Poverty In Brazil Research Paper

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Pablo Samur
Mrs. Hamilton
10th Lit 4 February 2016
Poverty in Brazil
Poverty is not only an injustice; it’s also a world problem. The poverty in Brazil is the worst in South America. Brazil is not only, soccer and samba; Brazil is also poverty. Brazil has been trying to hide its poverty but now the world is noticing it even more.
Brazil is a really big nation with a lot of contrasts, has remarkable diversity, and is well known for its very high level of inequality. In 2002 Brazil was the eighth most unequal country in the world with a 59.1 % in poverty rating. The inequality in Brazil has been high and stable during a period that covers more than twenty years. On average one out of every three persons was considered poor. It is for these reasons …show more content…

Since day one of this economical growth, the inequialty began. The poverty started with a few poeple and it grew to millions within the year. In the 1980’s and for the next 30 years, poverty reached its highest point has stayed balanced for this period of time.(Ölzen 3) On this days, you can still see a lot of poverty in Brazil but with less percentage.
Brazil has had quite a bad economic time: debt crisis, high inflation, rising wage inequality and stagnation. Relying on the military state to industrialize the country was a strategy that proved a failure in the case of Brazil. The result was simple: the extreme poverty rate has soared - to be more specific, the income of the poorest of the poor went downwards for years while the richer remained just as wealthy. The gap between the two parts of the population only got bigger, which deepened inequalities in the society. (Ferminho …show more content…

Each day in Brazil at least child die because of hunger. Kids are also joining gangs and they are being kidnapped. Street children are those that are not taken care of by parents or other protective guardians. Street children live in abandoned buildings, cardboard boxes, parks or on the street itself. Street children are deprived of family care and protection. Most children on the streets are between the ages of about five and eighteen years old. (Kids from Brazil 5)
In Brazil, a common cause is abandonment by poor families unable to feed all their children; an increasingly common cause is AIDS. (Realizing Children’s Rights in Brazil 4) Other causes are the death of parents or family members, violence in the home, drug taking and alcoholism. Once children resort to living on the street there is rarely any way back from this life, and the life expectancy of a child living on the streets is terrifyingly low - few expect to reach their eighteen Birthday. (Realizing Children’s Rights in Brazil 6)
Estimates on the numbers of Brazilian street children vary from 200,000 to 8 million. In one recent survey in São Paulo, 609 children were found to be sleeping on the streets. At least fifty were under twelve and unaccompanied by adult relations. (Lidia

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