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Over 27 Million Brazilians Unemployed, Under-Employed

Over 27 Million Brazilians Unemployed, Under-Employed
Over 27 Million Brazilians Unemployed, Under-Employed

The number of unemployed people in Brazil, or individuals in informal employment, which doesn’t meet the country’s monthly minimum wage, reached a whopping 27.6 million during the second quarter of 2018. The figures place the country’s unemployment rate at 24.6% of the total population, according to the National Household Sample Survey.

The figures, which were published by the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics, are primarily unchanged from those published in the first quarter of the year, Telesurtv reported.

The largest percentage of Brazil’s underutilized workforce was registered in the northeastern states of Piaui (40.6%); Maranhao (39.7%); and Bahia (39.7%). Unemployment also peaked in northeastern states: Amapa (21.3%); Alagoas (17.3%); Pernambuco (16.9%); Sergipe (16.8%); and Bahia (16.5%).

Last July, the government of senate-imposed president Michel Temer approved sweeping labor reforms intended to “modernize” labor laws.

Unions and workers’ organizations have widely criticized the reforms. The technical director of the Inter-Union Department of Socioeconomic Statistics and Studies, Clamente Ganz Lucio, said the change “creates mechanisms to legalize practices that make work precarious, reduce or impede union protection, and leave the worker exposed to the coercion of businesses in the definition of their rights,” according to Prensa Latina.

President of the Brazilian Lawyer’s Order, Claudio Lamachia, said the reform “attacks the federal constitution and the normative regulatory system and intends to create subclasses of workers with few rights, on precarious contracts.”

Last year Temer’s administration also cut 70% of the budget dedicated to combating slave labor, according to Pragmatismo Politico.

Surveillance authorities tasked with rooting out child exploration and work analogous with slavery have reached its lowest number of inspectors in 20 years.

 

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