2022. Child Labor in Brazil Might Be History by Then.

A considerable reduction in child labor is expected to occur in Brazil by 2015, but not its complete eradication, according to an analysis by the Brazilian National Coordinator of the International Program for the Eradication of Child Labor (IPEC), of the International Labor Organization (ILO), Pedro Américo Furtado de Oliveira.

Oliveira says that a study released at the of November, by the ILO, estimates that the situation of working children would get better by 2022.

The study evaluates that the government income transferring programs have been fundamental, but that they do not represent a complete solution in themselves, and that other elements must be added in order to really solve the problem.

Oliveira said that child labor has a strong impact on education, either by stopping children from attending school, or by affecting the performance of those who do go to school. "They usually end up quitting school, which will directly affect their salaries in the future".

ILO’s study, according to the coordinator, "attempts to demonstrate that if child labor were to be prohibited today, the country’s average income would drop 1%, although this loss would be compensated in five years."

The Ministry of Social Development and Hunger Alleviation issued a note commenting on the research. The note says that the research is based on data from 1992-2003, and that this period does not consider the changes undertaken by the Program for the Eradication of Child Labor (PETI).

The Ministry also emphasizes that the study did not evaluate the impact of the Family Grant program (Bolsa Famí­lia), created September 2003, which established school attendance as one of the preconditions for receiving the money.

The ILO study, says the note, indicates that child labor is less frequent among children that go to school.

Agência Brasil

Tags:

You May Also Like

Maharaji Gets Peace Award in Brazil

The Brazilian Association of Community Television Channels has given its highest award to Words ...

Brazilian Indians Call Lula Anti-Indian

Brazil’s Forum in Defense of Indigenous Rights (FDDI) issued, yesterday, its “April Manifesto,” criticizing ...

74% of Jobs Created in Brazil in January Came from Small Companies

In Brazil, micro and small companies were responsible for 74% of the 181,419 new ...

Tramontina, a Brazilian Company, Revives Cookware Making and a Town in the US

In April 2003, when a major cookware manufacturing facility closed in Manitowoc, Wisconsin, USA, ...

US Tour Operator Sued for Selling Sex with Minor Indian Girls in the Brazilian Amazon

Four Brazilian Indian women, allegedly sex trafficked as minors by an American fishing tour ...

Biotech Crops Are Killing Land and Life in Brazil and Latin America

Latin America is being invaded by genetically engineered (GE) crops. The promoters of these ...

UN Reviews Brazil’s Request to Extend Its Territory

The fourteenth session of the UN’s Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf ...

Expecting the World

"We believe that the Lula administration is in a good position to avoid what ...

Brazil Loses Celso Furtado, One of Its Brighest Intellectuals

Celso Furtado has died today November 20, 2004. With Dr. Furtado also has died ...

Brazil: Indians in Fear in Their Land

The president of the Indigenous People’s Committee, Agostinho Rodrigues, gave an emotional report of ...

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