More Economic Equality Brings Greater Political Polarisation in Brazil
More Economic Equality Brings Greater Political Polarisation in Brazil
By Fabiana Frayssinet
RIO DE JANEIRO, Nov 8 2014 (IPS) - If I had to choose today I would stay back home, I wouldnt come to look for work here, said Josefa Gomes, who 30 years ago moved from Serra Redonda, a small town in Brazils semiarid northeast, to the city of Rio de Janeiro, 2,400 km away.
She reached that conclusion as a result of the changes she has seen in her hometown, population 7,000, during visits to her family in recent years. Everything has changed, now people have electricity, theres work in the flour mills, shoe factories, or farming cooperatives, she told IPS.
Besides, thanks to paved roads and buses that pass frequently, it only takes 40 minutes to reach Campina Grande, a city of around 400,000, from her town. It used to take over an hour, she said.
The economy of the northeast, Brazils poorest region, has been growing since the past decade at a pace much higher than the national average, which has been nearly stagnant since 2012, due to the slowdown in the traditional motor of the economy: the south.
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