To Cultivate Myth that 60% of Brazilians Belong to Middle Class, Brazil Creates 3 Middle Classes

Brazilian family dining More than half of the Brazilian population now belongs to the middle class or at least that’s what Brazilians are being told. According to a recent report, the middle class in Brazil during the last decade expanded to reach 90 million out of a population of almost 200 million, according to DataFolha.

The survey, which takes into account only Brazilians over 16 years, considers three layers of middle class: the upper middle, the middle middle class, and the lower middle class. The first one has 19% of the population, the second, 26%, and the third 18%.

One factor that unites the three groups is the access to consumer durables, including appliances, computers and cars. On the other hand, the upper middle class’s members have more education and higher income than the other two.

The upper echelon represents 27 million people, while the middle group has 37 million and the lower one counts on 26 million.

The survey also showed that in 2011, the excluded (the so-called classes D and E) accounted for 28% of the population or 39 million people while the upper class had 9% of the population  or 12 million Brazilians.

According to a classification adopted by the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE), classes in Brazil, from A to E, are determined by the number of minimum wages a family makes. The minimum wage since January 1st is 622 reais (US$ 354).

Class A comprises gross household income above 30 minimum wages, Class B: from 15 to 30 minimum wages, Class C (normally known as the middle class): 6 to 15 minimum wages, Class D: 2 to 6 and Class E: less than 2 minimum wages.

So, a family from the middle class may make from 3,732 reais (US$ 2,125) (low middle class) to 9.330 (US$ 5,313), which would be considered upper middle class.

“Brazil is a middle class country, 6 out of 10 Brazilians over 16 years already belong to that group”, points out the daily Folha de S. Paulo based on the DataFolha report.

“The increase in income (of C bracket, included in the middle class), which does not seem much for the Brazilian elite, has represented a real revolution for the dispossessed classes of the country,” says economist Marcelo Neri from the internationally prestigious Rio based Getúlio Vargas Foundation think tank.

However “middle class is not homogeneous since is includes very different sub-groups and there is an ample number of indicators on income, education and access to consumer goods”.

The poorest Brazilians in the wide spectrum described as middle class are those who are managing to escape from bracket E and are still very vulnerable, points out the report from DataFolha.

Last week the Brazilian ministry to combat hunger announced the launching of a campaign to identify 320.000 indigent families that receive no federal subsidy as part of the overall program to help 17 million Brazilians climb out of extreme poverty.

Likewise the newspaper O Estado de S. Paulo published that there has been a significant drop in the number of Brazilians belonging to the E bracket and for the first time in the country’s history, less than 1% of homes belong to that group.
 
Bzz/MP

Tags:

You May Also Like

Praça dos Três Poderes in Brasília, Brazil

Brazilian Prayer: From Hypocrisy and Alligator Tears Deliver Us, O Lord

Resorting to the biblical parable on the Valley of Tears is off limits to ...

Signs of Fiscal Austerity Help Boost Brazil’s Stocks

Brazilian and Latin American stocks in general gained ground, as investors bought discounted shares ...

International AIDS Center Opens with US$ 1 Million Grant from Brazil

The world’s first International HIV/AIDS Technical Cooperation Center (Centro Internacional de Cooperação Técnica em ...

October 23 – the Day the Music Died in Brazil

By voting not to ban the sales of guns and ammunition in the referendum ...

UN Hears that in Brazil Government Is Main Promoter of Discrimination

The special rapporteur of the United Nations Organization (UNO) on Contemporary Forms of Racism, ...

Brazil’s Amazon Rainforest Policy Is a One-Way Road to Disaster

Depletion of the Amazon Rainforest is not a new concern facing environmentalists, biologists, ecologists, ...

Boycott Chicken Abuser KFC, Says Brazil’s Girl from Ipanema

On behalf of US-based animal rights organization People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals ...

Brazil’s Embraer Has New Head of Corporate Aviation

Brazilian aircraft manufacturer Embraer today announced the appointment of LuÀ­s Carlos Affonso as its ...

Brazzil Joins Pearl Travel Guides to Bring You a Brazil You Haven’t Seen Before

Brazzil Travel is a new publication from the Brazzil group of sites. It has ...

Even as Solo Candidate Brazil Has Little Chance to Host the 2014 World Cup

The International Federation of Football Association (FIFA) Joseph Blatter is skeptic about Brazil’s chances ...