« ARGOS. Dialéctica de una derrota. Atilio Boron. Página 12 | Inicio | Argentina, Universidad Nacional de La Plata, presentación del libro Tras las Huellas de una Escritura en Tránsito. La Crónica Contemporánea en América Latina »
Brazil’s Bolsa Familia at Risk
* With the Calheiros scandal still hanging over it, an increasingly tarnished Lula administration cannot afford to lose the one social program that has brought it a modicum of luster
* Thanksgiving arrived the other day, but 36.1 million Brazilians would not have been at the table. The Getúlio Vargas Foundation reported last September that the income of 19.3 percent of all Brazilians is so low that they can't afford to maintain the minimum 2,288 daily dose of calories recommended by the World Health Organization
* The government's formula is to put children in school as a means of putting food on the table
* Now that the Provisory Contribution over Financial Movements (CPMF) tax is at risk, the funds for social programs might be equally endangered. This would be a catastrophe and would knock out Lula's only clearly successful major social justice program since he became president
* Can the new trend in international development–microfinancing–complement Lula's social flagship, the Bolsa Família program?
In the last few weeks, social reforms intended by Latin America's "New Left," to enhance the social content of their legislative programs, have been overshadowed by challenges to their political agenda. Not only have Venezuelans voted "no" to the constitutional reforms that would have expanded Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez's power, but in an attack against President Evo Morales Bolivia's rich provinces have decided to draft a local applicable constitution that, if achieved, would claim more autonomy from the central government. However, this new counter-trend is not unique to Latin America's "New Left." Brazil and its centrist government are also in the midst of a considerable political challenge, as Lula's main social program, the Bolsa Família, is threatened by a killer tax-cut, and his ruling multiparty coalition is in a free-fall. His comrade-in-arm and president of the Senate, Renan Calheiros has just been forced to give up his post on the basis of corruption charges that have been lodged against him.
With Christmas on the horizon, the hot debate in Brazilian domestic politics has been whether cutting taxes would be tantamount to allowing the Trojan gift to be handed to the state. In the last few months the government and the opposition have been struggling over whether to continue the CPMF. If on one hand tax relief sounds like a blessing to a Brazilian middle-class that has seen its income squeezed during the last decade, on the other hand the poor are still heavily dependent on governmental social programs that are funded by taxes. Now the clock is ticking and a divided Senate needs to decide before the year ends whether the tax is to remain in place next year.
The CPMF Tax and Funding for the Bolsa Família Program
Created in 1997, the CPMF is a tax on financial transactions that, if retained, is expected to bring in to the government around $20 billion in revenue next year. President Lula claims that "everybody knows that the Brazilian state cannot live without both the CPMF and the DRU [which allows the Government to freely spend 20 percent of the taxes] (Agência Brasil: Estado não pode abrir mão de CPMF, avalia Lula, May 15, 2007)." To the President, ending the CPMF means slashing the budget, which would endanger both the government's social flagship program, the Bolsa Familia (Family Fund), and the 11.1 million families that receive its benefits (Ministry of Social Development and Hunger Combat: SENARC information system).
In support of President Lula, the Minister of Social Development and Hunger Combat, Patrus Ananias, released the following figures: In 2007, $3.75 billion of Bolsa Família program's $4.3 billion came from funds obtained through the CPMF. That means that nowadays the Bolsa Família program derives 87 percent of its budget from the CPMF. As a result of this heavy dependence on the CPMF, the Minister voiced the following concerns last September: "If the CPMF ends, the Bolsa Familia might end. (…) We certainly would look for other sources, but we would certainly see a visible loss to the Bolsa Familia (Agência Brasil: Para ministro, fim da CPMF poderia acabar com o Bolsa Família September 4, 2007)." Thus, it is clear that for the Lula administration, cuts in the Bolsa Família would jeopardize their plans for creating a national safety net and promoting anti-poverty measures.
The emphasis on the Bolsa Família program, a national conditional cash transfer (CCT) scheme that rewards families with a micro-grant for sending their children to school and fulfilling a few other healthcare conditions, makes it clear that the government's main long-term strategy for reducing poverty also has been notably successful in increasing primary-education attendance. Thus, the two main issues being brought to the table are whether using taxes to fund education attendance makes sense, and whether the government could minimize its expenditure and still run a successful program.
Education as the Way Out
Among the several possible remedies for reducing poverty, the Brazilian government in the last decade has been strongly emphasizing education, especially tackling problems with a demand-side strategy. This strategy draws on evidence that improving education attendance promotes development. The Academy for Educational Development has observed that, not only does one year of additional education increase individual output by 4 to 7 percent, but improvements in the literacy rate of 20-30 percent have been related to increases in GDP of 8 to 16 percent (The Basic Education Coalition. Teach a Child: Transform a Nation, Washington, DC, 2004, 9).
However, education does more than just increase income; it also can transform a life, exposing one to a background of knowledge on such issues as health and sanitation, food security and family planning, which can significantly improve quality of life. OXFAM has established that adolescents who have completed four years of primary education are less than half as likely to contract HIV as those deprived of it. UNICEF has reported that children of mothers with no education are more than twice as likely to die or to be malnourished, compared with children of those with a secondary or higher-level of education (OXFAM's website; and UNICEF: Progress since the World Summit for Children: a statistical review, 2001, 12).
CCT schemes: the turn-around
In the beginning of the 1990s only 85.8 percent of Brazil's children were enrolled in primary education (World Bank: Brazil Education Profile, Summary, 2004). Professors Eliana Cardoso and André Souza shed some light on the roots of the problem: "The combination of high opportunity-costs of school attendance and an educational system with low quality education will result in the low valuation of the returns of education, and thus low school attendance and high participation of children in the labor market" (Cardoso & Souza: The Impact of Cash Transfers on Child Labor and School Attendance in Brazil, 2004, 7). The federal government's solution was to adopt a national CCT scheme that rewarded the families with a grant for sending their children to school, in addition to fulfilling a few other healthcare conditions. This program, currently called Bolsa Família, evolved throughout the decade and today Brazil seems to be on track to achieve universal primary education: in 2004, only 6 percent of the children of primary-school age were out of school (UNESCO UIS: Education in Brazil, 2004).
Despite its success in improving primary school attendance, the CCT scheme used in Brazil is not shatterproof. The Bolsa Família budget during 2004-2006 was on the order of $9.9 billion, and its estimated annual budget for this year reached $4.3 billion (Brazilian House of the Representatives website). The program's heavy dependence on the federal government may make it inherently unstable. As already charged by the program's founder, Senator Cristovam Buarque, the potential politicalization of the program can lead it to go astray whenever an administration changes (Cristovam Buarque: Brazil's Bolsa Família: A Good Intention Gone Astray, Brazzil Magazine, September 2002). Finally, the reliance of the programs on grants might encourage government dependency instead of promoting people's self-empowerment.
Room for micro-lending
The problems discussed above, which arise when one relies solely on the federal government's Bolsa Família program to solve the demand side problems of primary education, should encourage a search for alternatives to the CCT scheme. One way out could be to turn to micro-lending. In a recent donors' brief, CGAP indicated that access to financial services fostered new income in such a way that the poor could invest in their children's future. In Bangladesh in 2002, figures show that nearly all girls in Grameen Bank client households received schooling, compared with only 60 percent of girls in non-client households, and BRAC reported that basic educational competency among 11-14 year-old children in client households doubled in 3 years, from 12 percent in 1992 to 24 percent in 1995 (CGAP: Donors Brief no. 9, December 2002, 1).
Not advocating the termination of CCT schemes such as the Bolsa Família, which is a key program for those who otherwise have no economic opportunity, and acknowledging a private sector potential for fostering school enrollment among those hovering around the poverty line could be of great benefit to governments like Brazil's. First, as microfinance institutions (MFIs) may allow low-income households theoretically to move up on the social ladder, the opportunity cost of sending their children to school rather than to work will decrease, and the federal government can ease its expenditures on the demand side of education, leaving more leverage to focus on the supply-side problems, which would include the low-quality of public education. Second, MFIs represent an opportunity for CCT beneficiaries to become MFI clients. In this way, low-income households would have an alternative available, allowing them to better cope with the potential political shocks which so frequently accompany changes of administrations in Brasília. The inclusion of MFIs might even signify a change in mentality, from a traditional government-dependent approach based on grants to a more self-reliant approach based on small but frequent loan re-payments.
Although microfinance is not without its critics, combining micro-lending with the Bolsa Família micro-grants could help to produce development through education in Brazil, with more children attending better quality schools. Therefore, it might be wise for the Brazilian federal government to start exploring the possibility of a seesaw relationship with the private sector, retreating as the expansion of the latter makes publicly funded programs less necessary. This would provide Brasília with the opportunity to steer more resources toward improving the quality of public education, thus re-focusing the government's education strategy from the demand to the supply side. Furthermore, this strategy would provide the Bolsa Familia with a way to cope with the potential phasing out of the CPMF and the implications of such a development on the program's poor beneficiaries.
This analysis was prepared by COHA Research Fellow Thomaz Alvares de Azevedo e Almeida
-
Buscar
-
Sobre Blog de Octavio Islas (México)
Blog de Octavio Islas (México)
octavio-islas
ver perfil »
contacto »octavio.islas@itesm.mx
Amaia Arribas, mi infatigable compañera, estratega, consultora de todos mis días de cada jornada.
¡Sindicaliza este Blog!
Suscríbete a mi blog por medio de RSS:
La revista web Razón y Palabra, pionera en Internet entre las revistas dedicadas a temas de comunicación, en castellano, fue distinguida en diciembre de 2006 con el reconocimiento "Alas de Plata" como mejores revista web en la industria de la comunicación en México.
En mayo de 2007, Razón y Palabra fue reconocida como mejor revista web de comunicación en Iberoamérica en la Sexta Cumbre de Comunicadores, en Santo Domingo.
Real de Catorce
Bebimos y vivimos
Disco Cicatrices
Siempre he querido escuchar en la radio, esa canción que inventamos borrachos, a la salida del antro del diablo, cuando abrazabas a Diana la monja, mientras yo me carcajeaba de frío, fuera del Regis, que se nos vino a caer.
La bailarina de nuestras parrandas está llorando en la banca de un parque, como le pesa el goteo de las noches sobre esas piernas otrora divinas, mientras tú y yo arrojamos el ancla de un barco hundido, perdido, sacudido, herido de tanto huracán.
Bebimos y vivimos, de musas nos hartamos. Tocamos las costillas de nuestra muerte joven.
Bebimos y vivimos, de amigos nos rodeamos, algunos se perdieron, algunos se encontraron...
Siempre he querido escuchar en la radio, esa canción que robamos del baño de aquel cinito de cintas tres equis donde fundamos la Secretaría de Educación Arrabal de la Vida cuando la calle era destino, doble sentido: era el camino, era nuestra profesión.
Bebimos y vivimos
-
Últimos comentarios
- Reporte Indigo.com Fin de fiesta en Los Pinos, con la periodista Anabel Hernández, 3 comentarios
Amando Ramirez Morales, Amando Ramirez Morales, Fco. Jaime Morales - CIESPAL Comunicación Organizacional 2006 4 comentarios
ramon garcia, ramon garcia, Octavio Islas, [...] - Octavio Islas, Excélsior, columna Proyecto Internet, Los cibernautas mexicanos en la Web 2.0, 17 de febrero de 2009 5 comentarios
Octavio Islas, Gabriela de la Peña Astorga, Higinio Barrera-Causse, [...] - Love. The Beatles 1 comentario
- Octavio Islas, Excélsior, Columna Proyecto Internet, 10 de febrero de 2009, Cifras de Internet en México 2008 1 comentario
- Popularidad del presidente Vicente Fox en sus últimos días de gobierno (Estudios de Parametría y Consulta Mitofsky) 1 comentario
Renato Penalosa - Octavio Islas, Los retos que impone la Generación Einstein al imaginario educativo, Excélsior, columna Proyecto Internet, México, 8 de diciembre de 2008 3 comentarios
Octavio Islas, Cristi Nieto, walter cardoz - Marshall McLuhan, The Global Village 2 comentarios
Paulina LAra, alaic-internet - Historia de un anuncio (video) 1 comentario
Huit - México, Jesús Silva-Herzog Márquez, GUERRA CIVIL FRÍA 1 comentario
Fabio Andrès Quiroz Villada
- Reporte Indigo.com Fin de fiesta en Los Pinos, con la periodista Anabel Hernández, 3 comentarios
-
Fotos
-
Mis tags
-
Categorías
- Academia 2006 (29)
- Academia 2007 (98)
- Academia 2008 (10)
- Amigos, días de guardar (1)
- Análisis 2006 (61)
- Análisis 2007 (316)
- Análisis 2008 (26)
- Artículos publicados en 2005 (4)
- Artículos publicados en 2006 (34)
- Artículos publicados en 2007 (49)
- Artículos publicados en 2009 (5)
- Articulos publicados en 2008 (18)
- Boletines de prensa, notas y síntesis informativa 2006 (149)
- Boletines de prensa, notas y sintesis informativas 2008 (9)
- Boletines, notas de prensa y síntesis informativas 2007 (299)
- Caricatura (1)
- Ciudad (2)
- Comentarios (1)
- Convocatorias 2007 (83)
- Convocatorias 2008 (3)
- Denuncia 2006 (5)
- Denuncia 2007 (27)
- Denuncia 2009 (0)
- Diplomas 2004 (2)
- Diplomas 2005 (1)
- Diplomas 2006 (12)
- Documentos 2004 (1)
- Documentos 2005 (12)
- Documentos 2006 (200)
- Documentos comunicaciones digitales (114)
- El espejo electrónico (52)
- Encuestas y estudios varios (50)
- Encuestas y estudios varios 2007 (100)
- Encuestas y estudios varios 2008 (21)
- Entrevistas (35)
- Eventos varios (8)
- Frase del día (6)
- Imágenes congresos y eventos académicos (11)
- Imágenes de los días de guardar (30)
- Kevin (1)
- Libros (8)
- Mensajes (1)
- Mis palabras (12)
- Notas cortas (9)
- Palabras de Otros (52)
- Palabras de otros 2007 (28)
- Podcasts (1)
- Proyecto Internet (6)
- Radio (1)
- Reconocimientos (1)
- Reportes (5)
- Revistas y publicaciones recomendadas (118)
- Semblanza (2)
- Seminarios, congresos 2006 (112)
- Seminarios, congresos 2007 (238)
- Seminarios, congresos 2008 (37)
- Videos 2007 (35)
- Videos 2008 (9)
-
Enlaces
- Agencia Latinoamericana de Información
- Alexa
- Así se veía la web de...
- Asociación Brasileña de Relaciones Públicas (Brasil)
- Asociación Latinoamericana de Investigadores de la Comunicación (ALAIC)
- Asociación Mexicana de Comunicadores (México)
- Asociación Mundial de Radios Comunitarias
- Big Think
- Blog de Alejandro Ocampo (México)
- Blog de Alejandro Pisanty (México)
- Blog de Alejandro PisciteIli (Argentina)
- Blog de Andrés Cañizales (Venezuela)
- Blog de Carlos Scolari
- Blog de Christian Espinosa (Ecuador)
- Blog de Cibercultura (Universidad Intercontinental, México)
- Blog de Ciudad (Octavio Islas)
- Blog de Clara Luz Alvarez (México)
- Blog de Daniel Martí Pellón (España)
- Blog de Daniela Floridia (Argentina)
- Blog de Dave Winer
- Blog de Eduardo Villanueva (Perú)
- Blog de Fernando Gutiérrez
- Blog de Francisco Trejo (México)
- Blog de Gabriel Sosa Plata
- Blog de Gina Saldaña (México)
- Blog de Imagen y Comunicación Estratégica (Maestría-EGADE ITESM-CEM, México)
- Blog de Jerónimo León (Colombia)
- Blog de Jorge Hidalgo. Alfabetización en medios e hipermedios
- Blog de José Luis Orihuela (España)
- Blog de la Sociedad iberoamericana de académicos, investigadores y profesionales del periodismo en internet
- Blog de Lidia García
- Blog de Marcos Palacios (Brasil)
- Blog de Marisa Avogadro (Argentina)
- Blog de Mauricio Huitrón (México)
- Blog de Octavio Rojas (España)
- Blog de Opinión Pública (Maestría ITESM, CCM, México)
- Blog de Paul Capriotti (España)
- Blog de Paul Levinson (Estados Unidos)
- Blog de Sandra Seoane (Argentina)
- Blog de Tópicos de comunicación, política y periodismo. Maestría EGAP (ITESM CCM, México)
- Blog de Tiscar Lara (España)
- Blog del Curso de Producción Infográfica (Maestría en Comunicación, Universidad de Xalapa, México)
- Blog del Diplomado de Comunicación Empresarial Estratégica, Módulo de Comunicación Estratégica (ITESM CEM)
- Blog del seminario de ciberperiodismo (UANL, México, 2005)
- Blog fotografías Gerardo Albarrán (Sala de Prensa, México)
- Blog Generación 1979-1980, Colegio Franco Inglés
- Blog Infonomía
- Blog Pensar y Comunicar (comunicadores en Chiapas)
- Blog Seminario de Actualización Periodística (ITESM-CCM)
- Blog sobre el futuro que no fue
- Blog sobre políticas públicas de Salud en México
- Blog Tópicos de Comunicación Organizacional (Licenciatura en Comunicación, ITESM CEM)
- Blogpi.net
- Boing Boing
- Boletín Informativo Razón y Palabra
- Book search de Google
- Books.google
- Botellita de Jerez
- Brandchannel.com
- Branding Narrativo
- Buscador
- Buscador de blogs
- Buscador de e-mails
- Buscador de personas
- Buscador gráfico
- Buscador Quintura
- Calendario electoral 2007
- Cátedra Humanitas ITESM CEM
- Centro Internacional para periodistas
- Ciberperiodista
- CIESPAL (Ecuador)
- Ciranda Internacional de Información Independiente
- Citation Machine
- Consejo Nacional para la Enseñanza y la Investigación de la Comunicación (México)
- Consulta Mitofsky, México
- Convertidor de formatos
- Country Reports
- Creative Commons
- Descargas
- Descargas software
- Diccionario de la Lengua Española
- Directorio del Estado
- Documentalistas.org
- Don Pox-Pablo y Daniel
- Douglas Rushkoff
- E-marketing Blog
- Edge perspectives
- Educ.ar (Argentina)
- Edward Tufte
- El portal del periodismo y comunicación (Argentina)
- Epistemología de la comunicación
- Estadísiticas de la Blogósfera
- Estadísticas mundiales en tiempo real
- Fire Fox (navegador alternativo a Explorer)
- Flickr
- Fundación Ciencias de la Documentación
- Gameology
- Gap minder
- Gatopardo
- Google answers
- Google earth
- Grupo de Acción en Cultura de Investigación
- Grupo de Investigación en Nuevos Medios, Universidad de Santiago de Compostela, España
- IANA
- ICANN
- IFEX
- II Congreso Online Observatorio de la Cibersociedad
- Imágenes
- Indymedia Documentation Project
- Info.com
- Infoamérica (España)
- Institut National de l´Audiovisuel
- International Journal of Communications
- Internet World Stats
- Investigative reporters and editors
- Japan society for studies in Journalism and Mass Communication
- John Battelle's Searchblog
- Joost (TV digital por Internet)
- Kartoo (buscador gráfico)
- Kokone (Niños)
- La iniciativa de comunicación
- Last FM
- Libertad de Información-México
- Live Leak.com
- Localizador de personas
- Lupa Ciudadana
- Many Eyes (relaciones entre palabras)
- Marketing alternativo
- Marshall McLuhan Global Research Network
- Media Determinism in Cyberspace
- Media Ecology Association (Estados Unidos)
- Media Ecology Association, VIII Convención anual (ITESM CEM, 2007, México)
- Metabuscador
- Microblogging Twitter
- Movimiento fon
- Neil Postman Criticism in TV medium
- Neil Postman in cyberspace
- News Explorer
- News Maps
- Observatorio de la Cibersociedad
- Página web Raúl Trejo Delarbre (México)
- Plagio
- Portal de Comunicología
- Portal de la Comunicación Universidad Autónoma de Barcelona
- Portal e-lecciones.net
- Procesador de texto alternativo a Word
- Producción par a par
- Proyecto Internet (México)
- Razón y Palabra (México)
- Red de Comunicaciones Digitales
- Red de Folk Comunicación
- Red de investigadores de Internet, sociedad de la información y cibercultura (ALAIC)
- Red DirCom
- Red Iberoamericana INAV
- Reloj mundial
- Remembering Neil Postman
- Revista Question (Argentina)
- Revista Rastros (Brasil)
- Revista Zócalo
- Sala de Prensa
- Síntesis Legislativa
- Scientific Commons
- Sitio web de Fernando Gutiérrez
- Sitio web de Marcelo Manucci (Argentina)
- Smart mobs
- Sobre marcas 1
- Sobre marcas 2
- Sociedad Iberoamericana de Académicos, investigadores y profesionales del periodismo en Internet
- Space Time (3-D)
- Spy de Google
- Sticky Networks
- Taller de blogs Universidad Autónoma de Tamaulipas (Ciudad Victoria, México)
- Technological or media determinism
- Tepocatas.com
- The Center for the digital future
- The Coolhunter.com
- The Dead Media Project
- Traductor automático
- Ubudu
- Underground
- Universidad de Celaya
- Universidad de Iowa (cultura popular)
- Universidad de Texas. Knightcenter
- Universidad de Texas. Programa de Periodismo en línea
- V Bienal Iberoamericana de la Comunicación (México, ITESM CEM- 2005)
- Virtual Tourist
- Vixy.net (Para descargar videos)
- Web.info.com
- What´s next (Innovación periodística)
- Whois
- YouTube (Web broadcast)
-
Amigos
-
Secciones



Los comentarios están cerrados