Brazil decades behind other countries in fighting inequality

News Hour

A Brazilian earning the minimum wage would have to work for 19 years to earn as much as what a rich person in the country’s top 0.1 percent makes in one month, Oxfam revealed today.

New research by the international agency shows that at the current pace, it would take Brazil 75 years to reach the United Kingdom’s current level of income equality, or 30 to Argentina’s.

Despite lifting millions of people out of poverty over the last decades, Brazil still faces a huge gap between the country’s richest and the rest of the population. Previously, Oxfam had revealed that just six people own as much money as the poorest half of the country.

“This is an unjust, unacceptable, and unsustainable situation,” said Oxfam Brazil’s executive director, Katia Maia. “We cannot dance around this anymore; tackling inequality head-on is everyone’s responsibility. This report is our way of kick-starting this conversation.”

Experts have little doubt about what’s behind Brazil’s economic inequality. The country’s regressive tax system weighs heavily on the poorest and on the middle class; racial and gender discrimination erodes the rights of women and black Brazilians; a political system that concentrates power and is highly prone to corruption.

Worse still, inequality threatens to reverse the progress the country has made in ending poverty. Current World Bank projections show up to 3.6 million people are expected to fall back into poverty this year in Brazil. About 16 million Brazilians already live below the poverty line.

“We know what works to end inequality,” said Maia. “Expanding the social safety net to cover the poorest investing in education, raising the minimum wage, and bringing ‘informal’ work out of the shadows all helps to narrow the gap.”

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