá, and Rio Grande. Portuguese settlers established their first
communities along the coast, and most Brazilians still live within about
300 km
(about 200 mi) of the coast.
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Climate
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The climatic pattern is
largely shaped by Brazil’s
tropical location and by topographic features. Most of Brazil has high
annual
average temperatures, above 22°C (72°F). Only in the South and in the
highest
elevations does the average fall below this. In the higher elevations,
the
seasonal variation in temperature is more marked.
A tropical wet climate
characterizes much of
northern Brazil, with abundant rainfall and little or no dry season.
Temperatures average 25°C (77°F), with more significant temperature
variations
between night and day than between seasons. Rainfall averages about
2,200 mm
(about 90 in) a year. Over central Brazil rainfall is more seasonal,
characteristic of a savanna climate. Eighty percent of the rain falls in
summer
(October through March), and there are more seasonal variations in
temperature.
Here rainfall averages about 1,600 mm (about 60 in) a year. In the
interior
Northeast, seasonal rainfall is even more extreme. The semiarid region
receives
less than 800 mm (30 in) of rain, which falls in a period of two or
three
months. In addition to its scarcity and seasonal nature, the rain
occasionally
fails completely, causing serious drought conditions.
In the Southeast the tropical
climate is
modified by elevation, with a winter average temperature below 18°C
(64°F) and
an average rainfall of about 1,400 mm (about 55 in) concentrated in
summer. The
South has subtropical conditions, with average temperatures below 20°C
(68°F)
and cool winters. Rainfall averages about 1,500 mm (about 60 in), with
no
differences between seasons. The region is also subject to frost, which
occurs
on average ten days a year and may damage crops. There are occasional
snowfalls
in the higher areas.
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Plant and Animal
Life
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The plant life of Brazil
depends on climate,
elevation, and soil conditions. A broad distinction can be made between
the
forests and grasslands, but considerable variety exists within these
areas. The
Amazon rain forest is the largest tropical rain forest in the world. It
has
luxuriant vegetation, with tall trees and several lower layers of
vegetation
that include woody vines and unusual varieties of plants that do not
root in
the soil, but grow by attaching themselves to other plants. The east
coast and
the uplands in the Southeast also had a tropical forest cover, although
less
dense and diverse than the Amazon region; however, much of this has been
cleared since 1500. In the South, the Araucária pine forest grows under
subtropical conditions.
In central Brazil the
rain forest gradually gives
way in the south to the cerrado, an area of more open vegetation
that
trends from woodland to a mix of trees, shrubs and grass, and open
grassland.
In the semiarid Northeast vegetation is adapted to the low rainfall. It
consists of low scrub, called caatinga. The trees lose their
leaves in
the dry season, and cacti and other plants that can survive very dry
conditions
are common.
The South contains open
grassland known as the campos.
Other small grassland areas occur in the northern Amazon region and in
the
mountains. The Pantanal near the border of Bolivia and Paraguay has
distinct
vegetation of trees, shrubs, and grasses that have adapted to the
conditions of
seasonal flooding. Along the coast several vegetation types exist,
including
salt marshes, mangrove swamps, and sand dunes.
The rich wildlife of Brazil
reflects the
variety of natural habitats. Of an estimated 750 species of mammals in
South
America, 417 are found in Brazil. Larger mammals include pumas, jaguars,
ocelots, rare bush dogs, and foxes. Peccaries, tapirs, anteaters,
sloths,
opossums, and armadillos are abundant. Deer are plentiful in the south,
and
monkeys of many species abound in the rain forests. The country has one
of the
world’s most diverse populations of birds and amphibians, with 1,500
species of
birds and 581 species of amphibians. There is a great variety of
reptiles,
including lizards, snakes, turtles, and caimans. There are estimated to
be more
than 1,500 species of freshwater fish in Brazil, of which more than
1,000 are
found in the Amazon Basin. The number of invertebrates is enormous,
calculated
at more than 100,000 species, of which 70,000 are insects. However,
Brazil’s wildlife
remains largely unknown, and new species are found on nearly a daily
basis.
Scientists estimate that the total number of plant and animal species in
Brazil
could approach 2 million.
Despite its abundance,
Brazil’s animal and plant life
are threatened by human activity. Removal of the vegetation cover has
been a
continual process since the Europeans arrived; people have cut and
burned the
land to clear it for farming and settlement. Concern about this process
intensified as people, settlements, and industry moved into the Amazon
rain
forest in the 1970s. Clearing land for agriculture and felling trees for
timber
have reduced the habitats of wildlife. Some species are also threatened
with
extinction by sport and subsistence hunting and by industrial and
agricultural
pollution. At the beginning of the 21st century, hundreds of species
were
considered at risk, including the jaguar, several species of monkey, and
Pantanal deer. Numerous birds, reptiles, amphibians, and insects are
also
threatened.
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Natural
Resources
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In 2005, 56.1 percent
of Brazil was covered in
forests, including a large area of tropical rain forests. These rain
forests
yield not only timber, but also a range of products such as rubber, palm
oil,
charcoal, and Brazil nuts.
The country also produces
many different types of
crops and livestock although fertile soil is limited. Despite its
importance as
an agricultural producer, just 8 (2003) percent of Brazil’s total land
area
actually produces crops; the remainder is either grassland, woodland, or
uncultivated fields.
Mineral resources are
particularly important for export
and as raw material for industrial use. The most important, in terms of
value
of output, are iron ore and gold. Copper, zinc, bauxite, manganese, and
tin are
also significant. Limestone, sea salt, diamonds, and phosphates are
leading
nonmetallic minerals.
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Environmental
Issues
|
Concern for the environment
in Brazil has grown in
response to global interest in environmental issues. The clearing of
rain
forests in the Amazon Basin to make room for agriculture and new
settlements
has drawn national and international attention over possible damage to
the rain
forest. Environmentalists are concerned that the extensive loss of rain
forest
vegetation, which produces large amounts of oxygen, could have a wider
impact
on the global environment. During the 1990s, forests in Brazil
disappeared at a
rate of 0.4 percent per year.
In many areas of the country,
the natural
environment is threatened by development. Highway construction has
opened up
previously remote areas for agriculture and settlement; dams have
flooded
valleys and inundated wildlife habitats; and mines have scarred and
polluted
the landscape. Rapid growth of urban areas has also contributed to
pollution.
There have been some efforts to deal with the problems of urban
pollution,
including cleaning up Guanabara Bay in Rio de Janeiro, the Tietê River
in São
Paulo, and the heavily polluted industrial town of Cubatão, near São
Paulo.
Brazil has many different
types of environmental
conservation units throughout the country, including national and state
parks,
reserves, forests, and natural monuments. The first national parks were
created
in 1937 in an effort to provide environmental protection. The largest
national
park in Brazil is Jaú in the state of Amazonas, with 2.3 million
hectares (5.6
million acres). In 1973 a government department for the environment was
established. There is now a wide range of protected areas in addition to
the
national parks; they include forest parks, ecological parks, natural
monuments,
biological reserves, and areas of ecological protection. Many state
governments
have designated protected areas, and land set aside for indigenous
peoples also
serves as nature reserves.
In 2006 the governor of
the state of Pará
designated an undeveloped area the size of England as a protected area.
Under
the governor’s decree the area, located in the Amazon rain forest and
totaling
150,000 sq km (58,000 sq mi), was protected from unsustainable logging
and
slash-and-burn agriculture. Nearly a third of the area—about 57,600 sq
km
(22,200 sq mi)—was placed off limits to any development and even
excludes the
general public, being accessible only to indigenous people and
scientific
researchers. The remaining area was designated only for sustainable
development, permitting limited logging under strict management and
allowing
local communities to harvest some natural resources. The area links to
existing
nature reserves in French Guiana, Guyana, and Suriname, forming a vast
corridor
known as the Guiana Shield that contains about 25 percent of Earth’s
tropical
rain forests and harbors many endangered species.
Designating sites as protected
does not necessarily
mean that they can be securely preserved, however. The government often
lacks
the resources or the will to stop ranchers and farmers who move into
these
protected areas. The country also faces conflicts in reconciling
economic
development and environmental conservation, and in allocating scarce
investment
funds to preserving the environment. The decision to create a vast
reserve in
Pará, however, was thought to have broken the power of large ranchers,
some of
whom owned plots of land the size of small countries.
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III
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PEOPLE AND
SOCIETY
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Brazil’s population is
a mixture of Native American,
European, and African peoples. These groups have intermingled over the
years to
create a society with considerable ethnic complexity. The Native
American
population has been in Brazil the longest, but is now the smallest
group. The
Portuguese began arriving in 1500, and other European groups came after
1850.
The ancestors of African Brazilians arrived as slaves, beginning about
the
mid-1500s and ending in 1850 when the slave trade was abolished.
Brazil’s population growth
was generally high during the
20th century, but it began to slow in the 1980s. Until recently the
population
was predominantly rural and agricultural. The last half of the 20th
century
brought rapid urbanization due to population growth and the migration of
people
from rural areas seeking employment in the expanding industries of the
cities.
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Population
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Brazil was first settled
by Native American
peoples, many of them members of the Tupí-Guaraní cultures. It is
difficult to
estimate the size of the Native American population at the time the
Europeans
arrived. There are no written records, and because of the scattered
distribution of the tribes there is little substantive evidence
remaining about
their history. Recent calculations suggest that between 1 and 6 million
Native
Americans lived in Brazil prior to the arrival of the Portuguese in
1500.
However, as a consequence of war, enslavement, and the introduction of
European
diseases, the indigenous population decreased rapidly. Estimates for
1819
suggest that the Native American population had fallen by two-thirds. In
2000
Native Americans made up less than 1 percent of the population, living
in
isolated groups in remote regions of the rain forest.
Portuguese settlement
was slow and small-scale. When they
arrived in 1500, they established settlements along the coast and
exported
agricultural products to Europe. By 1600 there were no more than 30,000
European settlers in the country. The population increased during the
18th
century as a result of natural increase and immigration to Brazil’s gold
fields, which were discovered in the late 17th century. Population also
increased when the Portuguese brought slaves from Africa to Brazil to
provide
labor for the sugar plantations and gold mines. More than 2 million
slaves arrived
during the colonial period. By 1800 Brazil’s total population was
estimated at
around 3.25 million, of which about 1 million were Europeans, 2 million
were
free or enslaved Africans or of mixed race, and about 250,000 were
Native
Americans.
During the early part
of the 19th century more than
1 million more slaves were imported. After the slave trade was abolished
in
1850, the country’s population continued to grow by natural increase and
immigration. Immigrants from Italy, Portugal, Germany, and Spain started
coming
to Brazil after 1850. Brazil’s first census, in 1872, recorded a
population of
9,930,478; by 1900 the population was just over 17 million. Immigration
continued to be substantial until the 1930s, with many Japanese arriving
after
1908. Since then, population growth has been primarily due to natural
increase.
In 1950 Brazil had 51,944,000
inhabitants, and
by 1980 the population had more than doubled, rising to 119,002,700. The
most
recent census, in 2000, recorded a population of 169,799,170. A 2008
estimate
placed the population at 191,908,598. Contributory factors to these high
growth
rates were immigration, a high birth rate, and a death rate that has
declined
steadily since 1870.
In Brazil, there are considerable
regional
variations in population density. The most densely peopled states are
Rio de
Janeiro and São Paulo in the Southeast and the Federal District in the
Center-West. The least populous states are Roraima and Amazonas, both in
the
North. About 80 percent of the population lives within 350 km (220 mi)
of the
coast. Until the mid-1960s there were more rural dwellers than people
living in
towns; since then the urban population has increased as
industrialization lures
workers to the larger cities. About 84 percent of the population is now
classed
as urban, and a significant proportion lives in big cities.
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B
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Principal Cities
|
The largest city in Brazil
is São Paulo, the
main industrial center of the nation. São Paulo is also the largest city
in
South America, with an estimated population in 2007 of 10.9 million. The
former
capital, Rio de Janeiro, ranks second. It is an important port and
commercial
center. Other important cities include Salvador, the regional capital of
the
Northeast; Belo Horizonte, a major industrial and commercial city in
Minas
Gerais; and Brasília, the capital of Brazil. Each of these cities forms
the
core of a larger urban area. In 2000 there were eight other cities in
Brazil
with more than 1 million inhabitants: Manaus, a port on the Río Negro
near its
confluence with the Amazon; Belém, a northern port on the mouth of the
Amazon;
Fortaleza and Recife, along the northeast coast; Curitiba and Porto
Alegre in
the south; Goiânia, in the south central; and Guarulhos, a suburb of São
Paulo.
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C
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Ethnic Groups
|
Brazil’s population is
derived from three main ethnic
sources. The earliest secure date for the arrival of Native Americans in
Brazil
is about 10,000 years ago. Europeans arrived in 1500, and for the next
three
centuries European immigration was restricted to only the Portuguese.
African
slaves came from West Africa, the Congo, Angola, and Mozambique.
Relations
between these groups created a complex population pattern of mixed
races,
described by an often subtle terminology based on color—for example, preto
(black), escuro (dark), mulato escuro (dark brown),
or mulato
claro (light brown).
Racial classifications
in Brazil are not as sharply defined
as in other nations. The Portuguese colonists who settled Brazil had a
more
relaxed attitude toward interracial relationships than other Europeans
and
often intermarried with Africans and Native Americans. In addition,
racial
classification often reflects an individual’s economic or social
standing. For
example, a Brazilian of mixed racial heritage who has done well
economically
may be classified as white.
The white population tends
to be slightly more
prevalent in urban areas while the black and mulatto population is
slightly
more populous in rural areas. There are also some strong regional
variations.
In the Northeast, where large numbers of slaves were imported during
colonial
times to work the sugar plantations, more than 70 percent of the people
were
recorded as black or mulatto in 1999. In the Southeast the population
was
classified as 64 percent white and 35 percent black or mulatto; in the
South,
which was settled mainly by European immigrants, more than 84 percent of
the
people were recorded as white. Brazil is widely regarded as a racially
open
society, with few ethnic tensions, and there is no recent history of
legal discrimination.
However, whites tend to occupy positions at the top of Brazil’s social
structure, while blacks often occupy the lower economic levels of
society.
Considerable room for social mobility exists among individuals with a
mixed
racial heritage.
|
D
|
Languages
|
Portuguese is the official
and prevailing language
of Brazil, although there are some regional variations in pronunciation
and
slang words. Since 1938 Portuguese has been the compulsory language for
teaching in schools, but German and Italian are still spoken in homes in
the
South by some descendants of immigrants. English and French are the main
second
languages of educated Brazilians.
There are also more than
100 indigenous
languages, of which the most important are Tupí, Gê, Arawak, and Carib.
The
Portuguese borrowed some Indian words, particularly from Tupí, which was
the
common language used in interactions among the Native Americans of the
coastal
regions, Jesuit missionaries, and early settlers. Many settlements and
physical
features still have Indian place names. The settlers also borrowed some
words
from the vocabulary of African slaves.
|
E
|
Religion
|
Roman Catholicism is the
dominant religion, with 90
percent of the population claiming at least nominal affiliation. About 6
percent are defined as members of non-Catholic Christian churches. In
recent
years Pentecostal groups, which believe in the experience of holiness,
or
Christian perfection, have grown rapidly. The Spiritist movement, which
believes in multiple incarnations and communication with spirits of the
dead,
has a small following, mainly among the urban middle classes.
Traditional
African beliefs, brought by slaves, have blended with Catholicism to
create
Afro-Brazilian religions such as Macumba, Candomblé, and Umbanda. These
incorporate
possession by spirits, the use of African music and dance, and the
identification of West African deities with Catholic saints. Such
religions are
strongest in former slave areas, such as Bahia in the Northeast. Native
Americans practice a wide variety of indigenous religions that vary from
group
to group.
The formal link between
the state and the Catholic
Church was severed in the late 19th century. However, the Catholic
Church has
continued to exert an influence on national affairs. It has
traditionally been
a conservative force, but in recent years a movement known as liberation
theology has emerged among members of the Roman Catholic clergy. This
movement
teaches that Christians must work for social and economic justice for
all
people; it has encouraged greater church involvement in social issues,
particularly those that affect the urban poor and the landless rural
population.
|
F
|
Education
|
Primary education is compulsory
from age 7 to 14;
high school education lasts for four years. Education is free in
official
primary and high schools. There was a major reform of education in 1971
that
provided a basic education of eight years, with a common core of
studies.
Students may then continue on to pursue training for employment or
higher
education. Despite provisions in the 1988 Constitution decreeing federal
expenditures for education, schooling remains underfunded and
considerable
variations exist in opportunity between urban and rural children, among
the
nation’s regions, and among social class.
Nearly all children complete
both primary and high
school. The level of adult literacy is similar for both sexes. In 1950
only
half of the population over 15 years of age was literate. Despite a
literacy
campaign begun in 1971, the current level is just 87 percent. Literacy
levels
vary regionally and between rural and urban areas. Illiteracy is
highest—around
27 percent—in the Northeast, which has a high proportion of rural poor.
The University of Rio
de Janeiro was Brazil’s first
university, created out of separate faculties in 1920. The University of
São
Paulo followed in 1934. In 2003 there were 125 universities. Each state
(except
the newest, Tocantins) has a federal university, and there are several
in the
states of Minas Gerais, Rio de Janeiro, and Rio Grande do Sul. There are
state
universities in most of the states of the Northeast, Southeast, and
South. The
Roman Catholic Church also has some universities, and there are dozens
of
private universities, many of them in São Paulo state.
|
G
|
Way of Life
|
Historically Brazilian
society has been patriarchal, with a
strong tradition of male social dominance. This has weakened with
immigration,
urbanization, and the decline of the rural sector. Also, independence
for women
has grown under the influence of feminism and the expansion of urban
employment
opportunities for women. The family is still a crucial social unit, and
there
is some survival, even in the cities, of parentela, a kind of
kinship
system. This extended network involves close family and distant
relatives,
godparents and godchildren, and even family servants. Such linkages are
generally stronger among the middle and upper classes.
There are significant
differences in housing standards
between social classes in Brazil. Striking contrasts exist in the cities
between the luxurious mansions and apartments of the affluent and the favelas
(shantytowns) of the poor. In the countryside the casa grande
(big
house) of the rancher or plantation owner and the simple shacks of rural
laborers also illustrate the disparities. In the cities there is a
social
spectrum of rich, middle class, working class, and poor, but in the
countryside
distinctions tend to be more polarized between the rich and the poor,
with few
working-class or middle-class individuals.
Clothing in Brazil is
not very distinctive, and
formality has diminished over the past 30 years. Although high society
is very
fashion-conscious, only senior managers and public servants wear suits
and ties
to work in the cities; office workers wear casual clothes. In the
countryside,
jeans, shirts, and dresses of inexpensive cotton are typical. The
cowboys of
Rio Grande do Sul, known as gauchos, still wear
distinctive
clothing consisting of ponchos and baggy trousers, while the cowboys of
the
Northeast, known as vaqueiros, wear hats, coats, and chaps
made
of leather. In Bahia some women maintain traditional African
clothing
consisting of long, full skirts, colored shawls, and turbanlike
headscarves.
Native Americans may wear few clothes and make use of beads and other
decorations for personal adornment. They may also use body paint and
have
distinctive hairstyles. However, except on ceremonial occasions, many
Native
Americans who are in contact with mainstream Brazilian society have
exchanged
traditional dress for more contemporary clothing.
Important staples in the
Brazilian diet include
beans, rice, wheat, and manioc, a plant grown in tropical areas and also
known
as cassava. These are consumed throughout the country, although manioc
is an
especially important element in the diet of the poor in the Northeast.
Meat,
particularly beef, is also widely consumed, although only occasionally
by the
poor. Despite the extensive coastline and river system, levels of fish
consumption are low, except along the Northeast coast and in the Amazon
region.
Traditional dishes include feijoada completa, a combination of
pork,
black beans, and rice, and churrasco, barbecued meat that is
common in
the South. In the Northeast there is an important African legacy in
spicy
dishes such as vatapá, a fish stew made with onion, tomato,
coconut, and
spices. Coffee is the most popular beverage, often drunk as cafezinho,
a
small cup of strong and very sweet black coffee. A potent alcoholic
beverage,
known as cachaça, is distilled from sugarcane, and light
beer is
widely consumed. More affluent Brazilians may drink wine produced in Rio
Grande
do Sul. International brand soft drinks are also popular.
Soccer is the most popular
sport, played in
the massive stadiums of the big cities and as recreation. The game was
introduced in the 19th century and was established as a professional
sport in
1933. Although there is great rivalry between local teams, there is
strong
popular support for the national team, which has won the World Cup,
soccer’s
major international competition, four times. Pelé, one of the world’s
legendary
soccer players, led the Brazilian team to three of those victories, in
1958,
1962, and 1970. Motor racing is also very popular, and Brazil has
produced a
number of championship winners, including Emerson Fittipaldi and Ayrton
Senna.
Major participant sports include swimming, tennis, sailing, and golf.
The festival of Carnival,
with its spectacular
street parades and vibrant music, has become one of the most potent
images of
Brazil. Its roots lie in the European Mardi Gras, a lively festival,
which
precedes the fasting and prayers of the Roman Catholic holy season of
Lent.
Carnival begins on the Friday before Ash Wednesday and lasts for five
days. In
Brazil it seems to have first occurred in Bahia in the mid-17th century
and in
Rio de Janeiro in the 1850s, where it was associated with street parades
and
elegant private balls.
Carnival did not take
on its present spectacular
form in Rio until the 1930s, when the dance known as the samba emerged
in the favelas
(shantytowns) of the city. Samba “schools” based in the favelas
compete to
create the most spectacular groups of extravagantly costumed dancers and
original samba songs. In Rio they now parade through the sambadrome
(a
street stadium) before vast crowds of Brazilians and foreign tourists.
The more
traditional street parties and balls also continue. Carnival is
celebrated
throughout Brazil, but the most spectacular celebrations outside Rio
take place
in Salvador, Recife, and Olinda, although the nature of the events
varies.
|
H
|
Social Issues
|
Brazilian society displays
marked inequity between the
city and the country, between regions, and between social classes. The
gap
between rich and poor is among the most substantial in the world. In
1998 the richest
20 percent of the population received 64 percent of the nation’s income,
while
the poorest 20 percent earned only 2 percent. Besides access to wealth,
this
inequality is also reflected in access to education, medical care, and
services
such as water supply, sewerage, and electricity.
Despite the rich resources,
rapid economic
development, and the overall size of Brazil’s economy, the nation has
major
problems with poverty, hunger, disease, and inadequate services. In the
cities,
overcrowding compounds these problems. Rapid urbanization has brought
people to
the cities at a rate that has outpaced the growth of the job market and
the
urban services that they need to survive comfortably. Many of the larger
cities
have extensive slums. Homelessness—particularly among children and young
teens
whose families cannot support them—constitutes another major problem.
Despite these urban problems,
poverty and lack of
access to clean water, electricity, health care, and schooling may be
more
acute in the countryside. For example, 96 percent of urban dwellers have
access
to safe drinking water as opposed to just 57 percent in the countryside.
Such
distinctions are also evident between regions. The average head of a
household
in the Northeast is likely to earn only half as much as a counterpart in
the
Southeast, twice as likely to be illiterate, and have a life expectancy
five
years lower. A key challenge for the government remains the inequality
of
opportunity among citizens.
Among other social issues,
overt racism is rare,
although there is some evidence of a social segregation in which the
poor are
more likely to be black or of mixed race. Organized crime has links to
gambling
and drugs, and the favelas often serve as bases for drug dealers. Street
crime
remains a problem in cities such as Rio de Janeiro and Salvador.
|
IV
|
CULTURE
|
Cultural development in
the colonial period (1500-1822)
was primarily a transfer of Portuguese traditions to Brazil,
particularly under
the influence of the Roman Catholic Church. Architecture was the
earliest art
form to develop a distinctly Brazilian tradition through the blending of
European and African influences. During the 18th century, wealth
generated by
sugar plantations and gold mines went into the building of flamboyant
churches and
public buildings in the regions of Bahia, Pernambuco, and Minas Gerais.
After independence in
1822, intellectuals rejected their
Portuguese inheritance and sought models elsewhere. Artistic movements
from
throughout Europe had a significant influence on Brazilian art during
the 19th
century. A major milestone for Brazilian culture was the Week of Modern
Art in
São Paulo in 1922, an international arts festival that introduced
modernist
ideas in Brazil. Brazilian modernism emerged in response to artistic
movements
in Europe and to the social, political, and economic changes that Brazil
was
experiencing. After its introduction, modernism exercised a powerful
influence
on Brazilian literature, art, music, and painting. From 1968 to the
1980s the
military regime that ruled Brazil repressed artistic expression by
censoring
the press, popular music and theater, and by establishing state control
over
radio and television. After the end of military rule in the 1980s, the
government lifted restrictions on artists and journalists.
|
A
|
Literature
|
Brazilian colonial literature
followed classical
traditions, drawing from Portuguese and Catholic influences. After
Brazil
attained independence in 1822, artists looked for inspiration from other
sources in an effort to create a uniquely Brazilian literary style.
Ideas were
drawn from French, English, and German literature, which introduced
romanticism, a movement in the arts that emphasized a highly imaginative
and
subjective approach to artistic expression. There was a strong
nationalistic
element in these writings. A leading figure was José de Alencar, who
wrote
about Brazil and its history. His Iracema (1865; translated as Iracema
the
Honey-lips, a Legend of Brazil, 1886) portrayed a romance between
an
indigenous Brazilian princess and a Portuguese colonist.
The major literary figure
in the late 19th century
was Joaquim Maria Machado de Assis, whose works include Quincas borba
(1891; Philosopher or Dog?, 1954) and Dom Casmurro (1899;
translated 1953). Many of his works provide searching comments on the
human
condition. Another major novel of this period is Euclides da Cunha’s Os
sertões
(1902; Rebellion in the Backlands, 1944), a powerful
portrait of rebellion and massacre in the Northeast.
The modernist influence
has encouraged an exploration of
national character and of distinctive regional cultures, and an interest
in
social issues. The regional novel has been particularly strong in the
Northeast, where an important group of writers have portrayed the nature
of the
region and the experiences of its people in the cane fields, the dry
interior,
and in the cities. One of Brazil’s most popular novelists, Jorge Amado,
wrote
about his native state of Bahia in such works as Gabriela, cravo e
canela
(1958; Gabriela, Clove and Cinnamon, 1962), which portrays the
experience of migrants from the interior of the Northeast to the cocoa
port of
Ilheus. Other important regional novels from the Northeast include
Graciliano
Ramos’s Vidas secas (1938; Barren Lives, 1965) and José
Lins do
Rego’s Menino de engenho (1932; Plantation Boy, 1966). The
country’s first important female novelist, Rachel de Queiroz, wrote
about the
challenges that women faced in Brazilian society in O quinze
(1930; The
Year 1915).
Among the best post-1945
writers are João Guimarães
Rosa, whose Grande sertao: veradas (1956; Devil to Pay in the
Backlands, 1963) provides a powerful portrait of rural life in the
interior
of Minas Gerais, and Clarice Lispector, best known for her short stories
such
as Laços de família (1960; Family Ties, 1972).
Important
contemporary writers include Autran Dourado, author of Ópera dos
Mortos
(1967; The Voice of the Dead, 1980); Darcy Ribeiro, author of Maíra
(1978; translated 1985); João Ubaldo Ribeiro, author of Sergeant
Getúlio
(1977; translated 1980); and Paulo Coelho, author of O alquimista
(1988;
The Alchemist, 1993) and Veronika decide morrer (1998; Veronika
Decides
to Die, 1999).
In poetry, major figures
in the 19th century were
Antonio Gonçalves Dias and Antonio de Castro Alves, who wrote on native
Brazilian themes in their works. Important poets of the modernist
movement have
been Manuel Bandeira, Carlos Drummond de Andrade, and Jorge de Lima. See
Brazilian
Literature.
|
B
|
Art and
Architecture
|
Portuguese religious influences
dominated colonial art.
In the 19th and 20th centuries, artistic movements in Europe
provided inspiration for Brazilian artists. For example, the Week of
Modern
Art, an international arts festival in São Paulo in 1922, introduced
cubist
ideas, which focused on abstract forms rather than lifelike
representation of
objects. Important modern artists Anita Malfatti and Tarsila do Amaral
were
both early pioneers in Brazilian modern art. Cándido Portinari depicted
people
and landscapes of his homeland in a patriotic manner, and Lasar Segall
helped
introduce expressionist paintings to Brazil with an exhibit in Rio de
Janeiro
in 1913.
Colonial architecture
was strongly influenced by the Jesuit
priests and the Roman Catholic Church. In the 20th century, modern
artistic
movements provided inspiration for architecture as they had for art,
particularly after the 1936 visit of Swiss French architect Le
Corbusier, who
collaborated with Oscar Niemeyer and Lúcio Costa on the Ministry of
Education
building in Rio de Janeiro. Niemeyer and Costa have been key figures in
the
high reputation of Brazil’s modern architecture. Their masterpiece is
the
capital city of Brasília (constructed in the 1950s), which Costa planned
and
for which Niemeyer designed many of the public buildings. Other
important
figures include Jorge Moreira Machado and Afonso Reidy. Buildings
designed by
these architects tend to be light, graceful, and airy, incorporating
features
appropriate to tropical heat and strong sunlight. They also frequently
combine
the skills of the architect with those of sculptors, painters, and
landscape
gardeners such as Roberto Burle Marx, who designed many parks and
gardens in
Brazil and overseas.
One of Brazil’s most famous
sculptors and
architects is the colonial artist known as Aleijadinho, who worked in a
baroque
style on the churches of colonial Minas Gerais. In the modern period,
more
abstract styles have dominated. Important figures such as sculptors
Bruno
Giorgi and Maria Martins contributed works to the design of Brasília.
Photography was introduced
in Brazil in 1840, and early
photographs provide an important record of society and landscape. In
recent
years photographer Sebastião Salgado has created powerful images of
Brazilian
poverty.
There is a strong folk-art
tradition in Brazil,
deriving from and often blending together the legacies of the Native
Americans,
Africans, and Portuguese. Indigenous art traditionally focused on three
forms:
pottery, weaving, and body art, which involved painting designs on the
skin.
Goods that have utilitarian functions have come to be appreciated for
their
aesthetic qualities. Such items include pottery, leatherwork, basketry,
lace,
and embroidery.
|
C
|
Music and Dance
|
The National Conservatory
was established in 1841, and
classical music drew upon European and ethnic traditions. There is a
strong
nationalist element in the work of composer Antônio Carlos Gomes.
Brazil’s
leading classical composer, Heitor Villa-Lobos, blended European
traditions and
melodies with those of Brazil’s African and Native American populations.
This
blend is perhaps best heard in his Bachianas Brasileiras (1930-1945),
a
series of nine suites.
The best-known form of
popular music is samba,
which grew from the rhythm and vocal styles of the Native Americans,
Portuguese, and Africans. Samba has come to be particularly associated
with the
spectacular dance and music competitions that take place each year in
Rio de
Janeiro during Brazil’s Carnival celebration. Although samba, as a dance
form,
is best seen during Carnival, there are other dances of African origin,
such as
the ritualized fighting of capoeira, which originated among
African
slaves. Bumba-meu-boi is a dance that uses drama, dance, instrumental
music,
and song to recount the mythical tale of the death and resurrection of
an ox.
In the 1950s and 1960s
bossa nova emerged from
a blending of Brazilian popular music with American jazz. Key composers
of
bossa nova were João Gilberto, Antonio Carlos Jobim, and Vinicius de
Morães. In
the mid-1960s the addition of electric guitars and elements of rock
music
resulted in the creation of música popular brasileira (MPB), associated
with
musician Chico Buarque and others. MPB focused on urban protest against
the
military regime that ruled Brazil from 1964 to 1985. In the late 1960s
tropicalismo
drew upon a range of musical traditions, with Maria Bethânia and Caetano
Veloso
as leading performers. It combined Brazilian folk traditions with rock
and roll
and popular music styles. Lambada, originating in the Amazon region in
the
1970s, is a sensual dance based on Afro-Brazilian rhythms. There are
also
elements of regional popular music, such as sertanejo in the South and
Center-West, which resembles American country music, with simple tunes
and
themes of love, nostalgia, and hardship.
|
D
|
Theater and Film
|
Theater was not an important
art form in
Brazil until the 1940s, when playwrights such as Nelson Rodrigues and
Alfredo
Dias Gomes began to contribute more original works. In the 1950s the
theater
became more experimental and socially concerned, and the Teatro de Arena
in São
Paulo became an important place of innovation and a center of social
protest
against the military regime in the 1960s.
Interest in cinema has
a long history, but
motion-picture production was constrained by the limited market for
films in
Portuguese. However, the cinema nôvo (new cinema) movement of the
mid-1950s began to attract international attention through films such as
Vidas
Secas (Barren Lives, 1963), a dramatization of the novel by
Graciliano Ramos. A major figure was Glauber Rocha, who made several
striking
films on Brazilian themes, most notably Deus e o diabo na terra do
sol (Black
God, White Devil, 1964). More recently, Bruno Barreto has produced
films
based on several novels by Brazilian writer Jorge Amado, and a novel by
Paulo
Lins about two boys growing up in the slums of Rio de Janeiro was turned
into a
film, Cidade de Deus (2002, also released as City of God).
|
V
|
ECONOMY
|
Before 1930 the Brazilian
economy was dominated by
a number of agricultural and mineral products for export. The world
economic
depression of the 1930s encouraged the government to diversify the
economy,
particularly through industrialization. The state led much of this
development,
through economic plans and government participation in key sectors of
public
services, such as electricity, telephones, and postal services. The
government
was also directly involved in some of the country’s largest firms,
particularly
in the mining, steel, oil, and chemical industries. At the same time, it
encouraged
foreign investment in areas such as automobile manufacturing,
engineering, and
the production of electrical goods. As a result, the importance of
agriculture
and mining in output and trade fell significantly.
Despite success in growing
its industrial sector,
Brazil encountered economic difficulties. Periodic world recessions, the
oil
crises of 1973 and 1979, the accumulation of high foreign debt, and
periods of
rapid inflation all contributed to slow the progress of development in
Brazil.
In response to these difficulties, the government reduced its role in
planning
the economy and in financing the development of new industries. The
government
also opened up a number of state-owned companies to private investors in
areas
such as steel, petroleum, electricity, and telecommunications. In 2001
services
accounted for 57 percent of Brazil’s gross domestic product (GDP);
industry, 34
percent; and agriculture, forestry, and fishing, 9 percent.
|
A
|
Labor
|
In 2006 the labor force
in Brazil was 93.1
million people, of whom 43 percent were women. Unemployment was
estimated at
9.7 percent in 2003, but that figure may be imprecise, due to the number
of
people holding part-time jobs or working in unreported employment,
particularly
in the cities. Urban-based employment surpasses agricultural-based
employment,
with much of its growth in service jobs rather than manufacturing. In
2006 the
service sector employed 64 percent of the workforce.
The government first granted
legal recognition to
labor organizations in 1907. In 1931 President Getúlio Vargas created a
government-supervised trade union structure. Strikes were forbidden, but
labor
courts assessed workers’ grievances. The Vargas government also
instituted
social legislation that was advanced for its time, regulating hours of
work and
establishing a minimum wage, worker training, and health care. By 1944
there
were 800 unions, with over 500,000 members. During the 1950s labor
became more
militant, and there was pressure for a central labor organization and
moves to
unionize rural labor.
Following the 1964 military
coup, the government
purged the leadership of unions and placed many unions under direct
government
control. However, continued union activism at the factory level and
strikes
organized by workers were factors in ending the military regime. Unions
reemerged following the return of civilian rule in 1985, and central
labor
organizations were legalized. During the 1990s the number of unions grew
into
the thousands and included factory and rural workers, employers, and
professionals. In addition to umbrella organizations such as the Central
Union
of Workers and the General Confederation of Workers, both formed in
1983, there
are unions for specific industries, such as metal workers, and for
sectors of
the economy, such as commerce, transport, and education.
|
B
|
Agriculture
|
After the 1930s agriculture
declined in importance
in the economy and employment. However, today agriculture generates
about
one-third of export earnings. Brazil’s development of its savannas by
improving
the quality of its soil with phosphorus and lime fertilizers has made it
an
agricultural superpower. Brazil is the world’s largest exporter of
soybeans and
the largest producer of sugarcane and coffee. Soybeans became an
important crop
after Brazil experimented with developing tropical varieties. Soybeans
and
coffee are now Brazil’s leading agricultural exports. Sugar output has
more
than doubled since 1975, partly to meet the demand for cane alcohol as a
substitute for gasoline.
Brazil is also one of
the world’s largest
producers of oranges, bananas, and papaws, a small tropical fruit. In
addition
to coffee, sugar, and soybeans, the leading crops are maize, various
beans,
rice, and manioc, or cassava. Cotton, grown mainly in the savannas, is
also becoming
a fast-rising export. Pastoral farming is also important. There are 207
million
head of cattle in Brazil; pigs, sheep, and goats are also important.
There has been considerable
modernization in
agriculture, through mechanization, the use of fertilizers and
irrigation, and
improvements in storage and transport. Settlements have advanced into
the lands
in the Center-West and the Amazon region, via planned settlement schemes
and
spontaneous colonization. This advance is partly a result of the
displacement
of farm workers by modernization. Brazil has a large number of landless
rural
dwellers, and the pattern of land ownership is very unequal.
|
C
|
Forestry and
Fishing
|
The forests are an important
source of a range
of products for domestic use and export. Timber products such as paper
and
cellulose are important export commodities. Other valuable forest
products
include açaí fruit; babaçu nut; yerba maté, whose leaves are made into a
tealike beverage; piaçava fiber, which is used to make brooms and cords;
and
charcoal, used largely in the iron industry.
Fish provide a modest
contribution to the Brazilian
diet. Two-thirds of the catch comes from sea fishing and the remaining
one-third comes from inland waters. However, there is a marked contrast
between
the two systems. Commercial companies take in a majority of the
saltwater fish
catch, whereas private individuals catch most of the fish in the inland
region.
Fishing is particularly important in the states of Rio de Janeiro and
Santa
Catarina.
|
D
|
Mining
|
Minerals are a vital source
of industrial raw
materials and provide 9.1 percent of export earnings. In 2001 Brazil was
the
world’s leading producer of iron ore and one of the world’s largest
exporters
of the mineral. The country is also an important source of gold, tin,
and
manganese. Iron ore comes from Minas Gerais and more recently from the
Serra da
Carajás in Pará. Minas Gerais is also a major producer of manganese,
bauxite,
nickel, zinc, gold, diamonds, and semiprecious gemstones. Carajás has
gold,
nickel, copper, and the metallic element molybdenum. Other significant
minerals
are tin in Amazonas, manganese in Amapá, and bauxite, an important ore
of
aluminum, in Pará. A wide range of nonmetallic minerals are mined,
including
limestone, dolomite, phosphates, and quartz. Low-grade coal is produced
in
Paraná, Santa Catarina, and Rio Grande do Sul, but output has fallen by
more
than half since 1988.
Oil was first discovered
in the Northeast in 1939,
and in 1953 the government established a state company, Petrobrás, to
control
production, refining, and distribution of petroleum. The country
remained
heavily dependent on oil imports until large oil fields were discovered
off the
shore of Rio de Janeiro in 1974. In 1997 the government ended the
Petrobrás oil
monopoly and opened the oil industry to competition. New oil fields were
discovered near Rio de Janeiro—the nation’s largest oil producer—and off
the
shore of Sergipe in 1996. In 2001 Brazil was one of the top 20 producers
of
crude petroleum in the world. Significant oil and natural gas fields
have also
been found in the Amazon region.
Brazil is also home to
Companhia Vale do Rio
Doce, a company that ranks as one of the world’s largest iron ore
producers and
exporters. The Brazilian government had controlled the company but in
1997 it
privatized Companhia Vale do Rio Doce as part of an economic plan to
raise
revenue. Companhia Vale do Rio Doce runs large iron mines in Minas
Gerais and a
mineral complex in Carajás.
|
E
|
Manufacturing
|
The manufacturing sector
has been a key to Brazil’s
economic development, with periods of rapid growth, especially in the
late
1950s and the 1970s. A major objective of Brazil’s industrialization
policy was
to replace imported manufactures with Brazilian-made ones. As a result,
industry has become highly diversified, including a range of
high-technology
and heavy industries. This diversification includes such manufactured
items as
food, drink, textiles, clothing, vehicles, and chemicals.
Industrialization
involved a mixed pattern of investment by domestic capital; by the
government
in areas such as steel, petrochemicals, and aircraft; and by foreign
capital in
the manufacture of automobiles, chemicals, and electrical goods. As a
result,
Brazil is one of the world’s major steel producers and car
manufacturers. The
vehicle industry has developed since 1956, with Fiat, Ford, General
Motors, and
Volkswagen as the largest firms.
The leading industries
are machinery and transportation
equipment, food and metal processing, automobiles, steel, chemicals, and
textiles and clothing. Industry is highly concentrated geographically,
with the
leading concentrations in metropolitan São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro,
Campinas,
Porto Alegre, and Belo Horizonte. Technologically advanced industries
are also
highly concentrated in these locations.
|
F
|
Energy
|
Most of Brazil’s energy
comes from renewable
sources, particularly hydroelectricity, which generated 84 percent of
the
country’s energy in 2003. Oil and natural gas are the main nonrenewable
sources, followed by coal. Renewable resources are domestically
produced, but
Brazil also imports about 10 percent of its total energy needs,
principally oil
and coal.
Almost half of the hydroelectric
capacity is
located on major rivers in the Southeast, close to the highest
concentrations
of population and industry. Improved transmission technology and the
construction of industries, such as metal smelting, that use large
amounts of
electricity have begun to tap into the considerable hydroelectric
resources of
the Amazon region. The biggest hydroelectric station is Itaipú, in
Paraná,
which Brazil shares with Paraguay. Other large stations are Tucuruí in
the
Amazon region, Paulo Afonso in Bahia, Itumbiara in Minas Gerais, and
Ilha
Solteira in São Paulo. In the South, burning coal supplies thermal
power, and
there are oil-fired power stations elsewhere. Brazil has taken some
tentative
steps in the production of nuclear power; in 2003 nuclear power provided
4
percent of Brazil’s energy.
Wood and charcoal are
still widely used in rural
areas for cooking. They are also important commercial sources of energy,
particularly in iron smelting and lime making. Sugarcane is also
significant,
both as a source of commercially distilled fuel known as ethanol for
motor
vehicles and as bagasse, the remains of crushed sugarcane stalks,
which
is used as fuel in sugar mills. From 2003 to 2006, more than 77 percent
of the
automobiles sold in Brazil, about 2 million vehicles, were flex-fuel
cars,
which operate on either ethanol or gasoline.
|
G
|
Foreign Trade
|
Before 1980 there were
persistent deficits in
Brazil’s balance of trade, with imports costing more than exports. In
the 1980s
this moved into a surplus as a result of a policy of export promotion,
increased self-sufficiency in manufactured goods, and a reduced need for
petroleum imports. Trade deficits returned in the 1990s partly due to a
global
economic stagnation. By the beginning of the 21st century, Brazil had
reestablished a trade surplus. Although Brazil traditionally has been an
exporter of primary agricultural and mineral products, manufactured
goods made
up 53 percent of Brazil’s exports in 2004.
Brazil is a member of
the International
Monetary Fund (IMF), an international body that seeks to coordinate
monetary
funds in order to expand trade, and the Inter-American Development Bank,
an
organization headquartered in Washington, D.C., that promotes economic
development in Latin American nations. It was a pioneer in the
International
Coffee Agreement of 1957, seeking to protect its interests in one of its
major
export crops. By establishing export quotas, the agreement between
coffee-producing and coffee-consuming countries tried to stabilize
prices and
overcome the problems caused by fluctuations in supply and demand. In
1960
Brazil joined the Latin American Free Trade Area (which became the Latin
American Integration Association in 1980), to foster trade within the
continent, and since 1995 has been a member of Mercosur, a customs union
with
Argentina, Paraguay, and Uruguay.
|
H
|
Currency and
Banking
|
The country’s economic
difficulties in the early 1990s
resulted in frequent devaluations of the currency along with frequent
name
changes to the unit of currency, including cruzeiro, cruzeiro
novo,
and cruzado. The present currency is the real, which
replaced the
cruzeiro real in 1994, and has approximate parity with the U.S.
dollar
(2.20 real equal U.S.$1; 2006 average).
The Banco de Brazil is
the largest commercial
bank, established in 1808. In 1965 the Central Bank of Brazil became
responsible for the supply of currency and the control of circulation.
In
addition to the federal bank and private banks, there are a number of
state
banks.
The largest stock exchange
is that of São Paulo,
followed by the exchange in Rio de Janeiro. There are a number of
smaller
exchanges.
|
I
|
Transportation
|
Sheer size, mountains,
and river rapids have all been
obstacles to transportation in Brazil, but the country has an expanding
transport network. Roads are a key element, encouraged in the late 1950s
by the
implementation of a national highway plan and the creation of an
automobile
industry. A national highway system with Brasília at the center links
all the
state capitals. There are other major interurban and interregional
highways,
including the Trans-Amazon Highway, an east-west artery linking isolated
regions of Brazil and Peru. Dependence on motor vehicles has created
serious
traffic congestion in some of the major cities, especially those on
sites with
limited geographic access, such as Rio de Janeiro. It has also resulted
in
increased air pollution.
Two-thirds of the tracks
on Brazil’s railway system
are located in the Southeast and South. Railways have suffered because
of their
high costs compared to the highways and because they were built as
separate
lines, rather than as an integrated system. Many of these systems have
variations in track gauges (the distance between the two sides of the
track);
this makes it impossible to run trains designed for one system on the
tracks of
a system built for a different gauge. In 1962 a federal agency was
created to
oversee the state-controlled railways. These and the railways of São
Paulo are
the largest systems. The remaining rail operations are suburban commuter
systems connecting in the major cities or specialized railways carrying
minerals, timber, or tourists.
Coastal shipping has also
declined in the face of
highway competition, but there was some modernization in shipping and
ports in
the late 1970s through the creation of export corridors to the ports of
Rio
Grande, Paranaguá, and Santos, and through the construction of
specialized oil
and ore ports. Major ports include Santos, Rio de Janeiro, and Angra dos
Reis;
the specialized ports of Tubarão, Sepitiba, and São Sebastião in the
Southeast;
Paranaguá and Rio Grande in the South; and Aratu and São Luis in the
Northeast.
Brazil’s large size makes
air transport important.
Sixty-seven airports, controlled by the state company Infraero, handle
most of
the air traffic. There are also many small airstrips that serve remote
areas in
the Amazon region. The airports of São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro are the
two
largest in South America in terms of traffic handled. Varig is the
principal
international and domestic airline, with Vasp and Transbrasil as the
leading
domestic carriers. Several sectors of the transport system—including
railways,
metro systems, highways, ports, and airports—were opened to private
investment
in the 1990s as part of the government’s privatization program.
|
J
|
Communications
|
Major newspapers are based
in Rio de Janeiro and
São Paulo. There are six major television networks, with Globo
Organisations,
one of the biggest media organizations in Latin America, controlling a
major
television, radio, publishing, and newspaper business. Brazilian telenovelas
(soap operas) have become an important export to other South American
countries
and to Europe. Telecommunications is a growing sector, with rapid
expansion of
cellular phones and cable subscriptions.
|
K
|
Tourism
|
Tourism brings in substantial
foreign exchange.
Brazil’s increased affluence and improved transportation facilities have
greatly increased tourist activity. In 2006, 5 million tourists entered
Brazil.
South America is the major source, followed by Europe and North America.
The
leading individual countries are Argentina, the United States, Uruguay,
Paraguay, and Germany. Major tourist attractions are the beaches of Rio
de
Janeiro, the historic cities of Bahia and Minas Gerais, and natural
formations
such as the waterfall at Iguaçu. The yearly Carnival festival in Rio de
Janeiro
also attracts large numbers of tourists. In recent years the beaches of
the
Northeast have become important attractions, and the rain forest has
begun to
attract ecological tourism.
In the early 1990s the
volume of visitors fell
because of press reports of crime in cities such as Rio de Janeiro and
Salvador. However, foreign tour operators recognized Brazil’s potential,
and
the government began to stimulate the industry. In 1992 the government
tourist
agency, Embratur, began to improve the infrastructure for tourism,
particularly
hotels and transport, and sought to increase the marketing of Brazil
overseas.
In addition to overseas tourism, rising prosperity within Brazil has
also
stimulated domestic tourism.
|
VI
|
GOVERNMENT
|
Brazil has been a republic
since 1889, but
democratic government was suspended during the dictatorship of Getúlio
Vargas
from 1937 to 1945 and during military rule under a series of presidents
from
1964 until 1985. Since its founding the republic has functioned under
five constitutions;
the current constitution became effective in 1988. It created a republic
with
26 federated states and one federal district. This constitution gave
considerable powers to the legislative branch, the National Congress, to
counter those of the president. It also shifted substantial
responsibility and
funding from the national government to the states and municipalities,
which
now have considerable autonomy over their internal affairs. It also
provides
for equality for all citizens under the law and universal suffrage.
Brazil’s government has
three distinct elements. A
president exercises executive power; a congress, consisting of the
Senate and
the Chamber of Deputies, controls legislative power; and the Supreme
Federal
Tribunal heads the judicial branch of government. In the federal capital
of
Brasília these powers are expressed symbolically by the placement of the
President’s Executive Office, the Congress, and the Supreme Court on
three
sides of the Square of Three Powers.
All citizens 16 years
of age or older are eligible
to vote by secret ballot in elections for president, congress, state
governors,
and state legislatures. Voting is compulsory for literate persons from
18 to 70
years of age, and optional for those who are illiterate, over 70 years
of age,
or aged 16 or 17.
|
A
|
Executive
|
A candidate for the presidency
must be a
native-born Brazilian over 35 years of age. The president must be
elected by an
absolute majority of votes cast. If no candidate receives a majority in
the
first round of voting, votes proceed to a second round. The president
holds
office for four years. A constitutional amendment passed in 1997 allows
the
president to run for a second term. The president appoints his own
cabinet
ministers, directs foreign policy, can initiate legislation, and serves
as
commander in chief of the armed forces.
Members of the Council
serve as advisers to the
president. The Council consists of 14 members: the vice president, the
minister
of justice, the presidents of the two houses of Congress, the majority
and
minority leaders from both houses of Congress, two members elected by
the
Senate, two elected by the Chamber of Deputies, and two appointed by the
president. A National Defense Council advises the president on matters
of
national sovereignty and defense.
|
B
|
Legislature
|
Elections for both houses
of Congress take place
simultaneously. Congressional candidates must be Brazilian by birth.
Deputies
must be over 21 years of age, and senators must be over 35. Senators are
elected by majority rule to serve for eight years, with each of Brazil’s
26
states and the Federal District of Brasília electing three members.
Deputies
are elected for four years by a system of proportional representation.
There
are 513 members in the Chamber of Deputies. Although the number of
deputies for
each state is theoretically related to its population, this relationship
is not
strictly observed in practice. Congress is responsible for all matters
within
the states, the federal district, and the municipalities. These include
fiscal
and budgetary matters; international treaties; national, regional, and
local
planning; and matters dealing with the armed forces and territorial
limits.
|
C
|
Judiciary
|
The principal judicial
power, the Supreme Federal
Tribunal, meets in Brasília and consists of 11 judges who are appointed
for
life. When openings occur, the president appoints new judges with the
approval
of the Senate. The president also appoints a Regional Federal Tribunal
for each
state and the Federal District. These courts consist of at least seven
judges
who are usually drawn from the area in which they serve. Specialized
tribunals
deal with labor, military, and electoral matters. The states administer
their
own judicial systems. Municipal judges and justices of the peace deal
with
minor criminal and civil matters.
|
D
|
Local Government
|
Brazil is divided into
26 states and the Federal
District of Brasília. Each state has a governor and legislature. The
basic unit
of local government is the municipio (municipality). This is
similar to
an American county, with an urban seat and a rural region, although the
larger
cities may be entirely urban municipalities. Population growth and the
advance
of populations into unsettled areas have resulted in the creation of new
municipios. Municipios are administered by a mayor and council, who deal
with
matters of local taxation, planning, and basic services.
|
E
|
Political
Parties
|
During the 20th century
few political parties
developed clear ideological positions in Brazil. Parties either
represented
regional or sectional interests or served as vehicles for individual
political
leaders. The military regime dissolved the existing parties in 1965 and
created
a two-party structure consisting of the government-sponsored party, the
National Renovating Alliance, and an opposition, the Brazilian
Democratic
Movement. As the military moved to restore democracy, new parties were
approved
in 1979. The major parties to emerge were the Brazilian Social
Democratic Party
and the Democratic Workers’ Party on the center-left; the centrist
Brazilian
Democratic Movement Party; the Liberal Front Party and the Brazilian
Labor
Party on the center-right; and the right-wing Progressive Party. Most of
these
had roots in the parties that were dissolved in 1964. The only
significant new
group was the socialist Workers’ Party, which emerged from militant
labor
opposition to the military dictatorship, particularly in São Paulo.
|
F
|
Social Services
|
The Brazilian government
first established a social
security provision in 1911. During the 1930s dictator Getúlio Vargas
implemented a welfare system that was advanced for its time, providing
workers
with minimum wages, unemployment insurance, and retirement benefits.
During the
1960s a range of benefits covering medical assistance, sickness benefit,
workmen’s compensation, and pensions were brought together under the
National
Institute for Social Provision (INPS), which was financed by
contributions from
workers and employers. In 1988 the framers of the new constitution
sought to
provide equality of access to welfare, health care, and social
assistance. They
extended equal benefits for pensions and maternity rights to rural and
urban
workers.
Financial constraints
have led to a decline in the quality of
the public health service, and many of the more affluent people belong
to
private health programs. The federal government finances the majority of
the
public health services, the balance coming from the states and
municipalities.
Considerable inequity also exists in access to medical services,
favoring
cities and the more populated Southeast.
Despite these difficulties,
life expectancy at birth
rose from 57 years in 1960 to an average of 73 years—69 years for men
and 76.6
years for women—in 2008. The infant mortality rate fell from 95 deaths
per
1,000 live births in 1970 to 27 deaths per 1,000 live births in 2008. As
a
reflection of increasing prosperity, the principal causes of death match
those
found in developed countries. However, parasitic diseases, gastric
ailments,
and malnutrition are still threats to the impoverished and the young.
Tropical
diseases, which are endemic to some areas, include malaria, yellow
fever,
Chagas’ disease, hookworm, and schistosomiasis.
|
G
|
Defense
|
The army is the largest
military force, and
almost 60 percent of its members are drafted. Men between the ages of 18
and 45
must serve a compulsory tour of duty ranging from 12 to 18 months. The
navy and
the air force have lower proportions of draftees. There is also a
paramilitary
public security force and a large military reserve. With the end of
military
rule in 1985, good relations with neighboring countries, and little
internal
political violence, the role of the armed forces has been diminishing. A
new
ministry of defense was created in 1999, replacing separate ministries
for the
army, air force, and navy; this ministry was headed by a civilian,
ending the
long tradition of military control of the armed forces. Defense
currently
absorbs 3.5 percent of government expenditure, falling from 4 percent
under the
military government.
|
H
|
International
Organizations
|
Brazil became an original
member of the United
Nations (UN) in 1945. It joined the UN’s Economic Commission for Latin
America
and the Organization of American States in 1948.
|
VII
|
HISTORY
|
Brazil’s history can be
divided into two major
parts: the colonial period from the arrival of the first Portuguese
explorers
in 1500 until independence in 1822, and the national period since
independence
from Portugal. During the colonial period Brazil became the first great
plantation slave society in the Americas, producing sugar and later
coffee on
large agricultural estates worked by slaves. During the 1700s Brazil
experienced the first major gold rush in the Americas after explorers
discovered gold on frontier territory inland from the coast. After
Brazil broke
away from Portuguese rule in the 1820s, members of the Portuguese royal
family
ruled as emperors until 1889, in the only sustained monarchy in the
western
hemisphere. Since 1889 Brazil has been a republic, experiencing two
periods of
dictatorship: from 1937 to 1945 and from 1964 to 1985. The interaction
of
Europeans, Native Americans, and Africans in Brazil has produced one of
the
most racially mixed societies in the world, and one with enormous
economic and
social inequalities.
|
A
|
Discovery
|
Most of the hundreds of
indigenous peoples who
inhabited eastern South America prior to the arrival of the Europeans
were
members of the Tupí-Guaraní cultures. These Native American groups spoke
variations of the Tupian language and inhabited an area along the
eastern coast
of South America south of the Amazon River and inland to the foothills
of the
Andes. They generally lived by hunting and gathering. Those who did farm
used
simple slash-and-burn techniques to clear the land. Their main crop was
manioc,
also known as cassava. After a few years the soil would be exhausted and
the
farming groups would move on. These people had no metal tools, no
written
language, no beasts of burden, and no knowledge of the wheel. They
worshiped spirits
and relied on religious figures known as shamans for healing, divination
of
future events, and connection to the world of spirits. Accurate numbers
for the
size of the indigenous population are difficult to determine, but best
estimates place the native population of eastern South America in 1500
at
somewhere between 1 and 6 million.
The Portuguese claim to
Brazil stemmed in part from
the Treaty of Tordesillas, which Portugal and Spain had signed in 1494
with the
pope’s blessing. Both nations had undertaken voyages in search of a sea
route
to the spice-rich regions of the Indian Ocean and claimed land based on
these
voyages. In 1492 Italian Spanish explorer Christopher Columbus made his
historic voyage and claimed land in the West Indies for Spain. Spain
sought
international recognition of its right to the newly discovered western
lands,
and the Treaty of Tordesillas was the result. The treaty drew an
imaginary line
far out into the western Atlantic. With a few exceptions, the Portuguese
laid
claim to conquered territories to the east of the line, along the
African
coast; Spain laid claim to territories to the west of the line. Much of
Brazil
lies to the east of the Tordesillas line and thus fell under Portugal’s
jurisdiction.
The Portuguese, however,
did not arrive in Brazil until
1500. They landed on the coast of South America by mistake while seeking
a
route to the Indian Ocean. In 1498 Portuguese explorer Vasco da Gama had
made
the first successful voyage around the southern tip of Africa to India
and
back. The Portuguese quickly outfitted a second expedition, led by Pedro
Álvares Cabral, a young nobleman. Cabral’s fleet strayed too far west in
the
South Atlantic as it moved around Africa. They spotted land on April 22,
1500.
Unaware that he had stumbled on a huge continent, Cabral named his
discovery Terra
da Vera Cruz (Portuguese for “Island of the True Cross”).
|
B
|
Early
Settlements
|
As they had done along
the African coast, the
Portuguese established trading posts, which they called feitorias
(factories),
along more than 1,600 km (more than 1,000 mi) of the South American
coastline.
Portuguese traders visited the factories with some frequency, primarily
to load
cargoes of a hard wood that produced a red dye known by its Latin name, brasile.
Eventually, the land became identified on maps with the brazilwood it
produced,
and the Portuguese began to call their small colony Brazil.
At the same time, France
was attempting to
establish trading relationships along the coast. In 1530, to counter
this
French threat, the Portuguese crown sent an expedition to Brazil led by
the
nobleman Martim Afonso de Sousa. He founded the settlement of São
Vicente (near
present-day Santos) and introduced sugarcane cultivation, cattle
raising, and
an administrative presence in the colony. The king attempted to divide
up 4,000
km (2,500 mi) of coastline into a dozen captaincies, giving control of
these
new territories to nobles. In exchange for developing and protecting
their
captaincies, these nobles, known as donatários, received control
over
lands that were sometimes larger than Portugal itself. Many of the
donatários
never even saw their land grants. Four of the captaincies were not
settled, and
just two—São Vicente in the south and Pernambuco in the
north—experienced any
initial success. The captaincies also failed to discourage the French,
who
continued raids against Portuguese shipping in the area.
In 1549 the king again
attempted to establish
centralized authority in the colony and sent out a larger and more
ambitious
expedition of some 1,200 colonists, soldiers, priests, and royal
officials led
by Tomé de Sousa. He founded a permanent colonial capital on the coast
of the
captaincy of Bahia, calling the city Salvador (Portuguese for “the
Savior”).
Within two decades the sugarcane that the colonists had brought from the
Portuguese islands off the coast of West Africa spread in the rich soils
of the
countryside around Salvador. As the demand for agricultural labor
increased,
conflict between Native Americans and colonists intensified. Plantation
owners
tried a number of methods to coerce the indigenous people to work in the
sugar
fields: forcing them into slavery, attempting to turn them into peasants
who
were obligated to work on the agricultural estates, and offering wages
in exchange
for labor. None of these attempts succeeded on a large scale.
The Native Americans found
a staunch ally against
the pressure from the colonists in the Roman Catholic Church, or more
precisely, in the Society of Jesus (Jesuits). Jesuit priests had arrived
with
Tomé de Sousa in 1549, and they founded the Roman Catholic Church in
Brazil. A
new and very effective religious order, the Jesuits created the first
schools
in Brazil and sought to convert the Native Americans to Christianity. A
group
of priests, led by Manoel da Nóbrega and José de Anchieta, eventually
created a
system of aldeias (villages) to Christianize the Native
Americans. By
the 1560s and 1570s the Jesuits had gathered thousands of indigenous
people in
dozens of aldeias.
In the 1560s disease,
most likely smallpox, swept
through the Native American villages, and large numbers of the
indigenous
people died. Given the Native Americans’ resistance to plantation work
and
their susceptibility to epidemics introduced by European settlers, the
Portuguese
colonists began to use African slave labor to satisfy their rapidly
increasing
labor needs.
|
C
|
Colonial Brazil
|
With the establishment
of early settlements along the
coast and the successful introduction of sugar cultivation, Brazil began
developing an economy based on plantation agriculture and powered by
slave
labor. The introduction of large numbers of African slaves transformed
areas of
Brazil into multiracial societies where Native American, European, and
African
peoples mingled. Following the discovery of gold in the captaincy of Minas
Gerais (General Mines) in the late 1600s, Brazil expanded its
borders into
the interior of the continent. Gold made Brazil the most economically
important
region of the Portuguese Empire and caused a major shift in the
concentration
of Brazil’s population. Settlements in southeastern Brazil, nearer the
gold
regions, grew at a rapid pace. Eventually the wealth and influence of
the
southeastern region eclipsed that of the older settlements of
northeastern
Brazil.
|
C1
|
Plantation
Society
|
The Portuguese initiated
the Atlantic slave trade in the
1440s, bringing black Africans back to Lisbon, the capital of Portugal.
Slavery
dated from ancient times in both Europe and Africa, but the enslavement
of
black Africans by Europeans was new. For three centuries (roughly 1550
to 1850)
Europeans transported their human cargo from Africa to the Americas.
More than
10 million Africans survived this forced passage, with about 3 to 4
million
going to Brazil alone.
Along the coastal zones
of the Northeast,
especially in the captaincies of Bahia and Pernambuco, the slave trade
created
a black majority. (Some 80 percent of the people of the northeastern
coast
today are descendants of Africans.) As the decades passed, the mulatto
population
of mixed European and African ancestry grew increasingly larger. The
mixing of
Native Americans and Portuguese produced the racially mixed mamelucos.
The mulattoes and mamelucos formed racial, social, and cultural groups
midway
between the dominant white elite and the African slaves and indigenous
population at the bottom of the social structure.
Probably three-fourths
of the 50,000 Portuguese colonists
lived near Salvador and Olinda, the capital of Pernambuco. For every
white
colonist in the early 17th century, there may have been as many as three
African slaves. There was probably a total of several hundred thousand
Native
Americans in the interior. By the early 17th century, the sugar boom had
created one of the fundamental patterns that would long plague Brazil: A
small
white elite controlled vast landholdings and dominated an economic and
political system with a nonwhite majority.
In 1580, after the death
of King Sebastian of
Portugal, who left no heir, King Philip II of Spain placed himself on
the Portuguese
throne through bribery and the threat of war. The merging of the Spanish
and
Portuguese monarchies lasted until 1640 when the Portuguese regained
their
independence. The union created the second largest empire in world
history, to
be eclipsed later only by the British Empire. It included control of
most of
the Americas, the Philippines, the Portuguese trading empire in Asia and
Africa, and Spanish possessions across Europe—The Netherlands, Sicily,
and
southern Italy.
Unfortunately for the
Portuguese, the forced coalition
with Spain drew them into bitter European power struggles between the
Spanish
and the Dutch. Involvement in this struggle was very costly for the
Portuguese.
By 1650 the Dutch had taken the Asian spice trade from the Portuguese
and had
gained control of the Indian Ocean. In Africa, Dutch attackers captured
Portuguese territory in Angola as well as Portugal’s West African slave
ports
and held them for decades. In the 1620s the Dutch attacked Rio de
Janeiro,
Salvador, and Recife. After a bloody struggle they were driven back. A
second
incursion in 1630 left the Dutch in control of Recife and Olinda, which
the
Dutch occupied until the 1650s. After their expulsion, the Dutch
(followed by
the English, French, and Spanish) set up their own sugar plantations in
the
islands of the Caribbean. Although sugarcane remained Brazil’s major
crop, the
new competition sent the colony’s economy into decades of decline.
|
C2
|
Discovery of
Gold and
Diamonds
|
In the late 17th century,
Brazilian explorers
known as bandeirantes began to find gold in the mountain streams
to the
north of Rio de Janeiro. Word of the discovery of gold filtered back
slowly to
the coast and to Lisbon. By 1700 the western world’s first great gold
rush had
begun. Thousands of colonists and slaves poured into the rugged
mountains north
of Rio de Janeiro. The rush eventually spread on a smaller scale to the
west,
to present-day Goiás and Mato Grosso. It received new stimulus in the
1720s
with the discovery of diamonds in the region north of the gold fields.
Gold and
diamond production rose dramatically until 1760. Probably 80 percent of
the
gold circulating in 18th-century Europe came from Brazil. The discovery
of gold
revitalized Brazil’s economy, which had been stagnating since the
decline of
the sugar plantations, although the increase in available cash also
caused
prices to rise in the colony. In Lisbon, the Portuguese monarchy grew
rich from
collecting its one-fifth share of the gold that was mined in Brazil.
Sugar,
gold, and diamonds established Brazil as the economic heartland of the
battered
and reduced Portuguese Empire.
For the first time, the
Portuguese established
effective colonization in the interior. The area of Minas Gerais became
the
most populous in Brazil. The bandeirantes and prospectors had extended
the
reach of Portugal far into the interior, creating a Brazil of
continental
dimensions. The Treaty of Madrid signed by Spain and Portugal in 1750
moved the
old Tordesillas line westward to reflect the lands effectively occupied
by the
two major colonial powers in South America. The present boundaries of
Brazil
roughly follow that line.
The flow of goods and
people into the
southeast also drained an already weak northeastern plantation economy.
In 1763
the king moved the colonial capital from Salvador to the booming city of
Rio de
Janeiro, which served as the main entry and exit point for colonists,
slaves,
and goods to and from Minas Gerais. The result of the gold rush in
Brazil is
evident in the dozens of beautiful baroque churches and hundreds of
statues and
paintings, principally in Minas Gerais.
In Portugal the wealth
from Brazil made the
monarchy very powerful. The dictatorial Marquis of Pombal, the chief
minister
of King Joseph Emanuel of Portugal, used this power to modernize the
imperial
system. In 1755 he abolished slavery in Portugal and prohibited the
enslavement
of Native Americans by declaring them free citizens of Brazil. Pombal
wanted to
outlaw African slavery in Brazil as well, but he realized that slavery
formed a
central part of Brazil’s plantation-based economy. Recognizing the
importance
of Brazil to the economic well-being of Portugal, Pombal tried to
improve the
efficiency of the Brazilian economy and administration and to lessen
tensions
between colonists and their Portuguese rulers. He involved
Brazilian-born
individuals in the colonial government, promoted new crops, and expelled
the
Jesuits, who had opposed his economic programs.
|
D
|
Independence
|
In 1789 elites in the
captaincy of Minas
Gerais revolted, protesting the reassertion of imperial control and the
imposition of new taxes. An early sign of Brazilian nationalism, the
Minas
Conspiracy involved prominent figures as well as military officers. The
revolt
failed and royal courts sentenced most of the conspirators to prison or
exile.
The only nonaristocratic member of the conspiracy, a military officer by
the
name of Joaquim José da Silva Xavier, became the scapegoat. Best known
by his
nickname, Tiradentes (Toothpuller)—one of his many professions
was dentistry—he
was hanged in 1793 and became a martyr for the cause of Brazilian
independence.
The connection between
Portugal and Brazil was severed
when Napoleon I and his armies invaded Portugal and Spain in 1807 and
1808.
Napoleon, who had become emperor of France following the French
Revolution
(1789-1799), deposed and imprisoned the Spanish king Ferdinand VII in
1808.
This left the Spanish American colonies isolated from royal control and
set off
a chain reaction that led to a series of long and bloody wars for
independence
(see Latin American Independence). Brazil avoided a similar fate
when
the monarchy fled Lisbon shortly before French troops entered the city
in 1807.
With the help of their British allies, who were fighting Napoleon’s
forces, the
royal family and 10,000 Portuguese followers made an unprecedented
voyage
across the Atlantic to Brazil, transferring the center of the empire to
Rio de
Janeiro. For the first and last time in Western history, a European
monarchy
would rule its empire from the colonies.
Portugal’s prince regent,
the future King John VI,
arrived in Brazil in early 1808 and for the next 13 years ruled
Portugal’s
Asian, African, and American colonies from Rio de Janeiro. In 1815 John
VI
elevated Brazil to the status of a kingdom, placing it on an equal
footing with
Portugal. The presence of the monarchy and court in Rio brought
Brazilian and
Portuguese elites together and paved the way for a gradual transition to
independence.
By 1815 Napoleon had been
defeated in Europe,
opening the way for the monarchy to return to Lisbon. John VI, however,
decided
to remain in Brazil, but in 1820 the Portuguese army headed a revolution
designed to bring about a constitutional government. The revolutionaries
agreed
that John VI would serve as constitutional monarch of the empire, but
only on
the condition that he return to Portugal. Threatened with the loss of
his
crown, John reluctantly left for Portugal in 1821. His 23-year-old son
Pedro
remained in the colony as prince regent of Brazil.
Pedro and his advisers
realized that revolutions in
other Latin American countries were encouraging a movement for national
independence in Brazil. A new and aggressive Cortes (parliament)
in
Portugal contributed to the demand for independence through a series of
inept
actions that offended many influential Brazilians. Portuguese members of
the
Cortes showed open hostility toward the Brazilian representatives, whom
they
regarded as unsophisticated residents of a backward province. Then the
Cortes
further alienated Brazilians by attempting to restore Brazil to colonial
status. Rather than trying to resist the growing momentum for
independence,
Pedro and his advisers decided to take control of this movement. On
September
7, 1822, after receiving orders from the Portuguese Cortes curtailing
his
authority in Brazil, Pedro declared Brazil’s independence. Thus Brazil
became
one of the few Latin American colonies to make a peaceful transition to
independence.
Pedro became Brazil’s
first emperor as Pedro I. His
greatest challenge was to keep this new nation of continental dimensions
from
fragmenting into several countries, as had happened in Spanish America.
He
hired Lord Thomas Cochrane, an admiral who had been thrown out of the
British
navy, to enforce his authority in Brazil. Cochrane defeated the small
Portuguese fleet and crushed separatist revolts in the major regional
centers
along the coast. With a small, hired navy and very few battles, Brazil
retained
its unity after gaining its independence. Portugal recognized Brazil’s
independence in 1825.
Despite his role in leading
Brazil to
independence, Pedro soon lost much of his support. He had been a
resident of
Brazil since the age of ten, but he was still Portuguese. Although Pedro
abdicated the Portuguese throne, which he inherited in 1826, many
Brazilians
remained suspicious of his continued involvement in the affairs of his
native
Portugal. Members of the Brazilian elite were dissatisfied with Pedro
for a
number of reasons. Many of them opposed the new constitution written
under his
supervision and enacted in 1824. They were also displeased when he
overrode the
decision of the newly created Brazilian parliament and surrounded
himself with
Portuguese-born cabinet ministers. In the 1820s Pedro chose to renew a
longstanding struggle with Argentina over the southern border of Brazil.
The
struggle erupted into the Cisplatine War (1825-1828). The war was
unpopular
with many Brazilians, especially after Brazil suffered a major military
defeat
at the hands of the Argentines in 1827. Faced with widespread opposition
to his
rule, Pedro abdicated his Brazilian throne in 1831 and returned to
Portugal.
|
E
|
Pedro II and the
Brazilian Empire
|
Like his father, Pedro
I left behind his eldest
son, the future Pedro II, to take his place in Brazil. Barely four years
old
when his father and family returned to Portugal in 1831, the young Pedro
grew
up a virtual orphan and received an extraordinary education. Carefully
chosen
tutors taught the future emperor Latin, Greek, French, German, Spanish,
and
English and gave him a broad education in the arts and sciences.
While the young emperor-to-be
grew up, a council of
regents appointed by Parliament ruled the country. For the first time,
Brazilians governed Brazil. As in most of 19th-century Latin America,
two
political parties contended for power. Conservatives looked back to
Portuguese
values and traditions for their inspiration. They sought to maintain a
strong
centralized monarchy, a slave economy, and the influence of the Catholic
Church. Liberals sought to mold their country in the image of England,
France,
and the United States. They wanted to diminish the influence of the
church,
restrain centralization and monarchy, and move toward a free labor
economy.
These were the ideals. When in power, each faction tended to be
practical,
sometimes implementing programs fought for by their opponents.
Throughout the 1830s the
absence of a strong
executive, disputes between liberals and conservatives, and powerful
regional
revolts threatened to shatter the fragile unity of the new nation. The
constitution did not allow for the coronation of young Pedro until his
18th
birthday, in December 1844. However, several factors combined to result
in his
coronation in 1840. Pedro was exceptionally mature, and both parties
hoped that
a monarch would provide the stability to prevent rebellions. In
addition, both
parties hoped that they might dominate the teenage emperor. In 1840 the
Parliament offered the 13-year-old Pedro the crown. He accepted,
beginning an
era known as the Second Reign that lasted from 1840 to 1889.
|
E1
|
A Changing
Economy
|
The 1840s also mark the
emergence of coffee
cultivation, which became the engine of economic growth that transformed
Brazil
during the next century. Like sugar, coffee was not native to the
Americas, but
had been transported there from its place of origin in Africa.
Cultivation
spread through the fertile valleys near Rio de Janeiro in the 1820s and
1830s.
During the next century, coffee cultivation also spread rapidly in the
area
north and west of Rio, in southern Minas Gerais and, most prominently,
in the
province of São Paulo. The rapid expansion of coffee fields quickly made
Brazil
the world’s leading exporter, a position it continues to hold today.
Revenue
generated by coffee drove the Brazilian economy until the Great
Depression of
the 1930s caused the collapse of national economies around the world.
Coffee
established southeastern Brazil—principally the states of Rio de
Janeiro, Minas
Gerais, and São Paulo—as the economic and political core of the nation.
In 1839 the discovery
of vulcanization—a process
that stabilizes products manufactured from rubber—caused rapid financial
growth
in the frontier towns of the Brazilian forests, where rubber was
harvested from
the sap of trees native to the area. Brazil produced the vast majority
of the
world’s rubber until early in the 1900s, when the British used smuggled
seeds
to establish more efficient plantations in East Asia.
|
E2
|
Slavery
|
The coffee economy remained
the backbone of the
Brazilian economy long after rubber production collapsed, and it ran on
slave
labor. Brazil had imported half a million slaves in the 17th century to
work on
the sugar plantations of the Northeast. In the 18th century the gold
fields of
Minas Gerais had absorbed another 1.5 million Africans. In the first
half of
the 19th century alone, Brazil imported another 1.5 million slaves to
fill the
demand for labor on the coffee plantations of the southeast. As the
abolitionist movement gained strength in England and the United States
in the
19th century, British pressure forced Brazil to halt its 300-year-old
Atlantic
slave trade in 1850.
The 3 to 4 million Africans
who entered
Brazil as slaves up until 1850 fundamentally shaped the composition of
Brazilian society. In 1800 Brazil had the largest slave population in
the world
(half of its population of 3 million), and this forced migration created
a
truly African American culture in Brazil. African music, religions,
foods, and
language patterns blended with the culture of the Portuguese and the
Native
Americans to produce a cultural mosaic that was a mixture of African,
European,
and Native American influences. European colonists adopted Native
American
customs and borrowed words from the indigenous languages, while African
slaves
blended their own religious rituals with those of Christianity to form
such new
Afro-Brazilian religions as Umbanda, Macumba, and Candomblé.
Although the slave trade
was abolished in 1850,
slavery remained legal in Brazil. Slavery had been central to the fabric
of
life in Brazil for so long that dismantling slavery took much longer
than in
any other society in the Americas. The slave system began to
disintegrate in
the 1880s with the rise of a vocal abolitionist movement, largely in the
cities, and the growing tendency for slaves to flee from their masters.
Legislation by conservatives attempted to stretch the process over
decades by
gradually freeing the children of slaves beginning in 1871 and by
emancipating
elderly slaves after 1885. By 1888 unrest on plantations, and the
refusal of
the army to step in and halt the flight of slaves from their masters,
brought
the system to the brink of chaos. Ruling in place of her father, who was
in
Europe for medical treatment, Princess Isabel decreed the end of slavery
in the
“Golden Law” of May 13, 1888. Rather than face the anarchy and upheaval
of
massive slave unrest and flight, slave owners grudgingly accepted
abolition.
With the supply of new
slave labor cut off
after 1850 and the slave system in a state of disintegration, coffee
planters
turned to European immigration to meet their labor needs. Some 2.7
million
immigrants—mainly from Italy, Spain, and Portugal—arrived in
southeastern and
southern Brazil between 1887 and 1914. These immigrants gradually
replaced slaves
as the labor force in the coffee fields. They turned southern Brazil
into an
area with a more urban and European culture, strikingly different from
the
older mining and plantation regions of Minas Gerais and the Northeast,
where a
more relaxed, rural atmosphere prevailed and where African cultural
influences
remained strong among the Afro-Brazilian population.
|
E3
|
End of the
Empire
|
In stark contrast to the
upheaval and
instability of some Latin American countries, Brazil’s government was
stable
during the middle part of the 19th century. The Liberal and Conservative
parties shared power, with the emperor acting as a moderating power
between the
two. The emperor called for new elections when it appeared that the
ruling
party faced a political crisis; invariably the opposition party would
win the
new elections.
There were elements of
Brazilian society that did
not support this power-sharing arrangement, however. In the 1870s and
1880s a
republican movement emerged that called for the end of the monarchy and
the
creation of a republic modeled after the United States. Republicanism
was
especially strong among members of the army.
Over the last century,
the military has played a
central role in Brazilian society and politics, but this was not the
case in the
early years of independence. Brazil avoided most of the bloodshed and
huge
military buildup that plagued the early years of the Spanish American
nations.
The Brazilian army remained relatively small and did not play a
significant
role in the nation’s affairs until the War of the Triple Alliance
(1864-1870).
For complex reasons, Brazil joined Argentina and Uruguay in this long
and
costly war against Paraguay in the 1860s. Despite the enormous disparity
in
resources, Paraguay tenaciously resisted the invading armies for years,
losing
the majority of its adult male population and large chunks of territory.
Brazil’s inability to defeat tiny Paraguay highlighted the weaknesses of
the
Brazilian military. Disgruntled officers began to envision a future
without the
monarchy.
By 1889 abolition, republicanism,
and
dissatisfaction in the armed forces had all eroded Pedro’s traditional
support
from landowners, the clergy, and the military. A small group of
conspirators
with key support from high-level army officers initiated a coup d’etat
on
November 15, 1889. The ailing, 62-year-old Pedro found himself with
little
support and, like his father, chose exile over resistance. The day after
the
coup the royal family sailed to exile in Portugal and France.
|
F
|
The First
Republic
|
Brazil’s first republic
was established in 1889. A
Constituent Assembly convened to draw up a new constitution and swiftly
decreed
the separation of church and state as well as other republican reforms.
In June
1890 it completed the drafting of a constitution, which was adopted in
February
1891. Similar to the Constitution of the United States, Brazil’s
constitution
eliminated the monarchy and established a federal republic, officially
called
the United States of Brazil. It replaced a parliament of senators
appointed for
life with an elected congress consisting of a house and senate. It also
provided for an independent judiciary, and an executive branch headed by
an
elected president. The balance of power shifted significantly from a
strong,
centralized federalist system (see Federal Government) to a
federalist
system that granted substantial powers to the states.
Initially the military
dominated the new government
under the leadership of General Manuel Deodoro da Fonseca, a
conservative
general who had joined the revolt at the last minute. The assembly
elected
Deodoro president of a provisional government and chose a more decidedly
republican general, Floriano Peixoto, as his vice president. An
inflexible
military leader, Deodoro proved incapable of working with the new
congress,
which took office in late 1890. They fought angrily over financial
policy and
over the extent of federal influence in the Brazilian states. Unwilling
to deal
with opposition, Deodoro dissolved Congress several months after it was
elected
and attempted to rule by decree. Faced with the possibility of civil
war, he
resigned the presidency in 1891. The tough Floriano assumed control and
guided
the republic through difficult times. He suppressed rebellions in the
state of
Rio Grande do Sul and in Rio de Janerio. Floriano supervised the
republic’s
first elections in 1894 and handed power over to a civilian president,
Prudente
de Morais Barros, who had served as the first republican governor of São
Paulo
state.
With the election of Prudente,
a politician
from one of the leading coffee-producing states, the powerful coffee
interests
again dominated national politics. Under the constitution, voting was
restricted to literate adult males. Because of a high illiteracy rate,
this
provision severely restricted the number of voters. Prior to 1930 no
more than
4 percent of the total population voted in presidential contests.
Landowners
maintained a monopoly on power through political machines—tightly
controlled
political organizations that they set up in each of Brazil’s states.
These
machines controlled enough votes to guarantee that landowners dominated
local
and national politics. Governors in the more populous states used their
political machines to ensure that the presidency of Brazil went to an
“official” candidate of their choosing. Over the four decades following
Prudente’s election, the coffee states of São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, and
Minas
Gerais shared political power. Nine of the 12 presidents from 1894 to
1930 came
from these three states, which produced most of Brazil’s wealth and
accounted
for most of its population.
|
G
|
Social Change
|
Up until the early 20th
century, Brazil’s
economy and social structure reflected a pattern established in the
early days
of colonial development. A small class of wealthy landowners controlled
most of
the country’s wealth and power, while the majority of Brazilians—mostly
slaves,
their descendents, and the mulatto population—lived in relative poverty
as
agricultural workers. This situation began to change gradually toward
the end
of the 19th century when large numbers of immigrants arrived in Brazil.
After
the slave trade was abolished in 1850, the coffee planters could not
find
enough workers and the government began actively recruiting Europeans to
immigrate
to Brazil. In the last decade of the 19th century about 100,000 European
immigrants arrived each year. The numbers increased during the early
years of
the 20th century, reaching a peak of about 600,000 for the period from
1911 to
1915. Many of these immigrants settled in the cities and urban centers.
Although Brazil’s economy
continued to be based on
agricultural production, industry had begun to develop by the 1920s,
especially
around the cities of Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo. Industrialization was
accompanied
by the growth of a small working class and middle class. Both groups
found
themselves excluded from the power structure developed by landowners to
dominate rural workers. The immigrants, particularly Italians who made
up about
a third of the immigrant population, introduced new political ideologies
from
Europe, where workers and middle-class citizens were becoming
increasingly
active in politics. Many of these workers were frustrated with their
lack of
access to Brazil’s political system. As their numbers grew, their
demands for a
place in the nation’s political system also increased. Socialists and
anarchists organized unions and strikes, but they encountered intense
repression from the government.
|
H
|
The Revolution
of 1930
|
A more powerful challenge
to the regime came from
disgruntled young military officers. Many of these officers supported
social
reform, but they were also concerned about their professional status.
They
believed that the civilian government had neglected the army, which
struggled
with poor equipment, outdated training, and slim prospects for promotion
of
officers. On July 5, 1922, a group of young officers known as tenentes
(lieutenants) staged a revolt in Rio de Janeiro against the government.
The
revolt was unsuccessful, but two years later a more serious uprising by
tenentes in São Paulo shook the foundations of the regime for several
weeks
before government forces suppressed it. By the late 1920s the challenges
of
army officers, middle-class groups, and urban workers threatened the
stability
of the regime.
A worldwide economic crisis
and a serious split
within the landowning elites over the presidential succession finally
brought
down the government. In 1929 economies throughout the world collapsed as
the
Great Depression began. In Brazil the depression caused a dramatic
decline in
coffee exports and a corresponding increase in the nation’s foreign
debts.
President Washington Luís refused to change his economic policy in order
to
deal with the crisis, and he did little to improve economic conditions.
Amid
growing public discontent about the economy, the political elite split
over the
1930 presidential election. The official government candidate, Júlio
Prestes,
was supported by the political machines in the larger states. He was
opposed by
Getúlio Vargas, governor of Rio Grande do Sul, who had organized a
coalition of
smaller states, opposition parties, and discontented elements in the
military
and in urban centers. The March election went smoothly for the
government, with
Prestes winning easily, but in October, before the new government was
inaugurated, a revolt erupted following the assassination of Vargas’s
running
mate, João Pêssoa. After a month of fighting, President Luís stepped
down, and
rebel troops marched into Rio de Janeiro. The Revolution of 1930 had
triumphed.
|
I
|
Getúlio Vargas
and the
New Brazil
|
Getúlio Vargas played
a central role in the 1930 revolt,
and he emerged as the most important political figure in 20th-century
Brazil.
Vargas was the son of an elite ranching family near the Argentine
border. In
less than a decade, from 1922 to 1930, he rose from federal deputy to
governor
of his home state of Rio Grande do Sul, and then to presidential
candidate and
leader of the revolutionary coalition. From 1930 to 1934 he ruled Brazil
as the
head of a provisional revolutionary government. The Constituent Assembly
elected him president in 1934.
In 1937, as elections
approached, Vargas led a coup
with the help of the army, and for the next eight years he ruled the
nation as
a dictator. He eliminated Congress, ruled by decree, and established
federal
control over Brazil’s states by replacing almost all the governors with
his own
appointees. With the state political machines neutralized, Vargas ruled
without
the support of the landowning elite. He maintained power with the
backing of
the military, the urban working and middle classes, and politicians in
smaller
states, who had been excluded from power under the republic.
|
I1
|
Estado Novo
|
During this period Vargas
turned Brazil into an Estado
Novo (New State). The Estado Novo was based on corporatism, which
advocates
close economic collaboration between employers and workers under the
centralized direction of the government. Vargas appointed government
planners
to organize industrialization programs and foreign trade policies, and
he
placed labor unions under the direct control of the government.
To satisfy his urban supporters,
Vargas worked
to create new Brazilian industries in the 1930s and 1940s. The most
important
new industry was iron and steel, which received a major boost in 1941
when
construction began on the first integrated iron and steel mill at Volta
Redonda, in Rio de Janeiro state. Vargas also established policies to
protect
domestic production from competition from foreign imports. These
protectionist
policies pleased an emerging new class of entrepreneurs and
industrialists and
created more jobs for blue-collar and white-collar workers.
Vargas initiated a social
welfare revolution as
well. Much like the New Deal policies of U.S. president Franklin
Roosevelt,
Vargas’s legislation provided workers with basic social welfare
protections:
minimum wage, maximum working hours, pensions, unemployment
compensation,
health and safety regulations, and unionization.
|
I2
|
World War II
|
During World War II (1939-1945)
Brazil fought
with the Allies. The Vargas regime, aided by the United States, embarked
on a
vast program of industrial expansion, emphasizing increased production
of
rubber and other vital war materials. Naval bases and airfields,
constructed at
strategic coastal points, became important centers of Allied
antisubmarine
warfare. The Brazilian navy eventually assumed all patrol activities in
the
South Atlantic Ocean. In 1944 and 1945 a Brazilian expeditionary force
participated
in the Allied campaign in Italy. Brazil was the only Latin American
country to
contribute troops to the war effort.
In the early 1940s, Brazilians
were fighting a
war against dictators in Europe while living under a dictatorship at
home. More
and more Brazilians began demanding a return to democratic elections,
especially after Vargas postponed the elections he had scheduled for
1943.
Vargas responded to these demands by promising presidential elections
for 1945
in which he would be ineligible to run for the presidency. Vargas
realized that
he would eventually have to build a base of support among voters if he
hoped to
remain active in Brazilian politics. He began to shift his policy to the
left
in order to establish solid support among urban workers, poor rural
laborers,
and leftists. He moved toward economic nationalism, challenging the
economic
and business interests of Britain, the United States, and other foreign
powers.
He also created social legislation to protect workers. These new laws
established
pensions and social security benefits, and set a minimum wage and
maximum work
hours.
Many Brazilians feared
Vargas might stage another coup
before the elections, as he had done in 1937. To prevent this from
happening,
members of the army—many of whom were alarmed at his turn to the
left—staged a
coup of their own in October 1945 and forced Vargas to resign. Vargas
quietly
left for his ranch in southern Brazil, and the electoral campaign
proceeded
under a caretaker government.
|
J
|
The Age of Mass
Politics
|
The fall of Vargas ushered
in a new era of
mass politics in Brazil. A new constitution was approved in 1946 that
dismantled the highly centralized government organization of the Estado
Novo,
returned a great deal of power to the individual states, and provided
for
regular elections. With the return of elections, politicians had to
campaign
for the votes of the people through such modern methods as political
rallies,
radio broadcasts, and newspapers. Although political machines returned
to power
in many areas, particularly in the rural regions, a style of politics
known as
populism emerged. Populist politicians challenged the traditional power
of the
coffee-growing landowners by forging a political following among the
masses,
especially among the growing number of urban workers and sectors of the
middle
class. Vargas had used support from these groups to maintain power as
dictator.
Now elected politicians competed to win the votes of workers and
middle-class
Brazilians.
Another new feature on
the political landscape was
the formation of truly national political parties. Three major parties
took
shape in the 1940s. The National Democratic Union (UDN) attracted the
more
conservative elements in national politics, while the Social Democratic
Party
(PSD) appealed to more moderate and liberal voters. Labor leaders and
their
political allies formed the Brazilian Workers Party (PTB) to represent
the
interests of the Brazilian working class. The Brazilian Communist Party
(PCB),
which was founded in 1922 and had survived severe repression for more
than two
decades, competed with the Brazilian Workers Party for the support of
the urban
working class.
In the elections of 1945,
the Social
Democratic Party candidate, Eurico Dutra, triumphed with 55 percent of
the
vote. Dutra was a former minister of war and one of the most influential
officers in the Brazilian military when he became a presidential
candidate. In
January 1946 he began a five-year presidential term. A hesitant and
cautious
president, Dutra did not make any major changes in the political system.
When
he withdrew government support for industrialization, Brazil’s economy
again
became heavily dependent on coffee exports.
|
J1
|
Vargas’s Second
Presidency
|
Meanwhile, Vargas won
election to the Senate and began
planning his return to power. With the support of the Brazilian Workers
Party,
Vargas defeated the candidates of the Social Democratic Party and
National
Democratic Union in 1950. Five years after a military coup ended his
dictatorship, Getúlio Vargas returned to the presidency with an
electoral
victory.
Despite his electoral
victory, opposition parties, which
controlled the Senate and House, fought Vargas at every turn. Vargas saw
his
election as a mandate to complete the unfinished work begun during his
dictatorship. The state role in economic and social development was
further
expanded. Vargas created federally financed banks, corporations, and
agencies,
including the national bank of social and economic development (BNDES),
the
Brazilian petroleum corporation (Petrobrás), and the Brazilian electric
corporation (Eletrobrás). At the same time, Vargas turned to the support
of
urban workers as a base for his political power. Business interests,
multinational corporations, and foreign governments viewed Vargas's
alliance
with the lower classes with suspicion and came together to oppose him.
Opponents of Vargas controlled almost all the major newspapers,
magazines, and
radio stations, and they attacked the president constantly.
By late 1954 the country
had come to a political
impasse, with Vargas and his opposition in a deadlock. A dramatic
attempt to
assassinate one of Vargas’s bitter enemies broke the deadlock after
investigations tied Vargas’s personal bodyguard to the attempt. The army
high
command gave Vargas an ultimatum: resign or be overthrown. Facing the
end of a
long and brilliant political career, Vargas chose his most dramatic
maneuver as
his last: On the morning of August 24, 1954, he committed suicide in his
bedroom at the presidential palace.
|
J2
|
Economic
Expansion
|
Vice President João Café
Filho completed the
remaining 17 months of Vargas’s term. In the 1955 presidential
elections, the
Social Democratic Party and the Brazilian Workers Party formed a
coalition.
This coalition elected the governor of Minas Gerais, Juscelino
Kubitschek as
president with João Goulart, Vargas’s controversial labor minister, as
vice
president. Kubitschek campaigned on the slogan “fifty years in five,”
promising
to achieve fifty years of progress during his five-year term. Arguably,
he
succeeded. During the late 1950s the Brazilian economy surged forward as
heavy
industries—iron, steel, and automobiles—and basic infrastructure—roads,
communications, and construction—expanded. The Kubitschek government
helped
finance many of these modernization projects by printing currency that
had no
financial backing. The government printed enough unsupported currency to
accelerate the cycle of inflation, which eventually led to major
economic
problems for Brazil.
Kubitschek’s most vivid
and enduring legacy is Brasília,
a new capital city built on the plains of central Brazil. Many
Brazilians
thought that a new capital in the interior of Brazil would stimulate
development in the region. Although the idea of moving the capital into
the
interior dated from the 18th century, it was Kubitschek who convinced
the
legislature to accept the idea and to fund it. Between 1956 and 1960,
Kubitschek personally supervised the construction of this modern,
futuristic
city, located 1,300 km (800 mi) north of Rio de Janeiro. Inaugurated in
April
1960, Brasília now has more than 2 million inhabitants.
|
J3
|
Descent into
Chaos
|
By the 1960 presidential
election, a new figure had
emerged on the national political scene. Jânio Quadros, the governor of
São
Paulo, was the National Democratic Union candidate for the presidency.
Quadros
vowed to sweep government clean of corruption and even brandished a
broom as
his symbol while campaigning. He won the presidential election. However,
because the presidential and vice presidential candidates were elected
separately in Brazil, the Brazilian Workers Party candidate, João
Goulart, was
elected vice president.
Just seven months after
his inauguration in January
1961, Jânio Quadros suddenly and unexpectedly resigned the presidency.
No one,
including Quadros, has ever offered a satisfactory explanation for the
resignation. Whatever the reasons behind Quadros’s resignation, it
provoked a
crisis. The constitution called for Vice President João Goulart to
succeed
Quadros, but powerful figures in the military high command quickly
declared him
unacceptable. Many Brazilians saw Goulart as a Communist or Communist
sympathizer, whose political ideas were too far to the left of center.
The
Congress, and many political leaders, rejected the military’s position
and
called for respect for the constitutional process.
For nearly two weeks,
the military and Congress
negotiated a solution to the impasse. Goulart was sworn in, but his
presidential powers were curtailed. New legislation created a prime
minister,
who would be responsible to the legislature and who would share many of
the
political powers held by the president. This legislation was reversed in
1962,
when Goulart held a national referendum in which voters restored the
presidential system of government.
The military’s hatred
of Goulart must be seen in the
context of the Cold War, an intense economic and diplomatic struggle
between
the United States and its allies and the group of nations led by the
Union of
Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR). By the 1960s many Brazilian military
officers had come to see Brazil as a front-line nation in the Cold War
struggle
between Communism and capitalism. This vision was fostered by Brazil’s
alliance
with the United States and by ideas circulated in courses and
specialized
schools for the officer corps. Many officers feared a revolution in
Brazil, and
they viewed Goulart, with his support for leftist causes, as the leader
of
Communist forces in Brazil.
Goulart was also confronted
with problems that
sprang from the gradual disintegration of the economy. Inflation
continued to
increase, and the government faced large debt payments on foreign loans
taken
out to finance economic development during the Kubitschek
administration.
Goulart’s economic advisers devised a plan to stabilize the economy by
controlling wages and reducing government spending. Goulart followed
this
policy for several months, but then abandoned it. He feared that the
imposition
of wage controls would cost him the support of workers, who were his
strongest
political supporters, and that concessions to foreign bankers would
alienate
Brazilian nationalists. By early 1964 inflation approached 100 percent a
year,
foreign loans came to a halt, and the economy neared collapse.
Following the advice of
his most radical advisers,
Goulart attempted to strengthen his support among the masses. In the
first
months of 1964 he staged huge rallies in several of Brazil’s major
cities. He
also signed decrees setting low-rent controls, nationalizing petroleum
refineries, seizing unused lands, and limiting profits that could be
taken out
of Brazil by foreign investors. In a final, desperate move to check the
power
of his enemies in the military high command, Goulart made a televised
speech to
a group of sergeants. He told them to disobey their superiors if they
believed
their orders were not in the best interest of the nation. Conspirators
in the
military had been contemplating the overthrow of Goulart for months; on
March
31, after Goulart’s speech to the sergeants, the army took control of
the
government. Goulart fled the country, never to return.
|
K
|
Military Rule
|
|
K1
|
Moderate
Leadership
|
The military intervened
with two primary objectives: to
eradicate the left and to rebuild the collapsing economy. Military
leaders split
between political hardliners and moderates over how to achieve these
goals. Led
by General Humberto Castello Branco, who was named president, the
moderates
dominated the early years of the regime. Rather than shutting down
civilian
politics completely, the military attempted to purge the system of
“undesirable” elements. They arrested and imprisoned people they
perceived as
opponents of the regime. Many fled the country. The military dismissed
thousands of civil servants, military personnel, and politicians from
their
jobs and prohibited suspected political opponents from voting or holding
office.
The military hoped that
these actions would be
enough to silence their opponents. This was not the case. By 1968
growing
political opposition—even from former supporters of the military
government—increasingly called for a return to civilian rule. Even the
Supreme
Court and the Congress, whose membership had been approved by the
military
leaders, began to exhibit signs of independence. The Supreme Court
ordered the
release of three students who had been detained by the government, and
the
Congress refused to allow the trial of one of its members who had
criticized
the military. University students in Brazil mounted huge demonstrations
against
the generals in 1967 and 1968. In addition, a small guerrilla movement
developed, based largely in the cities. Its members kidnapped U.S.
ambassador
Charles Burke Elbrick and demanded a ransom and the release of political
prisoners held by Brazil’s military government. Over the next four years
guerrillas continued their campaign against the government by kidnapping
foreign diplomats, bombing government buildings, and robbing banks to
finance
their activities.
|
K2
|
Hardliners Take
Control
|
The growing opposition
provoked a sharp response from
the hardliners, who launched a coup within the regime and took the upper
hand
in the military high command. The coup was triggered when General Artur
Costa e
Silva, who had been voted president by the legislature in 1967, suffered
a
series of incapacitating strokes in 1968. The three military cabinet
ministers
(army, navy, and air force) then took charge.
The generals saw chaos
and Communists all around
them, and they cracked down, initiating intense repression to crush the
opposition. In December 1968 they shut down Congress. The military
leaders
issued a new constitution that concentrated power in the executive and
they
named a new president, General Emílio Médici. Between 1968 and 1974,
Médici and
the hardliners unleashed the systematic and widespread use of torture
and
repression to silence their opponents. Thousands suffered at the hands
of the
torturers, and hundreds died.
The regime took control
of labor unions and
silenced anyone who criticized the regime. Within a few years the
guerrillas
had been entirely wiped out. The government eventually shut down the
national
student union, and universities purged their faculties of those
suspected of
supporting leftist ideas. Large numbers of prominent Brazilian academics
and
artists went into exile in other Latin American countries, the United
States,
and Europe.
The years of repression
coincided with the years of
the so-called Brazilian miracle when the economy grew faster than any
other
economy in the world. During this period manufactured goods replaced
coffee as
Brazil’s leading export. The staunchly nationalistic military wanted to
make
Brazil a world power and understood that a strong industrial economy
held the
key to their goal. They welcomed foreign investment, attracting billions
of
dollars. The regime channeled that investment into sectors of the
economy
considered critical for development. Among other things, these included
the
Trans-Amazon Highway, a large hydroelectric dam at Itaipú in
southeastern
Brazil, and a nuclear power program.
|
L
|
Return to
Civilian
Government
|
|
L1
|
Abertura
|
By 1973 the economy was
expanding at an
extraordinary pace, and the military appeared to have control over the
political system. Moderate forces within the military brought General
Ernesto
Geisel to the presidency in 1974. The son of German immigrants, Geisel
initiated abertura (opening), a series of reforms that gradually
allowed
limited political organization and elections. The legal opposition
party, the
Brazilian Democratic Movement (MDB), began to win important elections.
Geisel handpicked his
successor, General João Baptista
Figueiredo. Figueiredo’s presidency began in 1979 by furthering abertura
with
the declaration of a general amnesty for all political crimes since
1964. The
government also allowed exiles to return home. Figueiredo released the
last few
political prisoners, and official censors finally left the pressrooms
and
television studios. The Figueiredo government also issued guidelines for
the
formation of new political parties and for open election of governors in
1982.
|
L2
|
Economic
Problems
|
Abertura was complicated
by growing economic problems
with roots going back to the enormous industrial and economic expansion
of the
late 1960s and early 1970s. This expansion had made the country heavily
dependent
on petroleum, much of which was imported. When Arab nations began
limiting oil
exports in October 1973, the price of oil skyrocketed, seriously
crippling the
Brazilian economy. The regime had already borrowed heavily to finance
the
so-called Brazilian miracle. To keep the economy going, and to avoid a
recession, the Brazilian government borrowed billions from international
agencies and banks to finance continued growth. The Brazilian foreign
debt went
from about $25 billion in 1974 to more than $100 billion in the early
1980s—at
that time the largest foreign debt in the world. Inflation continued its
upward
trend, reaching levels far higher than during the crisis of 1963 and
1964. In
1982 Brazil halted all payments on the principal of its huge foreign
debt, and
the economy entered a severe recession.
|
L3
|
Transition to
Democracy
|
The battered economy severely
discredited the
military regime in the eyes of most Brazilians. Furthermore, few saw
much need
for a military regime, given that the threat of leftist revolution had
long
since been crushed. In 1984 millions of Brazilians took to the streets
demanding immediate direct elections for president.
The government managed
to fend off the calls for direct
elections by instituting an electoral college, in which congressional
delegates
and state assembly members voted for the president. However, the massive
public
demonstrations helped split the government party. Many of the
government’s
supporters in the electoral college defected and voted with the
opposition,
defeating the official government candidate for president in 1984. The
electoral college instead chose Tancredo Neves, the governor of Minas
Gerais,
to become Brazil’s first civilian president since 1964. They chose José
Sarney
as vice president. Sarney, a long time leader of the government party in
the
Senate, had played a key role in leading government supporters to join
the
opposition.
Neves, who was 74, fell
desperately ill on the
eve of his scheduled inauguration in March 1985. When Neves died in late
April,
before he could assume office, José Sarney was sworn in as president.
Sarney
immediately faced two momentous problems: the economic crisis and the
need to
continue the transition to a fully democratic regime by instituting a
new
constitution that would reestablish democratic institutions.
Inflation in 1985 approached
300 percent, the
foreign debt continued to mount, and strikes broke out across the
country as
workers demanded higher wages. In a drastic effort to stabilize the
economy,
Sarney introduced the Cruzado Plan in February 1986. The plan froze
prices and
wages and it brought Sarney to the peak of his popularity when inflation
ground
to a standstill for a few months. Unfortunately, when the government
unfroze
prices and wages at the end of 1986, inflation exploded again. Interest
payments on the foreign debt gobbled up nearly all of the country’s huge
trade
surplus, draining the economy of badly needed capital. The government
incurred
large deficits in public spending, and foreign banks refused to extend
new
loans until the government implemented an economic austerity program.
The Congress elected in
November 1986 drafted a new
constitution that went into effect in October 1988. The constitution’s
provisions gave wider power to the legislature and decreased the
influence of
the executive branch, granted more tax revenues to the states and
municipalities, and extended the vote to 16-year-olds. It eliminated the
electoral college established by the military regime and allowed
Brazilians to
vote directly for president.
|
M
|
The Collor
Administration
|
The election of Fernando
Collor de Mello in late
1989, and his inauguration in March 1990, marked the completion of the
long and
difficult process of abertura. Finally, Brazilians had the opportunity
to elect
their president directly through the ballot box rather than having one
imposed
by a small clique of generals. More than 80 million Brazilians voted in
the
presidential election, the vast majority for the first time. In his
first two
years in office Collor implemented an economic program that brought
inflation
down, but failed to contain it. More important, he began to drastically
curtail
the state’s role in the Brazilian economy and to dismantle protectionist
trade
policies.
The great hopes millions
of Brazilians had for the
Collor presidency soon disappeared as the economic program failed to
halt
extremely high inflation rates, which reached a peak of more than 1,500
percent
in 1991. A corruption scandal also badly damaged the government. In 1992
legislative
investigations uncovered an influence-peddling scheme that involved
hundreds of
millions of dollars, much of it going to Collor. In December 1992 the
Congress
impeached Collor and swore in his vice president, Itamar Franco, to
serve out
the last two years of Collor’s term.
|
N
|
The Cardoso
Presidency
|
President Franco paved
the way for the election of his
successor, Fernando Henrique Cardoso. One of Latin America’s most
prominent
intellectual figures, Cardoso was trained as a political sociologist at
the
University of São Paulo in the late 1950s and early 1960s. A former
member of
the Communist Party, Cardoso spent part of the 1960s and 1970s in exile.
During
the late 1970s he entered politics, eventually becoming a senator from
the
state of São Paulo and an unsuccessful mayoral candidate for the city.
Franco chose Cardoso as
his finance minister in
1993 in yet another effort to combat runaway inflation and the debt
crisis.
Cardoso and a team of advisers put together the Real Plan. This plan
created a
new currency, the real, in 1994 and put into place a series of
measures
to reduce inflation without wage or price freezes. Inflation dropped
from a
rate of 45 to 50 percent per month in early 1994 to a rate of about 1 to
2
percent per month over the next two years, giving Brazilians their
lowest
inflation rates in decades.
The success of the plan
made Cardoso a
national hero and the leading contender for the presidency. Cardoso
forged a
coalition of his Brazilian Social Democratic Party (PSDB), the
conservative
Liberal Front Party (PFL), and several other parties. The former
Communist
convinced the business community and conservatives that his views had
evolved,
and were close enough to theirs to gain their support. With nearly 55
percent
of the total vote in the 1994 elections, Cardoso scored the most
impressive
electoral victory in 40 years.
Inaugurated on January
1, 1995, President Cardoso forged
a majority coalition in Congress that passed fundamental legislative
reforms
during his first two years in office. This legislation on federal
expenditures
dramatically reduced government involvement in the economy. The
government
privatized major state enterprises, broke up the government-controlled
telecommunications monopoly, and eliminated restrictions limiting the
amount of
money foreign corporations could invest in Brazil. The government also
reduced
expenditures in a number of social security programs and eliminated job
security among civil servants in an attempt to reduce government
expenditures.
Cardoso also worked to
reduce tensions between
landowners and the homeless squatters, who occupied large unproductive
estates
in the countryside. With 1 percent of the population owning 45 percent
of the
land in 1995, Brazil had the most unequal land distribution pattern in
Latin
America. Conflicts over land use and ownership led to a number of
violent
confrontations in 1995 and 1996 in which more than 40 people were shot
and
killed by Brazilian police. In 1995 Cardoso signed a presidential decree
that
took possession of just over 100,000 hectares (250,000 acres) of land
from
large, private estates and reallocated it to more than 3,600 poor
families.
In 1996 Cardoso signed
a decree that allowed
non-Native Americans to appeal land allocation decisions made by
Brazil’s Indian
Affairs Bureau. Cardoso’s decree allowed regional governments, private
companies, and individuals to challenge indigenous land claims in
certain areas
of the country, primarily in the Amazon region of northern Brazil. The
law was
widely condemned by human rights, Native American, and religious
organizations.
|
O
|
Economic Crisis
and
Reelection
|
Largely because of Cardoso’s
popularity and his
success in revitalizing the economy, Brazil’s legislature passed a
constitutional amendment in 1997 allowing the president to run for a
second
term in office. Later in the year, however, Brazil’s economy was shaken
following a collapse in Asian stock markets. The resulting financial
crisis
affected stock markets in many developing economies. Reacting to the
crisis, Brazil’s
government introduced an austerity program that reduced federal spending
and
temporarily restored foreign confidence in the economy. The economy
received a
second jolt in 1998 after the government of Russia defaulted on its
foreign
debts. Fearing that the economic crisis might spread through Latin
America,
investors began withdrawing their money from Brazil. Cardoso began
negotiating
an economic bailout with foreign lenders through the International
Monetary
Fund (IMF), an international agency designed to stabilize the world
economy.
Even though the economy
had taken a turn for the
worse, Cardoso won election to a second four-year term in 1998. The
following
month, the IMF and Brazil announced a $41.5-billion loan package to
protect
Brazil’s economy. In return, Cardoso agreed to introduce legislation
designed
to cut back on government spending and to restructure Brazil’s taxation
and
social security systems. In 1999 the government devalued the national
currency,
the real, by 8 percent against the U.S. dollar. (Devaluation involves
lowering
the value of a nation’s currency in relation to foreign currencies.)
Financial
experts hoped the devaluation would put the economy on a more secure
footing by
lowering the cost of Brazilian products in overseas markets, making
exports
more attractive and increasing the flow of cash into Brazil.
|
P
|
The Da Silva
Presidency
|
In the 2002 presidential
election, Cardoso could
not run for reelection because of term limits. The Workers’ Party
candidate
Luis Inacio Lula da Silva, widely known as Lula, won the election. He
was the
first working-class president to be elected in Brazil; the nation’s
presidents
have traditionally come from the military or a small, wealthy elite. Da
Silva
was also the first leftist candidate to be elected president in Brazil.
(The
last time a leftist leader became president was in 1961 but that leader,
João
Goulart, had been elected vice president. He succeeded to the presidency
on the
resignation of the president, Jânio Quadros.) During his campaign, da
Silva
promised to institute social reforms for the poor and working class, to
create
more jobs, and to raise salaries.
In his first term da Silva
followed
through on many of his campaign promises. He succeeded in improving the
economy, raising living standards and reducing inflation. His party,
however,
was plagued with corruption scandals, including charges of illegal
campaign
financing. In the 2006 presidential election da Silva failed to win a
majority
in the first round of balloting. In the October runoff, however, he was
easily
elected to a second term with more than 60 percent of the vote.



