Brazilians Read 1.8 Books Per Year. There Is a Plan to Improve This.

The Brazilian National Book and Reading Plan (PNLL), which was launched last month by the ministers of Culture and Education of Brazil, has the objective of increasing reading (the Brazilian reading index) over the next three years by 50%.

Today the index is 1.8 books per year per inhabitant, which is considered very low even in comparison with other countries in Latin America. For example, the index in Colombia is 2.4 books per inhabitant per year.

The coordinator of the plan, Galeno Amorim, says that there is a long way to go before Brazil can reach the index levels in the United States and England of 5 books per year per inhabitant, or France, where it is even higher at 7 books.

The PNLL will implant public libraries, distribute books, provide credit for the publishing industry, create the figure of the reading mediator and create spaces for reading.

Brazil has between 10,000 and 12,000 libraries, says Amorim, adding that the problem is no longer access to books (in 2004 it was estimated that 14 million Brazilians did not have access to books, but that number has been cut in half).

What are needed are concrete actions, he says. That means putting libraries in every city and increasing the number of places where books are sold.

Agência Brasil

Tags:

You May Also Like

RAPIDINHAS

According to many Portuguese people 160 million Brazilians speak the language wrongly. Are all ...

Strong US Treasury Yields Weaken Brazilian Market

Latin American and Brazilian stocks in particular tumbled, as a recent sharp increase in ...

Arabs Love Brazil. They Are 7% of the Country.

They started arriving in Brazil in the nineteenth century. In their luggage was a ...

Forget the Recession! Brazil’s Credit Card Market Is Exploding

As a result of higher disposable income levels, lower unemployment and a healthy banking ...

Rice and Meat Boost May Prices 0.79% in Brazil

Brazil's consumer prices rose 0.79% in May, the fastest pace in more than three ...

Brazil’s Painter of Happiness: Absolut Britto

He was born to a very poor family in Northeast Brazil, in the city ...

Brazil: Here, City Hall Does the Kidnapping

Brazil’s Indianist Missionary Council says it has evidence indicating that the city hall of ...

Brazil’s Jobless Rate Jump to 10.4% Is Bad News for Market Too

Latin American stocks were mixed, with Brazilian and Argentine shares falling on profit taking ...

The Killing Season

There has been a wave of violence against indigenous peoples  in the latest weeks ...

Missionaries Have to Go If We Are to Save Brazil’s Indian Culture

The fact that a considerable chunk of the Amazon is located within Brazilian borders ...