Brazil (pronounced /br?'z?l/, listen
(help·info)), officially the Federative Republic of Brazil
(Portuguese: Brasil or República Federativa do Brasil), is
a country in South America.[1] It is the fifth-largest country by
geographical area, the fifth most populous country, and the fourth
most populous democracy in the world. The official language is Portuguese.[2]
Catholicism is the predominant religion.
Bounded by the Atlantic Ocean on the east, Brazil has a coastline
of over 7,367 kilometres.[1] Brazil borders every nation on the
South American continent except Ecuador and Chile: Venezuela, Suriname,
Guyana and the department of French Guiana are to the north, Colombia
to the northwest, Bolivia and Peru to the west, Argentina and Paraguay
to the southwest, and Uruguay to the south.[1] Numerous archipelagos
are part of the Brazilian territory, such as Penedos de São
Pedro e São Paulo, Fernando de Noronha, Trindade and Martim
Vaz and Atol das Rocas.[1][3]
Brazil is crossed by both the Equator and Tropic of Capricorn,
and as such is home to a vast array fauna and flora, natural environments,
as well as extensive natural resources. The Brazilian population
is concentrated along the coastline and in a few large urban centers
in the interior. While Brazil is one of the most populous nations
in the world, population density drops dramatically as one moves
inland.[4]
Brazil was a colony of Portugal from its discovery by Pedro Álvares
Cabral in 1500 until its independence in 1822. Initially independent
as the Brazilian Empire, the country has been a republic since 1889,
although the bicameral legislature (now called Congress) dates back
to 1824, when the first constitution was ratified. Its current Constitution
defines Brazil as a Federative Republic.[2] The Federation is formed
by the indissoluble association of the States, the Federal District,
and the Municipalities.[2] There are currently 26 States and 5,564
Municipalities.[5]
One of the ten largest economies in the world, the country has
a diversified middle-income economy with wide variations in development
levels and mature manufacturing, mining and agriculture sectors.
Technology and services also play an important role and are growing
rapidly. Brazil is a net exporter, having gone through free trade
and privatization reforms in the 1990s. In spite of important economical
achievements, many social issues still hamper development.
History
Pre-colonial Brazil
Main article: Indigenous peoples in Brazil
In the territory of current day Brazil, most native tribes who were
living in the land by the year 1500 are thought to have descended
from the first wave of migrants from North Asia (Siberia), who are
believed to have crossed the so-called Bering Land Bridge at the
end of the last Ice Age, around 9000 BC. At the time of European
discovery, the territory of current day Brazil had as many as 2,000
nations and tribes, an estimated total population of nearly 3,000,000
Amerindians. When the Portuguese arrived in 1500, the Indians were
mostly semi-nomadic tribes, living mainly on the coast and along
the banks of major rivers. Initially, the Europeans saw the natives
as noble savages, and miscegenation of the population began right
away. Tribal warfare, cannibalism and the pursuit of brazilwood
for its treasured red dye convinced the Portuguese that they should
enculture the Indians.[6]
Colonization
Map of Brazil issued by the Portuguese explorers in 1519.Initially
Portugal had little interest in Brazil, mainly because of high profits
gained through commerce with Indochina. After 1530, the Portuguese
Crown devised the Hereditary Captaincies system to effectively occupy
its new colony, and later took direct control of the failed captaincies.[7][8]
Although temporary trading posts were established earlier to collect
brazilwood, used as a dye, with permanent settlement came the establishment
of the sugar cane industry and its intensive labor. Several early
settlements started to be founded across the coast, among them the
colonial capital, Salvador, established in 1549 at the Bay of All
Saints in the north, and the city of Rio de Janeiro on March 1567,
in the south. The Portuguese colonists adopted an economy based
on the production of agricultural goods that were exported to Europe.
Sugar became by far the most important Brazilian colonial product
until the early 18th century.[9][10] Even though Brazilian sugar
was reputed as being of high quality, the industry faced a crisis
during the 17th and 18th centuries when the Dutch and the French
started producing sugar in the Antilles, located much closer to
Europe, causing sugar prices to fall.
During the 18th century, private explorers who called themselves
the Bandeirantes found gold and diamond deposits in the state of
Minas Gerais. The exploration of these mines were mostly used to
finance the Portuguese Royal Court's debts. The way in which such
deposits were explored by the Portuguese Crown and the powerful
local elites, however, burdened colonial Brazil with excessive taxes.
Some popular movements supporting independence came about against
the taxes established by the colonial government, such as the Tiradentes
incident in 1789, but the secessionist movements were often dismissed
by the authorities of the ruling colonial regime. Gold production
declined towards the end of the 18th century, starting a period
of relative stagnation of the Brazilian hinterland.[11] Both Amerindian
and African slaves' man power were largely used in Brazil's colonial
economy.[12]
In contrast to the neighbouring Spanish possessions in South America,
the Portuguese colony of Brazil kept its territorial, political
and linguistic integrity due to the action of the Portuguese administration
effort. Although the colony was threatened by other nations across
the Portuguese rule era, in particular by Dutch and French powers,
the authorities and the people ultimately managed to protect its
borders from foreign attacks. Portugal had even to send bullion
to Brazil, a spectacular reversal of the colonial trend, in order
to protect the integrity of the colony.[13]
Empire
Emperor Dom Pedro II of Brazil, in 1873.In 1808, the Portuguese
court, fleeing from Napoleon’s troops which had invaded Portugal,
established themselves in the city of Rio de Janeiro, which thus
became the seat of government of Portugal and the entire Portuguese
Empire until 1821, even though being located outside of Europe.
After João VI returned to Portugal in 1821, his heir-apparent
Pedro became regent of the Kingdom of Brazil, within the United
Kingdom of Portugal, Brazil and the Algarves. Following a series
of political incidents and disputes, Brazil achieved its independence
from Portugal on September 7, 1822. On October 12, 1822, Dom Pedro
became the first Emperor of Brazil, being crowned on December 1,
1822.
In 1824, Pedro closed the Constituent Assembly, stating that the
body was "endangering liberty". Pedro then produced a
constitution modeled on that of Portugal (1822) and France (1814).
It specified indirect elections and created the legislative, executive
and judiciary branches of government; however, it also added a fourth
branch, the "moderating power", to be held by the Emperor.
Pedro's government was considered economically and administratively
inefficient. Political pressures eventually made the Emperor step
down on April 7, 1831. He returned to Portugal leaving behind his
five-year-old son Pedro II. Until Pedro II reached maturity, Brazil
was governed by regents from 1831 to 1840. The regency period was
turbulent and marked by numerous local revolts including the Male
Revolt, the largest urban slave rebellion in the Americas, which
took place in Bahia in 1835.[14]
On July 23, 1840, Pedro II was crowned Emperor. His government
was highlighted by a substantial rise in coffee exports, the War
of the Triple Alliance, and the end of slave trade from Africa in
1865, although slavery in Brazilian territory would only be abolished
in 1888. Brazil stopped trading slaves from Africa in 1850, with
the Eusébio de Queirós law,[15] and abandoned slavery
altogether in 1888, thus becoming the last country of the Americas
to ban slavery.[16][17] When slavery was finally abolished, a large
influx of European immigrants took place.[18][19][20] By the 1870s,
the Emperor's grasp on domestic politics had started to deteriorate
in face of crises with the Roman Catholic Church, the Army and the
slaveholders. The Republican movement slowly gained strength. In
the end, the empire fell due to a military coup d'etat and because
the dominant classes no longer needed it to protect their interests
and deeply resented the abolition of slavery.[21] Indeed, imperial
centralization ran counter to their desire for local autonomy. By
1889 Pedro II had stepped down and the Republican system had been
adopted to Brazil.
Republic
Main articles: History of Brazil (1889–1930), History of Brazil
(1930–1945), History of Brazil (1945–1964), History
of Brazil (1964–1985), and History of Brazil (1985–present)
The Chamber of Deputies of Brazil at the National Congress in Brasília,
the capital of Brazil.Pedro II was deposed on November 15, 1889
by a Republican military coup led by general Deodoro da Fonseca,[22]
who became the country’s first de facto president through
military ascension. The country’s name became the Republic
of the United States of Brazil (which in 1967 was changed to Federative
Republic of Brazil). From 1889 to 1930, the dominant states of São
Paulo and Minas Gerais alternated control of the presidency.[23][24]
A military junta took control in 1930. Getúlio Vargas took
office soon after, and would remain as dictatorial ruler (with a
brief democratic period in between), until 1945. He was re-elected
in 1951 and stayed in office until his suicide in 1954. After 1930,
the successive governments continued industrial and agriculture
growth and development of the vast interior of Brazil.[24][25] Juscelino
Kubitschek's office years (1956-1961) were marked by the political
campaign motto of plunging "50 anos em 5" (English: fifty
years of development in five).[26]
The military forces took office in Brazil in a coup d'état
in 1964, and remained in power until March 1985, when it fell from
grace because of political struggles between the regime and the
Brazilian elites. Just as the Brazilian regime changes of 1889,
1930, and 1945 unleashed competing political forces and caused divisions
within the military, so too did the 1964 regime change.[27] Tancredo
Neves was elected president in an indirect election in 1985, as
Brazil returned to civil government regime. He died before taking
office, and the vice-president, José Sarney, was sworn in
as president in his place.
Democracy was re-established in 1988 when the current Federal Constitution
was enacted.[28] Fernando Collor de Mello was the first president
truly elected by popular vote after the military regime.[29] Collor
took office in March 1990. In September 1992, the National Congress
voted for Collor's impeachment after a sequence of scandals were
uncovered by the media.[29][30] The vice-president, Itamar Franco,
assumed the presidency. Assisted by the Minister of Finance at that
time, Fernando Henrique Cardoso, Itamar Franco's administration
implemented the Plano Real economic package,[29] which included
a new currency temporarily pegged to the U.S. dollar, the real.
In the elections held on October 3, 1994, Fernando Henrique Cardoso
ran for president and won, being reelected in 1998. Brazil's current
president is Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, elected in 2002 and
reelected in 2006.
Foreign relations and the military
Brazilian Army troops before boarding for MINUSTAH peacekeeping
mission in Haiti.Brazil is a political and economic leader in Latin
America.[41][42] However, social and economic problems prevent it
from becoming an effective global power.[43] Between World War II
and 1990, both democratic and military governments sought to expand
Brazil's influence in the world by pursuing a state-led industrial
policy and an independent foreign policy. More recently, the country
has aimed to strengthen ties with other South American countries,
engage in multilateral diplomacy through the United Nations and
the Organization of American States.[44] Brazil's current foreign
policy is based on the country's position as a regional power in
Latin America, a leader among developing countries, and an emerging
world power.[45] Brazilian foreign policy has generally reflected
multilateralism, peaceful dispute settlement, and nonintervention
in the affairs of other countries.[46] The Brazilian Constitution
also determines the country shall seek the economic, political,
social and cultural integration of the nations of Latin America.[2][47][48][49]
The Armed forces of Brazil comprise the Brazilian Army, the Brazilian
Navy, and the Brazilian Air Force.[2] The Military Police (States'
Military Police) is described as an ancillary force of the Army
by constitution, but under the control of each state's governor.[2]
The Brazilian armed forces are the largest in Latin America. The
Brazilian Air Force is the aerial warfare branch of the Brazilian
armed forces, being the largest air force in Latin America, with
about 700 manned aircraft in service.[50] The Brazilian Navy is
responsible for naval operations and for guarding Brazilian territorial
waters. It is the oldest of the Brazilian Armed forces and the only
navy in Latin America that operates an aircraft carrier, the NAeL
São Paulo (formerly FS Foch of the French Navy).[51] Finally,
the Brazilian Army is responsible for land-based military operations,
with a strength of approximately 190,000 soldiers.
States and municipalities
Atlantic
OceanPacific
OceanNorth RegionNortheast RegionCentral-West RegionSoutheast RegionSouth
RegionAcreAmazonasParáRoraimaAmapáRondôniaTocantinsMaranhãoBahiaPiauíCearáRio
Grande
do NorteParaíbaPernambucoAlagoasSergipeMato GrossoMato Grosso
do SulFederal
DistrictGoiásMinas GeraisSão PauloRio de JaneiroEspírito
SantoParanáSanta CatarinaRio Grande
do SulArgentinaBoliviaChileColombiaFrench GuianaGuyanaParaguayPeruSurinameUruguayVenezuela
Politically, Brazil is a Federation of twenty-six states (estados)
and one federal district (Distrito Federal). The states are subdivided
into municipalities.
The national territory was divided in 1969 by the Brazilian Institute
of Geography and Statistics (IBGE), for demographic and statistical
purposes, into five main regions: North, Northeast, Central-West,
Southeast and South.
The North region covers 45.27% of the surface of Brazil, and has
the lowest number of inhabitants. With the exception of Manaus,
which hosts a tax-free industrial zone, and Belém, the biggest
metropolitan area of the region, it is fairly unindustrialized and
undeveloped. It accommodates most of the rainforest vegetation of
the world and many indigenous tribes.
The Northeast region is inhabited by about 30% of Brazil's population.[52]
It is culturally diverse, with roots set in the Portuguese colonial
period, and in Amerindian and Afro-Brazilian elements. It is also
the poorest region of Brazil,[53] and suffers from long periods
of dry climate.[54] The largest cities are Salvador, Recife and
Fortaleza.
The Central-West region has low demographic density when compared
to the other regions,[55] mostly because a part of its territory
is covered by the world's largest marshlands area, the Pantanal[56]
as well as a small part of the Amazon Rainforest in the northwest.
However, much of the region is also covered by Cerrado, the largest
savanna in the world. The central-west region contributes significantly
towards agriculture.[57] The largest cities of this region are:
Brasília (the capital), Goiânia, Campo Grande, Cuiabá.
The Southeast region is the richest and most densely populated.[55]
It has more inhabitants than any other South American country, and
hosts one of the largest megalopolises of the world, where of the
main cities are the country's two largest; São Paulo and
Rio de Janeiro. The region is very diverse, including the major
business center of São Paulo, the historical cities of Minas
Gerais and its capital Belo Horizonte, the third-largest metropolitan
area in Brazil, the beaches of Rio de Janeiro, and the coast of
Espírito Santo.
The South region is the wealthiest by GDP per capita,[53] and has
the highest standard of living in the country.[58] It is also the
coldest region of Brazil,[59] with occasional occurrences of frost
and snow in some of the higher altitude areas.[60] It has been settled
mainly by European immigrants, mostly of Italian, German and Portuguese
ancestry, being clearly influenced by these cultures. The largest
cities in this region are: Curitiba, Porto Alegre, Florianópolis,
Londrina, Caxias do Sul and Joinville.
Geography
The Amazon Rainforest.Brazilian topography is diverse, including
hills, mountains, plains, highlands, scrublands, savannas, rainforests,
and a long coastline. The extensive low-lying Amazon Rainforest
covers most of Brazil’s terrain in the North, whereas small
hills and low mountains occupy the South. Along the Atlantic coast
there are several mountain ranges, with a highest altitude of roughly
2,900 meters (9,500 feet (2,900 m)). The highest peak is the 3,014
metres (9,890 ft) Pico da Neblina (Peak of Mist/Fog or Misty Peak)
in Guiana's highlands.[61][62] Major rivers include the Amazon,
the largest river in terms of volume of water, and the second-longest
in the world; the Paraná and its major tributary, the Iguaçu
River, where the Iguaçu Falls are located; the Negro, São
Francisco, Xingu, Madeira and the Tapajós rivers. Several
small islands and atolls in the Atlantic Ocean are part of Brazil:
Abrolhos, Atol das Rocas, Penedos de São Pedro e São
Paulo, and Trindade and Martim Vaz.
Climate
The Iguaçu Falls with its Subtropical climate.Brazil's climate
has little seasonal variation since most of the country is located
within the tropics. However, although 90% of the country is located
within the tropical zone, year-long climate varies considerably
from the mostly tropical North (the equator traverses the mouth
of the Amazon) to temperate zones below the Tropic of Capricorn
(23°27' S latitude), which crosses the country at the latitude
of the city of São Paulo. Brazil has five climatic regions:
equatorial, tropical, semiarid, highland tropical, and subtropical.
Temperatures along the equator are high, with averages above 25
°C (77 °F), and occasionally reaching the summer extremes
of up to 40 °C (104 °F) in the temperate zones.[63] Southern
Brazil has a subtropical temperate weather, normally experiencing
frost in the winter (June-August), and occasional snow in the mountainous
areas, such as Rio Grande do Sul and Santa Catarina. Temperatures
in the cities of São Paulo,[64] Belo Horizonte,[65] and Brasília[66]
are moderate, usually ranging between 10 °C (50 °F) and
30 °C (86 °F), because of their altitude of approximately
1,000 m (3,280 ft 10 in). Rio de Janeiro,[67][68] Recife[69] and
Salvador,[70] located in the coast, have warm climates, with average
temperatures ranging from 23 °C (73 °F) to 27 °C (81
°F). The southern cities of Porto Alegre and Curitiba have a
subtropical climate similar to that in parts of the United States
and Europe,[71][72] and temperatures can fall under 0 °C (32
°F) in the winter.
Precipitation levels vary widely. They are higher in the humid
Amazon Basin, and lower in the somewhat arid landscapes of the northeast.
Most of Brazil has moderate rainfall of 1,000 to 1,500 millimeters
a year, with most of the rain falling in the summer (between December
and April), south of the Equator. The Amazon region is notoriously
humid, with rainfall generally of more than 2,000 millimeters per
year, getting as high as 3,000 millimeters in parts of the western
Amazon and near Belém. Despite high annual precipitation,
the Amazon rain forest has a three-to-five-month dry season, the
timing of which varies according to location north or south of the
equator.
Environment
The Toco Toucan is a typical animal of the Brazilian rain forests.Brazil's
large area comprises different ecosystems, which together sustain
some of the world's greatest biodiversity. Because of the country's
intense economic and demographic growth, Brazil's ability to protect
its environmental habitats has increasingly come under threat. Extensive
logging in the nation's forests, particularly the Amazon, both official
and unofficial, destroys areas the size of a small country each
year, and potentially a diverse variety of plants and animals.[73]
Between 2002 and 2006, an area of the Amazon Rainforest equivalent
in size to the State of South Carolina was completely deforested
for the purposes of raising cattle and woodlogging.[74] By 2020,
at least 50% of the species resident in Brazil may become extinct.[74]
There is a general consensus that Brazil has the highest number
of both terrestrial vertebrates and invertebrates of any single
country in the world.[75] Also, Brazil has the highest primate diversity,[75]
the highest number of mammals,[75] the second highest number of
amphibians and butterflies,[75] the third highest number of birds,[75]
and fifth highest number of reptiles.[75] There is a high number
of endangered species,[76] many of them living in threatened habitats
such as the Atlantic Forest.
Economy
São Paulo is the largest financial center of the country.Brazil's
GDP (PPP and Nominal) is the highest of Latin America with large
and developed agricultural, mining, manufacturing,[77] and service
sectors, as well as a large labor pool. The country has been expanding
its presence in international financial and commodities markets,
and is regarded as one of the group of four emerging economies called
BRIC. Major export products include aircraft, coffee, automobiles,
soybean, iron ore, orange juice, steel, ethanol, textiles, footwear,
corned beef and electrical equipment.[78] According to the International
Monetary Fund and the World Bank, Brazil has the ninth largest economy
in the world by purchasing power parity (PPP)[79][80] and tenth
largest at market exchange rates.[81][82] Brazil has a diversified
middle income economy with wide variations in development levels.
Most large industry is agglomerated in the Southern and South East
states. The Northeast is the poorest region of Brazil, but it has
attracted new investments in infrastructure for the tourism sector
and intensive agricultural schemes.[83][84][85][86]
Brazil had pegged its currency, the real, to the U.S. dollar in
1994. However, after the East Asian financial crisis, the Russian
default in 1998[87] and the series of adverse financial events that
followed it, the Brazilian central bank has temporarily changed
its monetary policy to a managed-float scheme while undergoing a
currency crisis, until definitively changing the exchange regime
to free-float in January 1999.[88] Brazil received an IMF rescue
package in mid-2002 in the amount of USD 30.4 billion,[89][90] a
record sum at that time. The IMF loan was paid off early by Brazil's
central bank in 2005 (the due date was scheduled for 2006).[91]
Brazil has a diverse and sophisticated service industry as well.
During the early 1990s, the banking sector amounted to as much as
16% of GDP, and has attracted foreign financial institutions and
firms by issuing and trading Brazilian Depositary Receipts (BDRs).[92]
One of the issues the Brazilian central bank is currently dealing
with is the excess of speculative short-term capital inflows to
the country in the past few months, which might explain in part
the recent downfall of the U.S. dollar against the real in the period.[93]
Nonetheless, foreign direct investment (FDI), related to long-term,
less speculative investment in production, is estimated to be USD
193.8bn for 2007.[94] Inflation monitoring and control currently
plays a major role in Brazil's Central Bank activity in setting
out short-term interest rates as a monetary policy measure.[95]
The IPCA index, measured and calculated by the IBGE on a monthly
basis, is the most commonly used index for inflation, although other
indices such as the IPC-Fipe and IGP-M (FGV) are also widely used.
Energy policy
Itaipu Dam, the world's largest hydroelectric plant by energy generation.Brazil
is the 10th largest energy consumer in the world and the largest
in Latin America. At the same time it is also a large oil and gas
producer in the region and the world's largest ethanol producer.
Because of its ethanol fuel production Brazil has been sometimes
described as a bio-energy superpower.[96] Brazil's ethanol fuel
is produced from sugar cane, the world's largest crop in both production
and export tonnage.
With the 1973 oil crisis the Brazilian government initiated in
1975 the Pró-Álcool program. The Pró-Álcool
or Programa Nacional do Álcool (National Alcohol Program)
was a nation-wide program financed by the government to replace
automobile fuels derived from fossil fuels in favor of ethanol.
The program successfully reduced the number of cars running on gasoline
in Brazil by 10 million, thereby reducing the country's dependence
on oil imports. Brazil's production and consumption of biodiesel
relative to its energy matrix is expected to reach to 2% of diesel
fuel in 2008 and 5% in 2013.[97] Brazil is the third largest hydroelectricity
producer in the world after the People's Republic of China and Canada.
In 2004 hydropower accounted 83% of Brazil power production.[97]
The gross theoretical capability exceeds 3,000 TWh per annum, of
which 800 TWh per annum is economically exploitable.[98] Also in
2004, Brazil produced 321TWh of hydropower, which was the third
largest hydropower production in the world.[99] The installed capacity
is 69 GW.[99] Brazil co-owns Itaipu hydroelectric power plant on
the Paraná River which is the world largest hydroelectric
power plant by energy generation with the installed generation capacity
of 14 GW by 20 generating units of 700 MW each.[100]
Science and technology
An Embraer E-175 jet airliner, produced in Brazil and used by airlines
around the world.Technological research in Brazil is largely carried
out in public universities and research institutes. Despite governmental
regulations and incentives, investment in R&D has been growing
in private universities and companies as well since the 1990s. Nonetheless,
more than 73% of funding for basic research still comes from governmental
sources.[101] Some of Brazil's most notables technological hubs
are the Oswaldo Cruz Institute, the Butantan Institute, the Air
Force's Aerospace Technical Center, the Brazilian Agricultural Research
Corporation and the INPE.
Brazilian information technology is comparable in quality and positioning
to those of India and the People's Republic of China.
Brazil has the most advanced space program in Latin America, with
significant capabilities to launch vehicles, launch sites and satellite
manufacturing.[102]On October 14, 1997, the Brazilian Space Agency
signed an agreement with NASA to provide parts for the ISS.[103]
Uranium is enriched at the Resende Nuclear Fuel Factory to fuel
the country's energy demands. Plans are on the way to build the
country's first nuclear submarine.[104]
Brazil is one of the two countries in Latin America[105] with an
operational Synchrotron Laboratory, a research facility on physics,
chemistry, material science and life sciences.
Demographics
Recife is the second largest metropolis in Northeastern Brazil.Brazil's
population comprises many races and ethnic groups. The last PNAD
(National Research for Sample of Domiciles) census revealed the
following numbers: 93.096 million White people (49.7%), 79.782 million
Pardo people (42.6%), 12.908 million Black people (6.9%), 919 thousand
Asian people (0.5%) and 519 thousand Amerindian people (0.4%).[106]
Most Brazilians can trace their ancestry to the country's indigenous
peoples, Portuguese colonists and African slaves. Since 1500, with
the arrival of the Portuguese, miscegenation between these three
peoples took place. During over 3 centuries of Portuguese colonization,
Brazil received 700 thousand Portuguese settlers and over 3 million
African slaves.[107]
Starting in the late 19th century, Brazil opened its doors to immigration:
people of over 60 nationalities immigrated to Brazil. About 5 million
European and Asian immigrants arrived from 1870 to 1953, most of
them from Southern Europe (Italy, Portugal and Spain) and from Germany.
In the early 20th century, people from Japan and the Middle-East
also arrived.[108] The immigrants and their descendants had an important
impact in the ethnic composition of the Brazilian population and
many diasporas are present in the country. Brazil has the largest
population of Italian origin outside of Italy, with over 25 million
Italian Brazilians, the largest Japanese population outside of Japan,
with 1.6 million Japanese Brazilians, as well the second largest
German population outside of Germany, with 12 million German Brazilians.[109][110][111]
A characteristic of Brazil is the race mixing. Genetically, most
Brazilians have some degree of European, African and Amerindian
ancestry[112]. All the population can be considered a single "Brazilian"
ethnic group, with highly varied racial types and backgrounds, but
without clear ethnic sub-divisions.[113]
The largest metropolitan areas in Brazil are São Paulo,
Rio de Janeiro and Belo Horizonte, respectively with 19.7, 11.4,
and 5.4 million inhabitants.[114] Almost all capitals are the largest
city in their corresponding state, except for Vitória, the
capital of Espírito Santo, and Florianópolis, the
capital of Santa Catarina. There are also non-capital metropolitan
areas in the states of São Paulo (Campinas, Santos and the
Paraíba Valley), Minas Gerais (Steel Valley), Rio Grande
do Sul (Sinos Valley), and Santa Catarina (Itajaí Valley).
Portuguese is the only official language of Brazil.[115] It is
spoken by nearly the entire population and is virtually the only
language used in schools, newspapers, radio, TV and for all business
and administrative purposes. Moreover, Brazil is the only Portuguese-speaking
nation in the Americas, making the language an important part of
Brazilian national identity. 180 Amerindian languages are spoken
in remote areas.[116] There are important communities of speakers
of German (mostly the Hunsrückisch, part of the High German
languages) and Italian (mostly the Talian dialect, of Venetian origin)
in the south of the country, both largely influenced by the Portuguese
language.[117][118]
Education and health
Federal University of Paraná, in Curitiba.The Federal Constitution
and the 1996 General Law of Education in Brazil (LDB) determine
the Federal Government, States, Federal District, and Municipalities
will manage and organize their respective education systems. Each
of these public educational systems is responsible for its own maintenance,
which manages funds as well as mechanisms and sources for financial
resources. The new Constitution reserves 25% of state and municipal
taxes and 18% of federal taxes for education.[119] Private school
programs are available to complement the public school system. In
2003, the literacy rate was at 88 percent of the population, and
the youth literacy rate (ages 15–19) was 93.2 percent.[119]
However, according to UNESCO Brazil's education still shows very
low levels of efficiency by 15-year-old students, particularly in
the public school network.[120] Higher education starts with undergraduate
or sequential courses, which may offer different specialization
choices such as academic or vocational paths. Depending on the choice,
students may improve their educational background with Stricto Sensu
or Lato Sensu postgraduate courses.[121]
The public health system is managed and provided by all levels
of government, whilst private healthcare fulfills a complementary
role.[2] Several problems hamper the Brazilian system. In 2006,
the most notable health issues were infant mortality, child mortality,
maternal mortality, mortality by non-transmissible illness and mortality
caused by external causes (transportation, violence and suicide).[122]
Social issues
Located between some of the richest areas of Rio de Janeiro, the
Rocinha favela is testimony to high economic inequality within Brazil.Brazil
has been unable to reflect its recent economic achievements into
social development. Poverty, urban violence, growing social security
debts, inefficient public services, and the low value of the minimum
wage are some of the main social issues that currently challenge
the Brazilian government. The rate of poverty is in part attributed
to the country's economic inequality. Brazil ranks among the world's
highest nations in the Gini coefficient index of inequality assessment.
According to Fundação Getúlio Vargas, in 2006
the rate of people living below the poverty line based on labour
income was of 19.31% of the population[123] — a 33% reduction
considering the previous three years.[124]
Poverty in Brazil is most visually represented by the various favelas,
slums in the country's metropolitan areas and remote upcountry regions
that suffer with economic underdevelopment and below-par standards
of living. There are also great differences in wealth and welfare
between regions. While the Northeast region has the worst economic
indicators nationwide, many cities in the South and Southeast enjoy
First World socioeconomic standards,[125] with roughly 23.8 homicides
per 100,000 residents.[126] The level of violence in some large
urban centers is comparable to that of a war zone.[127][128] Analysts
generally suggest the alarming social inequality as the major reason
behind this problem. Muggings, robberies, kidnappings[129] and gang
violence[130] are common in the largest cities. Police brutality
and corruption are widespread.[131][132] Innefficient public services,[133][134][135]
especially those related to security, education and health, severely
affect quality of life. Minimum wages fail in fulfilling the constitutional
requirements set in article 7, IV, regarding living standards. Brazil
currently ranks 70th in the Human Development Index list, with a
high HDI (0,800). The social security system is considered unreliable
and has been historically submerged in large debts and graft, which
have been steadily increasing along the 1990s.[136]
Culture
Brazilian Carnival parade in Rio de Janeiro.A wide variety of elements
influenced Brazilian culture. Its major early influence derived
from Portuguese culture, because of strong colonial ties with the
Portuguese empire. Among other inheritances, the Portuguese introduced
the Portuguese language, the Catholic religion and the colonial
architectural styles. Other aspects of Brazilian culture are contributions
of European and Asian immigrants, Native South American people (such
as the Tupi), and African slaves. Thus, Brazil is a multicultural
and multiethnic society.[137] Italian, German and other European
immigrants came in large numbers and their influences are felt closer
to the Southeast and South of Brazil.[138] Amerindian peoples influenced
Brazil's language and cuisine and the Africans, brought to Brazil
as slaves, influenced Brazil's music, dance, cuisine, religion and
language.[139]
In the 1950s, Antônio Carlos Jobim, Vinícius de Moraes,
Baden Powell de Aquino, and João Gilberto popularized the
Bossa Nova style in music. Later Elis Regina, Milton Nascimento,
Chico Buarque and Nara Leão had an important role in shaping
Música Popular Brasileira (literally translated as "Brazilian
Popular Music," often abbreviated to MPB). In the late 1960s,
tropicalismo was popularized by Caetano Veloso and Gilberto Gil.
Brazilian Carnival (Portuguese: Carnaval) is an annual celebration
held 40 days before Easter and marks the beginning of Lent. Brazilian
Carnival has distinct regional characteristics. Other regional festivals
include the Boi Bumbá and Festa Junina (June Festivals).
Religion
Christ the Redeemer, in Corcovado mountain. One of the New Seven
Wonders of the World.The most popular religion in Brazil is Roman
Catholicism and the country has the largest Roman Catholic population
in the world. Adepts of Protestantism are rising in number. Until
1970, the majority of Brazilian Protestants were members of "traditional
churches", mostly Lutherans, Presbyterians and Baptists. Since
then, numbers of Pentecostal and Neopentecostal members have increased
significantly. Although Islam was first practiced by African slaves,[140],
the Muslim population of Brazil is comprised mostly by Arab immigrants.
However, a new trend has been the increase in conversions to Islam
among non-Arab citizens.[141]; only 27,000 Muslims live in Brazil
as of 2000.[142] The largest population of Buddhists in Latin America
lives in Brazil, mostly because the country has the largest Japanese
population outside Japan.[143]
The latest IBGE census presents the following numbers: 74% of the
population is Roman Catholic (about 139 million); 15.4% is Protestant
(about 28 million), including Jehovah's Witnesses (1,100,000) and
the Latter-day Saints (600,000),[144] ; 7.4% considers itself agnostics
or atheists or without a religion (about 12 million); 1.3% follows
Spiritism (about 2.2 million); 0.3% follows African traditional
religions such as Candomblé and Umbanda and 1.7% are members
of other religions. Some of these are Buddhists (215,000), Jews
(150,000), Islamic (27,000) and some practice a mixture of different
religions.[142]
Sports
Maracanã Stadium at the 2007 Pan American Games.Football
(Portuguese: futebol) is the most popular sport in Brazil.[145]
The Brazilian national football team (Seleção) is
currently ranked second in the world according to the FIFA World
Rankings. They have been victorious in the World Cup tournament
a record five times, in 1958, 1962, 1970, 1994 and 2002. Basketball,
volleyball, auto racing, and martial arts also attract large audiences.
Though not as regularly followed or practiced as the previously
mentioned sports, tennis, team handball, swimming, and gymnastics
have found a growing number of enthusiasts over the last decades.
In auto racing, Brazilian drivers have won the Formula 1 world championship
eight times: Emerson Fittipaldi (1972 and 1974), Nelson Piquet (1981,
1983 and 1987) and Ayrton Senna (1988, 1990 and 1991). The circuit
located in São Paulo, Autódromo José Carlos
Pace, hosts the annual Grand Prix of Brazil.[146]
Some sport variations have their origins in Brazil. Beach football,
futsal (official version of indoor football) and footvolley emerged
in the country as variations of football. In martial arts, Brazilians
have developed Capoeira,[147] Vale tudo,[148] and Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu.[149]
Brazil has undertaken the organization of large-scale sporting
events: the country organized and hosted the 1950 FIFA World Cup[150]
and is chosen to host the 2014 FIFA World Cup event.[151] São
Paulo organized the IV Pan American Games in 1963[152] and Rio de
Janeiro hosted the XV Pan American Games in 2007.[153] Brazil also
tried for the fourth time to host the Summer Olympics with Rio de
Janeiro in 2016.[154]
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