Welcome To Brazil: A Brazilian’s Critique of The Issues Surrounding The Upcoming World Cup


Welcome To Brazil: A Brazilian’s Critique of The Issues Surrounding The Upcoming World Cup in Brazil

It’s not really news anymore that Brazil is setting an example for how to not organize a World Cup, with its endemic corruption, and both social and structural problems that could turn out to be really embarrassing when it comes time to host an event of this magnitude. One of the problems is that Brazilian society tends to get worried about these things only when they are on other country’s radar, or rather, the problems only exist if they get noticed.

So, just the other day I was thinking that I should write a post about all of the corruption that has been going on surrounding the World Cup, thinking that maybe it would help generate some discussion in blogs outside of Brazil, which might in turn help to awaken the Brazilian conscience…

…And then I saw this video. It was made by someone who obviously had a similar idea, but who in my opinion, really took it up a notch with the intensity. From the frightening description in the video, one would think that this guy was talking about the Post-Apocalypse, not about Brazil. Anyway, there are also a few points he got right…

Why, According To One Brazilian, Should Foreigners Boycott The 2014 World Cup in Brazil?

So, the video, “Boycott Brazil 2014 World Cup” is in Portuguese, but if you don’t understand Portuguese you can activate the shady subtitles which transmit the basic ideas that this guy is talking about….

If you had trouble understanding the video, these were some of the things that we learned:

  • The airports in Brazil are in bad shape. Your flight will get delayed, and there’s apparently no security, making it a perfect opportunity for terrorists.
  • You can’t count on the Brazilian police to help you, but you could be robbed anywhere.
  • Manholes could explode and kill you at any minute.
  • If you are a pedestrian in Brazil, you will almost surely be hit by a car.
  • If you are a woman, you might be raped if you choose to travel on the subway.
  • Stay away from Paulo Maluf, and really all Brazilian politicians as they are the real criminals in all of this.
  • Brazil is a country of filthy illiterates.
  • 92% of homicides in Brazil are unsolved. So if you are murdered in Brazil, your family might as well just pack up and go home, they’ll never find your killer.
If you have gotten lost in all of this, please know that I posted this video because a) i thought that it was funny, but also b) because if you are going to Brazil for the World Cup, you’ll see that these are all very common topics that come up in discussion when Brazilians are critiquing their own country (though not in such an extreme way – Brazilians really do love their country). Know also that Brazil is really truly a very nice place, apart from some issues, but doesn’t every country have its problems? Brazil is no different, and it is really not as bad or dangerous in Brazil as the creator of this video makes it out to be.

Dilma Rousseff Tortured? Secret Documents Unveiled?… Brazilian Politics: Brazil Grapples With its Violent History


Brazil Grapples With its Violent History

I just realized that i’ve never written anything about Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff …

Here’s an interesting article Via Global Post that talks a bit about her surprising past. In her youth, Rousseff was an active opponent of the country’s former dictatorship and was even brutally tortured for her views (if you are surprised to read that Brazil was not long ago under the power of a Machiavellian military dictatorship, then you should definitely read this whole article). Also, Rousseff’s attitude about this whole thing is surprising, if not a bit worrisome….although, who would really want to re-hash their having been tortured for 22 days? But still….

I think this situation really exemplifies what is in my opinion a general apathy and willingness to ignore and simply move on from the horrors committed by Brazilian politicians (or in this case, dictators). The fact that Brazil is only Latin American country to NOT hold a fact-finding “Truth Commission” to clarify responsibility for political torture committed during the military rule of 1964-1985 does not surprise me at all. The Brazilian government has entertained a long history of avoiding searches for criminal accountability, why should they want to start now?

Photo of A Banner From The Campaign of President Dilma Rousseff of The Ruling Workers' Party

Here’s the article…

RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil — When President Dilma Rousseff, a former urban guerrilla tortured for 22 straight days with electric shocks under Brazil’s military dictatorship, took office in January she was ambivalent about her past as a young activist: “I don’t have any regrets, nor any resentment or rancor,” she said.

Rousseff has since done little for those looking for justice for crimes under the dictatorship. For one, her new government has waffled on whether it supports allowing archival documents to be declassified as confidential in a proposed access-to-information law.

Unlike many of its Latin American neighbors, Brazil has yet to hold a fact-finding “Truth Commission” to clarify responsibility for crimes committed during the military rule of 1964-1985. It also has not reversed an amnesty law that shields torturers from prosecution. The Inter-American Court of Human Rights declared the amnesty illegal in December.

But a recent granting of first-of-its-kind access to Brazil’s National Archives may be a quiet indication that the direction is changing.

The Justice Ministry announced last week that it would grant 12 researchers “unrestricted” access to the documents in the National Archive “that make viable the identification of public agents who ordered or had been authors of acts injurious to human rights.”

Researchers in the past have complained of what they see as arbitrary denial of access to dictatorship-era documents based on a capricious interpretation of protecting the privacy of individuals. Around Rousseff’s October election, historians reported being bluntly denied military-era records because journalists had also asked for them and the archives wanted to “preserve the electoral process from the harm they could do with the information.”

At the heart of the issue is Brazil’s unresolved record with its own history of state-sponsored violence, even as it tries to become a new global voice on human rights issues abroad.

“There has been a huge delay. Every country in Latin America has had a truth commission except Brazil,” Manuela Lavinas Picq, a professor of political science at Amherst College who lived in exile during the Brazilian military dictatorship, said at a March conference . “In the rest of Latin America the truth commissions came in a context of transition. In the ‘80s away from dictatorship, also in the ‘90s away from civil war.”

Read The Rest Here…

And Here’s another really interesting article written by Nikolas Kozloff from Huffpost… It’s basically talking about how wikileaks documents show us how Brazil has aggressively pursued narrow-minded self interest in order to further Machiavellian geopolitical and economic goals….

Although, I think that the author goes a little overboard here…the Brazilian countryside generally isn’t as “violent, anarchic and backward” as his terrifying description claims…but I know he’s just trying to add some drama to his thesis, and it’s still an informative article…plus I definitely agree that the Brazilian government has a long way to go, (as is true for any government) 🙂

WikiLeaks: More Evidence of Brazil’s Rise on World Stage

Even as Brazil seeks to hype its PR image to the outside world, the countryside remains violent, anarchic and backward. In 2004, for example, scores of diamond prospectors were killed by members of a local indigenous tribe in the Brazilian jungle. The circumstances surrounding the massacre were unclear, however, with the Indians claiming they were simply defending their lands against illegal miners. The police on the other hand countered that indigenous leaders were involved in diamond trafficking and wanted to display a show of force “against those who failed to give them their share.”

The anarchic situation in the countryside was compounded by the Luiz Inácio “Lula” da Silva government, which had “been slow to take the initiative on indigenous issues.” On the campaign trail in 2002, Lula had spoken about the need to demarcate and register Indian lands promptly. However, Indian leaders later soured on the president, expressing disappointment to U.S. officials that Lula had not paid enough attention to their issues. Fundamentally, they reported, Lula was too beholden to powerful provincial politicians tied to major landowners.

When I visited Brazil this past year, officials were quick to tout the country’s stable and efficient political institutions. Yet, WikiLeaks documents paint a different picture and suggest that the Brazilian government has a long way to go. Take, for example, Brazil’s National Indian Foundation or FUNAI which is hardly up to the task of bringing order to the countryside. Publicly, FUNAI has admitted that there are problems with the land demarcation process but claims that underfunding, understaffing, corruption and internal conflicts make it difficult to carry out claims.

Via HuffPost…

News: Skilled Foreigners Struggle to Get Brazilian Visas


Although Brazil is very much in need of a skilled workforce, and companies are often willing to recruit foreign talent to fill that void, I have been hearing from several non-brazilian friends that obtaining a work visa has really been an issue. This is an interesting article that reflects these sentiments…

Via IT Decisions…

Skilled Foreigners Struggle to Get Brazilian Visas

As the Brazilian government attempts to remedy its worsening skills shortage in key areas such as technology, skilled foreigners interested in moving to the country face major visa headaches.

According to an article by Brazilian newspaper Folha de São Paulo, Brazil has only granted 56,006 work visas in 2010.  That compares with 586,000 visas granted in the UK, 482,052 in the US and 223,000 permits to work granted by China during the year.

The story goes on to comment that despite the growing interest from professionals, students and businesspeople in Brazil, these individuals are often put off by visa applications that often take several months to be processed.

Reasons for such drawn-out processes include lack of online automation for many procedures including the several items of documentation foreigners often have to provide and the fact that applications are forwarded to government departments in Brasilia for analysis.

In sectors such as IT, the skills gap seen in more developed nations is already a reality across the Brics as these countries seek to focus on value-added services. CIOs in Brazil are struggling to find and retain talent and have to rely on services providers instead – which comes at increasingly hefty price tags.

The skills shortage issue has now become a potential blocker for successful investments in Brazil from overseas: for example, Taiwanese tablet manufacturer Foxconn has already delayed the production of the Apple iPad in Brazil, mainly due to the scarcity of qualified manpower.

“Se Beber, Não Dirija”: Drunk Driving in Brazil – A National Epidemic – A Lei Seca & Brazilian Ads Against Drunk Driving


DRUNK DRIVING IN BRAZIL:

RECORD DEATHS, BLITZ CONTROVERSY, POLICE CHECKPOINTS, PROVOCATIVE AD CAMPAIGNS, RANDOM BREATHALIZING, & A DRUNK VALET

“a famosa lei seca, que esta apavorando muitos”

If you’ve been to Brazil, you have probably seen ads like these, meant to make people think twice about driving drunk (although since they are billboards on the road, wouldn’t people already be reading them, as they are driving drunk):

"you drank and are driving? you'll look nice with a crown of flowers" (that sounds kind of odd for some reason translated into english)

"you drank and are driving? sorry to be forward, but is the widow pretty?"

In fact, drunk driving has historically been a HUGE problem in Brazil, it is completely commonplace and used to be rarely monitored or policed. After drunk driving accidents came to a critical peak, Brazil passed the “Lei Seca,” “dry law” and now people seem more scared to drive drunk at night. Now under the dry law, brazil has a zero tolerance policy for drinking and driving, so you cannot drive with even trace amounts of alcohol in yur system. Since the lei seca was passed I have noticed a great increase in the number of blitz, which is the Portuguese word for when cops create a roadblock and test everyone’s blood alcohol level with a breathalyzer, called a bafômetro in Portuguese, (“bafo” means “breath”). (The word blitz comes from German.) Here are some pics of what a typical blitz may look like, yes they are intimidating:

blitz da lei seca

 

ohhhh, you got blitzed

"i passed the breathalyzer test!" "lets drink to celebrate!"

 

The prevalence of the blitz has pissed a lot of Brazilians off, but all in all it seems to be working. Despite the controversy (“controversy” in Portuguese is “polêmica“), ads and billboards against drunk driving have also become more common throughout Brazil, as the government continues to heavily campaign against this dangerous aspect of Brazilian culture.

Two bars in São Paulo, Bar Aurora and Boteco Ferraz, have innovated an incredibly clever marketing strategy, and they’ve created several commercials that have even won awards at Cannes. The concept is to campaign against drunk driving, by promoting the idea “se beber, não dirija” – “if you drink, don’t drive.”

Here is one short and funny film “the drunk valet,” one such brazilian advertisement against drunk driving. Would you let a valet who was clearly drunk drive your car?….

Brazilian Media: Fantástico – Brazil’s Best Television News Program


Fantástico is Brazil’s own, idiosyncratic answer to Sixty Minutes.

Fantástico regularly lives up to its name and satisfies Brazil’s passion for the supernatural and the offbeat. In 1996 it created a major stir with exclusive footage of what it claimed to be two UFOs seen over Brazilian cities. And in 2001, it had a report about a flying woman who was found in a Brazilian village.

This hour-long show features short, always interesting news reports on world events, interviews with international celebrities as well as great investigative reporting and funny clips and out-takes from television around the world. Fantástico in many ways holds a mirror up to Brazil’s attitude to the world and its place in it. As a result, the show simultaneously reflects the country’s seriousness and its surreal sense of fun.

A staple of Brazilian television for more than three decades, Fantastico competes even with the telenovelas at the top of the nation’s TV ratings. In its many years on air, Fantástico has interviewed international stars from Pele to Paul McCartney, Alfred Hitchcock to Bill Gates and even Michael Jackson. The show has started to gain a popular online following due to the outrageous nature of some of their reports, and also because of their international celebrity performances. You will find many clips from Fantástico on YouTube. Fantástico is aired on Rede Globo on Sundays at 9:00 PM in Brazil.

Here are some clips from Fantástico that I think really highlight what this hour-long news show is all about:

Brazilian Politician Uses Stolen Donations to Build Himself a Castle

Edmar Moreira: taking plitical greed to a whole new level

This first one I remembered watching the last time I was in Brazil in 2009. It really struck me because it reveals the sheer brazenness of corruption in Brazilian politics, and the attitude of helplessness that Brazilian people feel in preventing this kind of thing from happening. It is also testament to the fearlessness of Fantástico’s investigative reporting in a country where corruption runs deep and can be a dangerous thing to talk about. Basically what happened was that this small-time politician,  Edmar Moreira, a representative from the state of Minas Gerais, secretly built this totally ostentatious medieval-style CASTLE (using funds stolen from social contributions) somewhere out in the countryside. That’s right, it was not a just mansion, but a castle. And unsurprisingly, this castle did not appear in his tax return. “Castle Vania,” as it is called, is reported to be worth more than $20 million reais. Moreira probably would have gotten away with this whole thing if Fantástico’s reporters hadn’t come in and blown his cover, reporting that this castle actually belonged to him. Since the story became so public and controversial, the Brazilian General Attorney (Ministério Público) made some public statements of outrage regarding the matter and promised to investigate. Of course, the case against Moreira is still pending and he has run again for re-election.

 

An Illiterate Man Enrolls In A For-Profit School In Brazil

Ok, this second video clip is a bit newer, and I couldn’t find the clip of this story that was aired on Fantástico, but it also illustrates the Brazilian media’s brilliant investigative reporting.

Some background on this story is that for-profit “educational institutions” have become a recent phenomenon in Brazil, much in the way that they have here in the United States. It has become common knowledge that for-profit schools use shady recruiting practices (like the way University of Phoenix recruiters were notoriously caught going to homeless shelters to boost their enrollment numbers). Basically for-profit education has no standards and they will let anyone into these schools because students are just like paying customers, so more students means more money. So what happened here was that journalists found an illiterate man who had passed the entry exam of a for-profit school in Brazil. The illiterate candidate says that he “just guessed” on the questions which resulted in him passing the test. He then attended the school for three years. Even though they profess having standards for entry, would a school really admit a student who couldn’t read or write anyway just for their own gain? The answer was yes.

Here’s the link for article from Rede Globo if you prefer to read about it:

http://g1.globo.com/concursos-e-emprego/noticia/2010/04/analfabeto-que-passou-em-concurso-frequentou-escola-por-apenas-3-anos.html 

Michael Jackson Interviewed in Brazil

And lastly, here’s an interview by Fantástico with Michael Jackson in Brazil from 1996. Search for more Fantástico  interviews with American stars on YouTube if you are interested, they have interviewed everyone, even Justin Beiber and Miley Cyrus.

 

This is Fantástico’s Official Website: http://fantastico.globo.com/

News: Politics: Rousseff Wants Those Who Have More to Pay More


RIO DE JANEIRO, Jun 17, 2011 (IPS) – The Brazilian government of Dilma Rousseff is attempting to push through long-delayed reforms of the tax system, which is one of the most onerous and unequal in the world, with a tax burden as heavy as that of many rich countries, but accompanied by deficient public services.

Rousseff announced that the tax reform bill, one of her government’s top priorities, will be introduced to Congress in several parts, leaving aside the idea of a broad, far-reaching reform, which analysts say was one of the reasons it failed on two previous attempts by her predecessor Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva (2003-2011), who also belonged to the left-wing Workers Party.

However, the initiative is already facing severe criticism, even among the president’s allies in Congress.

Finance Minister Guido Mantega said the idea is to start out by simplifying the Merchandise and Services Circulation Tax (ICMS), considered the worst “culprit”, and cutting taxes on wage and salary income.

Mantega acknowledged that Brazil’s tax burden is heavy, and said that in order to compete with other emerging countries like China and India, it will be necessary to resolve these two aspects this year.

Although there are major disagreements between the government, the opposition, trade unions and business on the question of the tax reforms, there is broad agreement that the current system is unfair and overly complex and that it is curbing growth and undermining competitiveness.

According to the Brazilian Institute of Tax Planning (BIPT), total tax revenue was equivalent to 35 percent of GDP in 2010, representing a .72 percent increase from the year before. In 2000, it was equivalent to 30 percent of GDP, the BIPT reported.

Besides the tax on wages and salaries, some 70 direct and indirect taxes are levied in Brazil, such as a consumption tax on products and services, property taxes, motor vehicle taxes, and garbage collection and street light taxes.

“Brazil has the 14th highest tax burden in the world,” the president of the BIPT, Joao Eloi Olenike, told IPS in an interview. “But countries that have similar or heavier burdens have an excellent quality of life and channel the funds into services that improve the well-being of the population, which sadly is not the case here.” He cited the United States, where tax revenue represents 29 percent of GDP.

The BIPT advocates tax reforms “that would shift away from (regressive) taxes on consumption towards (progressive) taxes on income and wealth, and that would reduce the excessive number of taxes, with a view to simplifying the system.”

A BIPT study found that Brazil’s 191 million people paid an average of 6,722 reals (4,254 dollars) a year in 2010, nearly 1,000 reals (632 dollars) more than the year before.

The report points out that Brazilians have to work an average of 149 days a year just to pay their taxes, behind Sweden’s 185 days but on the same level as France and ahead of the United States, where people pay their taxes with 102 days of work.

Breaking down the tax burden by income level, the BIPT notes that the poorest segments of the population must work 142 days a year to pay their taxes, and the wealthy 152 days, while the middle-class is hit the hardest, having to work 158 days to meet their tax payments, which are equivalent to 43 percent of their gross income.

“Our tax system is complex, confusing and unfair, with excessive obligations and a burden of multiple taxation with a cascading effect,” said Olenike.

The cascading effect refers to an item being taxed more than once as it makes its way from production to final retail sale.

The result is an increase in consumption taxes, “which hurt citizens with the weakest purchasing power,” he stressed.

This kind of tax burden, because it is not gradual according to the consumer’s ability to pay, “ends up hurting the poor, who pay more proportionately,” the head of the BIPT added.

It also makes local and foreign companies “less and less interested in making productive investments in our country,” which leads to “unemployment and economic stagnation.”

But Brazil’s main trade union federation, the Unified Workers’ Central (CUT), complains that the tax reforms proposed by the government are more in line with a neoliberal policy agenda than with a social agenda. In other words, they say that the poor will continue to suffer more under the proposed new tax regime than the rich.

According to studies by the powerful trade union, only half of the tax revenue in Brazil comes from taxes on income, capital gains and wealth like land or real estate. The other half consists of taxes on consumption, which disproportionately affect the poor.

CUT and a number of lawmakers of the governing Workers Party are calling for a progressive income tax, so that whoever earns more pays more.

In a recent meeting with the finance minister, the trade union’s leaders also pressed for an increase in direct taxes on income and wealth, and in the tax on large personal fortunes and inheritance.

The CUT also argues that a reduction in taxes on productive investments is necessary, while calling for a tax on financial speculation.

“We see these as the chief aspects that could contribute to improving the distribution of income in the country,” said CUT secretary general Quintino Severo. “By reducing the burden on the working class, we would boost domestic consumption capacity and help generate jobs and income.

“We can’t support a tax structure where those who earn less pay more, or one that punishes those who want to generate jobs and income,” he said.

The National Confederation of Industry (CNI), meanwhile, argues that a reduction in taxes on investment and exports cannot be put off any longer.

In an interview with IPS, CNI chief economist Flavio Castelo Branco said the current tax system is “outdated” and “designed for economic circumstances of the past, when we were not integrated in the world and we needed to combat the fiscal crisis and high inflation.”

Castelo Branco said it is unacceptable for capital goods, for example, to carry a cost in taxes, “when in other countries, like Chile, that cost is zero.”

The cascading effect drives up the cost of the final product by imposing taxes on energy and telecommunications, for example.

“An investment project in Brazil entails a high tax cost, which drives investors to other countries,” he said.

“Taxes on investment and exports, and the complexity of additional costs, increase companies’ costs and prices, and reduce competitiveness,” he said.

“It’s the final consumer who ends up paying,” which “obviously has an effect on the distribution of income,” he said.

The fiscal burden on each citizen becomes very clear on tax freedom day, when shopping centres offer products and services without taxes, and the price of gasoline, for example, goes down 53 percent and prices in restaurants are 31 percent below normal, on average.

The National Confederation of Young Entrepreneurs (CONAJE) promotes events to raise awareness among people about the taxes they are paying without even knowing it.

The president of CONAJE, Marduk Duarte, told IPS that the current tax system is “retrograde and dense.”

As part of the Movement for an Efficient Brazil, which is attempting to collect 1.4 signatures to present a petition to Congress, the CONAJE proposes reforms based on tax reduction, simplification and transparency, along with public spending cuts.

Duarte pointed to the fiscal wars between Brazil’s states over attracting investment, and to the need for improved distribution of tax revenue among municipalities, states and the federal government.

“With a lower, more balanced tax burden, we could make a serious dent in tax evasion and informality,” Olenike said. (END)