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Brazil
People and History
With
its estimated 182 million inhabitants, Brazil has the
largest population in Latin America and ranks fifth in the
world. The majority of people live in the south-central
area, which includes the industrial cities of Sao Paulo, Rio
de Janeiro, and Belo Horizonte. Urban growth has been rapid;
by 2005, 81% of the total population was living in urban
areas. This growth has aided economic development but also
has created serious social, security, environmental, and
political problems for major cities.
Six
major groups make up the Brazilian population: the
Portuguese, who colonized Brazil in the 16th century;
Africans brought to Brazil as slaves; various other
European, Middle Eastern, and Asian immigrant groups who
have settled in Brazil since the mid-19th century; and
indigenous peoples of Tupi and Guarani language stock.
Intermarriage between the Portuguese and indigenous people
or slaves was common. Although the major European ethnic
stock of Brazil was originally Portuguese, subsequent waves
of immigration have contributed to a diverse ethnic and
cultural heritage.
From
1875 until 1960, about 5 million Europeans immigrated to
Brazil, settling mainly in the four southern states of Sao
Paulo, Parana, Santa Catarina, and Rio Grande do Sul.
Immigrants have come mainly from Italy, Germany, Spain,
Japan, Poland, and the Middle East. The largest Japanese
community outside Japan is in Sao Paulo. Despite class
distinctions, national identity is strong, and racial
friction is a relatively new phenomenon. Indigenous
full-blooded Indians, located mainly in the northern and
western border regions and in the upper Amazon Basin,
constitute less than 1% of the population. Their numbers are
declining as contact with the outside world and commercial
expansion into the interior increase. Brazilian Government
programs to establish reservations and to provide other
forms of assistance have existed for years but are
controversial and often ineffective.
Brazil
is the only Portuguese-speaking nation in the Americas.
About 80% of all Brazilians belong to the Roman Catholic
Church; most others are Protestant or follow practices
derived from African religions.
Pedro
Alvares Cabral claimed Brazil for Portugal in 1500. The
colony was ruled from Lisbon until 1808, when Dom Joao VI
and the rest of the Portuguese royal family fled from
Napoleon's army, and established its seat of government in
Rio de Janeiro. Dom Joao VI returned to Portugal in 1821.
His son declared Brazil's independence on September 7, 1822,
and became emperor with the title of Dom Pedro I. His son,
Dom Pedro II, ruled from 1831 to 1889, when a federal
republic was established in a coup led by Deodoro da
Fonseca, Marshal of the Army. Slavery had been abolished a
year earlier by the Regent Princess Isabel while Dom Pedro
II was in Europe.
From
1889 to 1930, the government was a constitutional democracy,
with the presidency alternating between the dominant states
of Sao Paulo and Minas Gerais. This period ended with a
military coup that placed Getulio Vargas, a civilian, in the
presidency; Vargas remained as dictator until 1945. Between
1945 and 1961, Jose Linhares, Gaspar Dutra, Vargas himself,
Café Filho, Carlos Luz, Nereu Ramos, Juscelino Kubitschek,
and Janio Quadros were elected presidents. When Quadros
resigned in 1961, Vice President Joao Goulart succeeded him.
Goulart's
years in office were marked by high inflation, economic
stagnation, and the increasing influence of radical
political elements. The armed forces, alarmed by these
developments, staged a coup on March 31, 1964. The coup
leaders chose as president Humberto Castello Branco,
followed by Arthur da Costa e Silva (1967-69), Emilio
Garrastazu Medici (1969-74), and Ernesto Geisel (1974-79),
all of whom were senior army officers. Geisel began a
democratic opening that was continued by his successor, Gen.
Joao Baptista de Oliveira Figueiredo (1979-85). Figueiredo
not only permitted the return of politicians exiled or
banned from political activity during the 1960s and 1970s,
but also allowed them to run for state and federal offices
in 1982.
At
the same time, an electoral college consisting of all
members of congress and six delegates chosen from each state
continued to choose the president. In January 1985, the
Electoral College voted Tancredo Neves from the opposition
Brazilian Democratic Movement Party (PMDB) into office as
President. However, Neves became ill in March and died a
month later. His Vice President, former Senator Jose Sarney,
became President upon Neves' death. Brazil completed its
transition to a popularly elected government in 1989, when
Fernando Collor de Mello won 53% of the vote in the first
direct presidential election in 29 years. In 1992, a major
corruption scandal led to his impeachment and ultimate
resignation. Vice President Itamar Franco took his place and
governed for the remainder of Collor's term culminating in
the October 3, 1994 presidential elections, when Fernando
Henrique Cardoso was elected President with 54% of the vote.
Cardoso took office January 1, 1995, and was re-elected in
October 1998 for a second 4-year term. Luiz Inacio Lula da
Silva, commonly known as Lula, was elected president in
2002, after his fourth campaign for the office.
President
Lula, a former union leader, is Brazil's first working-class
president. However, since taking office he has taken a
conservative fiscal path, warning that social reforms would
take years and that Brazil had no alternative but to extend
fiscal austerity policies. The real is strong, and
in 2004, Brazil enjoyed more robust growth that yielded
increases in employment and real wages.
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