In recent posts, I have painted a
fairly pessimistic picture of Brazil’s future, pointing out the government’s
failure to implement the major reforms and investments needed to bring about
sustainable economic development. But this does not tell the full story of the
changes that have been happening in Brazil over the last decade, particularly
under the stewardship of the ruling Workers’ Party (PT). Since I arrived here
in February 2011, I have seen the government take several major steps to move
Brazil forward and create a more inclusive, progressive society. While the PT
has been fairly complacent in its economic management of the country, it has
been quite bold with these social initiatives and deserves credit for its
success. In this post, I will describe some of these policies in order to
provide a glimpse of the positive changes that seem to occur here on an almost
daily basis.
Fighting Extreme Poverty and Inequality
Brazil has long
been known as one of the most unequal societies in the world, as measured
through the Gini
Coefficient. Like much of Latin America, the country has a tremendous gap
between the haves and have-nots, and city landscapes are often marked by the stark
contrast between the luxury high-rise apartments of the rich and
the sprawling favelas of the poor. This, of course, has led to other problems, as inequality in Brazil has long been associated with
extremely high crime rates and low
levels of interpersonal trust.
Since coming to
power in 2002, the PT has focused intensely on a pro-poor development strategy.
President Lula spearheaded several major initiatives to expand the social
safety net, most notably the Fome Zero
campaign to fight hunger and the Bolsa
Família, the largest conditional cash
transfer program in the world. In addition, the government ramped up
spending and investment in the poorer Northeast region of the country to
promote convergence with the more prosperous South.
The results have
been very impressive. Fome Zero was such a success in Brazil that many now
believe it can serve as a
model for hunger programs across the world. José Graziano da Silva, the
program’s coordinator, now serves as head of the UN’s Food and Agriculture
Organization. Bolsa Família has proved
similarly popular, and countries across the world have rushed to set up
their own schemes. The macroeconomic results have been clear. The Northeast
region outgrew the rest of the
country over the last decade, and Brazil’s Gini Coefficient has fallen from
an average of roughly 0.60 in the 1990s to 0.53 in 2011. Inequality in Brazil
remains uncomfortably high, but the fact that the country was able to grow
rapidly over the last decade while simultaneously becoming more equal is an
impressive feat, and stands in sharp contrast to the United States, China, and
Chile, all of whom have seen significant rises in inequality over the last
decade. Brazil has become a poster child for pro-poor economic growth.
President
Rousseff has continued to expand the country’s social safety net, creating a
national “Brazil Without Poverty”
plan shortly after her inauguration and recently unveiling a new expansion of
the Bolsa Família program.
Expanding the
social safety net has been the single greatest contribution of the PT to
Brazil’s development. In addition to improving living conditions for millions
of people across the country, these programs are having an even more profound
impact on Brazilian society. The growing middle class has finally surpassed the
rich elite in terms of its aggregate purchasing power, which has led companies
to increasingly focus on this key demographic rather than the wealthy “A-class”. In
addition, the middle class has become a more influential and informed voting
bloc, and politicians increasingly focus their efforts on appealing to this key
constituency. As the middle class grows in economic and political stature,
Brazil continues to become a more inclusive society.
Women’s Reproductive Rights
As the largest
Catholic country in the world, Brazil has long adhered to church doctrine on
many matters of social policy. This has certainly been the case regarding
abortion, traditionally a taboo topic, only permissible in cases of
rape or danger to the mother’s health. However, the concept of women’s
reproductive rights has gained sway in recent years, led by a rising group of
feminists within the PT.
Ms. Rousseff,
Brazil’s first female president, gained heat during her 2010 campaign for previous
remarks she had made in favor of abortion rights, arguing that it was a
public health issue of special concern to low-income women. The ensuing outrage
forced her to walk back from this position before the election, but it marked
the first time that an open discussion of the issue became permissible on the
national stage. Ms. Rousseff later nominated Eleanora Menicucci, an outspoken
supporter of abortion rights, as her Minister for Women’s Affairs, despite the backlash from social conservatives. This month, the government began a study about possible policies to reduce the risks arising from illegal abortion, particularly for poorer women.
The Supreme
Court recently waded into the discussion with a ruling
last month to legalize abortion in the case of brain-dead fetuses. The 8-2
ruling in favor, including affirmative votes by the court’s two female
ministers, represented a significant victory for national women’s rights
advocates. Abortion is a very difficult ethical question for any society to
deal with, and I do not come down strongly on either side of the issue. But I
do believe in the virtue of open, robust debate that respects all
sides, especially keeping in mind the specific salience of the issue for many
feminists. But the fact that Brazil is moving toward such national discussions
is something to be celebrated, as it is a clear sign of the growing clout of
progressive, feminist thought in a traditionally male-dominated, conservative
society.
Affirmative Action
Like the U.S.,
Brazil is a country significantly burdened by its historical legacy of slavery
and racial inequality. Many intellectuals here have long argued that “poverty
has a color”, as the overwhelming majority of poor Brazilians tend to be
darker-skinned while the wealthiest Brazilians tend to be much whiter.
Confronting this legacy is immensely challenging, but there can be no doubt
that Brazil under the PT has put an increased emphasis on combating racial
disparities, primarily through affirmative action programs.
Under a new
series of quota systems and scholarships for black students, Brazil has made
impressive progress in increasing university enrollment for black students.
Several studies have shown that these students have performed as well as, and at
times better than, their whiter counterparts. The DEM, a conservative party,
mounted a legal challenge to these programs, arguing that they constituted
reverse racism. However, the Supreme Court recently
ruled unanimously that such measures were legitimate forms of overcoming
longstanding racial inequality. The ruling was a huge victory for
Afro-Brazilian groups, and although the country surely has a long way to go on
this front (as does the U.S.), there has clearly been progress over the last
several years.
LGBT Rights
In addition to
promoting women’s rights and Afro-Brazilian rights, Brazil has recently made
significant strides in recognizing LGBT rights. Last year, the Supreme Court ruled
unanimously that same-sex couples are entitled to civil unions under the
Brazilian constitution. Due to a constitutional provision allowing for
conversion of civil unions into marriages, this has opened up a process for gay
marriage to become legal in Brazil. Brazil has thus leapfrogged the U.S. on this
key indicator of LGBT equality, offering all federal benefits to same-sex
couples on a national level. The Senate voted
last week to affirm civil unions for same-sex couples, meaning that the
Supreme Court decision should soon be codified into law (following civil law
custom).
The PT-led
Senate is also on the verge of passing a measure to criminalize LGBT
discrimination, a major policy focus of local gay rights groups. Last year, Ms.
Rousseff pushed for an anti-homophobia education initiative in public schools,
but the initiative was blocked by evangelical and Catholic groups. Despite this
failure, it is clear that Brazil is making rapid progress on this front,
joining Argentina as one of the most socially progressive countries in Latin
America.
Truth and Reconciliation
Since its return
to democracy, Brazil has struggled to confront the legacy of the military
dictatorship that ruled the country from 1964 to 1985. Unlike neighboring
Chile, Argentina, and Uruguay, Brazil has made little effort to revisit this
dark period in its history, partially due to a 1979 amnesty law passed by the
regime to protect itself from any future prosecution. Ms. Rousseff, a former
member of an underground resistance movement, has moved quickly to change this.
Last month, standing next to the four living ex-presidents of Brazil, she
inaugurated the members of a new Truth Commission
which will spend two years investigating human rights abuses in the country
between the period of 1946 and 1988. In a highly significant symbolic gesture, the state of Rio de Janeiro issued formal apologies and reparations payments to 120 former political prisoners, including Ms. Rousseff herself.
This move has
been widely celebrated across Brazilian society as a long-delayed but necessary
step for the country to come to terms with its troubled past. The only serious
criticism so far has come, unsurprisingly, from within the military
establishment. Brazil has come a long way in its 25 short years as a democracy,
and the Truth Commission should be another step forward in fortifying the
country’s political institutions and preventing future abuses of power. Ms.
Rousseff deserves enormous credit for tackling such a major issue left
unaddressed by her predecessors.
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