Blacks Become Majority in Brazil, But Power Remains with Whites

Brazilian blacks The news is out. Brazil, with a population of 191 million people, is no longer a country of white majority. The credit now belongs to the 49.6% black or mulatto population compared to the 49.4% defined as white and this is set to increase in coming years with that percentage increasing to 54, according to a recent report from the Rio do Janeiro Federal University.

Professor Antonio Paixão from the Rio University's Economy Institute believes that since Brazil is no longer a white majority country, "we need a policy of diversity," which is a great challenge for the political establishment.

The black birth rate is also higher than that of the whites or Europeans descendents, so the big question is whether Brazil is prepared to face the fact that blacks and mulattos are becoming a solid majority, and how this will influence legislation, asks Paixão.

But current reality shows another picture, with a considerable degree of discrimination for the blacks: the basic food basket for a black person demands 76 hours of work compared to the average 54 hours for a white person.

Similarly illiteracy among blacks runs as high as 20%, but only 6% for whites.

Since Brazil was the last country in the region to grant slaves freedom in 1888, blacks have always been at a disadvantage in education and work opportunities, points out Paixão.

Similarly, access to tertiary education for blacks is far more up road, since most of them are condemned to work to subsist, while white families can afford to pay for their children's education.

The administration of Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva is credited with having invested heavily in the social and economic integration of the black people, for example by imposing a policy of quotas for blacks in universities.

Nevertheless power in Brazil rests with the whites who hold the strategic posts in politics and the economy.

But some blacks have had outstanding careers, mainly in sports and the arts. One of them is the world famous former football star Pelé and another the musician-composer Gilberto Gil. Both have held cabinet posts, but as a white initiative towards supporting diversity.

Mercopress

Tags:

You May Also Like

Canceling Brazil and LatAm’s Debts Is No Charity, But an Act of Fairness

At the beginning of July, the G8 nations set forth a precedent-setting “100 percent” ...

Violent Settlements Are Good for Brazil

"More than 90 percent of the settlers we interviewed were involved in a conflict ...

Congressman Names Names in Brazilian Graft Scandal, But Lula’s Party Denies All

In testimony yesterday before the Ethics Council of the Brazilian Chamber of Deputies, the ...

The Lebanese and Their Children Who Are Building Brazil

Businessman Ricardo Sayon runs Ri Happy, one of the most renowned toy store chains ...

For Brazil WTO Negotiations Will Go Nowhere Without Political Spur

The Brazilian Minister of Foreign Relations, Celso Amorim, said, Wednesday, January 4, that a ...

Brazil Tells Africa: You Can Count on Us at UN

At the close of an eight-day trip to Africa, the Brazilian Minister of Foreign ...

Pretty Woman, 30, Paid to Be Killed, Say Brazilian Police

The police of Fortaleza, the capital city of the northeastern state of Ceará, in ...

Brazilian educator Paulo Freire

Brazil’s Educator Paulo Freire Gets US Award 8 Years After His Death

The Center for Education Outreach & Innovation (CEO&I) of Teachers College at Columbia University ...

Brazilian capital Brasília's Justice Palace

The Real Cost Brazil: a Lavish State Machine That Doesn’t Deliver

A major survey of Brazil by the Economist has made the country once more ...

Ready for Lula

With 95 percent of next year’s budget already allotted, which is binding for the ...

WordPress database error: [Table './brazzil3_live/wp_wfHits' is marked as crashed and last (automatic?) repair failed]
SHOW FULL COLUMNS FROM `wp_wfHits`