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NEWS FROM BRAZIL supplied by SEJUP (Servico Brasileiro de Justica e Paz).
Number 513, July 16, 2004
This week´s edition of SEJUP focuses on the issue of unemployment in
Brazil.
Mobilization in Defense of Employment/Work:
“We are experiencing the greatest social crisis in the history of Brazil
because of the high rate
of unemployment caused mainly by the economic policies of the federal
government, according to economist José Carlos de Assis, coordinator of
the movement “Unemployment Zero”.
July 12-17 has been designated as the week for manifestations in favor of
employment and protests against the policies of Brazil´s Finance
Minister, Antonio Palocci.
The Coordination of Social Movements (CMS) of the campaign, “Brazil
Wants Work”, is organizing manifestations and protests in dozens of
cities, prepared by each region of the country. Mauro Cruz, coordinator of
the Movement of Unemployed Workers
(MTD) states
that unemployment was chosen as the theme because it affects all sectors
of society.
According to him, “It is a question that unites students and union
workers, as well as those who are landless or homeless”.
The latest statistics from the Brazilian Institute of Statistics and
Geography (IGBE) indicate an unemployment rate of 12% in Brazil. The
Greater São Paulo region has an unemployment
rate of 19.7% (or 2,000,044 persons unemployed). Even with the creation
of some new jobs,
statistics show that businesses are contracting workers at lower salaries
and, in 75% of the cases, without registration of the official working
card. Thus, workers have little or no guarantees or rights working in
these precarious situations.
The Workers´ Center (CUT) has designated July 16 has the National Day of
Struggle and Mobilization for Change in Economic Policies”. Joining with
the protests of the Coordination of Social Movements, CUT is having
protest marches, strikes, and encampments of the unemployed in 14 states.
The platform of demands includes: economic growth for workers, generation
of jobs, higher salaries, maintenance of worker rights, just distribution
of income, public service of quality, reduction of high interest rates,
agrarian reform, and rejection of the Free Trade Act of the Americas.
Social Movements and many economists are convinced that only a large
transformation in the country´s economic policy will revert the quadrant
of the current social crisis. Mauricio Andrade, the executive coordinator
of the non-governmental organization, ‘Citizenship Action’, states
that “A mobilization will demand the creation of an effective policy in
the areas of agrarian reform and urban employment. In both cases, it is
necessary to rethink and discuss these questions, as well as the external
debt”. According to Antonio Carlos Spis, the communication secretary of
CUT, “the National Day of Struggle wants to change the way that the
government conducts the economy, guaranteeing an allocation of resources
for social investments”. For Spis, mobilizations constitute a necessary
element to help the government to break with conservative sectors of
society. Assis agrees and states that, within the current political
conjuncture, the unemployment situation will only change with the
mobilization of society. According to Andrade, “We will transform this
country only when civil society is heard and respected by authorities.
.
A national registration of the unemployed is being taken by Citizenship
Action and the Coordination of Social Movements to help organize and widen
their level of participation in the defense of their rights. One objective
of the registration is to register the greatest possible number of
unemployed throughout the country in order to pressure businesses and
public powers. Assis believes that the registration of unemployed is a
wonderful idea. “It can have the same effect for the urban excluded as
the Landless Movement (MST) has had for rural workers”. The registration
will be complete by September 7, the date of the annual “Cry of the
Excluded”
national march.
Source: Luis Brasilino and Lauro Veiga Filho
Brasil de Fato, July 8-14, 2004
The reproduction of this material is permitted as long as the source is
cited.
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