Rousseff launches signature policy for the poor

Houses made from metal sheets are a common sight in the Terra Firme slum, one of the poorest and most violent in the Brazilian state of Para. President Dilma Rousseff has launched the Brasil Sem Miseria (Brazil Without Poverty) scheme, aimed at lifting millions out of extreme poverty.

Houses made from metal sheets are a common sight in the Terra Firme slum, one of the poorest and most violent in the Brazilian state of Para. President Dilma Rousseff has launched the Brasil Sem Miseria (Brazil Without Poverty) scheme, aimed at lifting millions out of extreme poverty.

Published Jun 3, 2011

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Brasilia - President Dilma Rousseff launched an ambitious plan on Thursday to eliminate dire poverty in Brazil within four years by lifting more than 16 million people from conditions of “misery”.

The “Brazil Without Misery” programme is the signature policy of the former leftist guerrilla's first term, her advisers said, fulfilling one of the key promises she made in her campaign for the presidency last year.

Poorer voters, millions of whom benefited from rapid economic growth and an expanded anti-poverty programme under former President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, are the main electoral base for Rousseff's centre-left Workers' Party.

The announcement of the new programme in the capital Brasilia was a welcome relief for Rousseff following weeks of negative media coverage over a scandal that has tainted her chief of staff and exposed differences with her main coalition ally, the PMDB party.

The success of the Bolsa Familia family stipend programme under Lula, which helped lift about 20 million people into a thriving lower middle class, showed that cutting poverty was a crucial part of Brazil's economic success, Rousseff said at a ceremony in the capital.

“Brazil proved to the world that the best way to grow is distributing wealth,” she said, flanked by her troubled chief of staff Antonio Palocci and Vice President Michel Temer of the PMDB in an apparent show of unity.

Despite the strides Brazil has made in recent years, with brisk growth rates that have pushed it up the ranks of the world's largest economies, it still faced a “crisis” of poverty that was more serious than any financial crisis, she said.

“We can't forget that the most permanent, challenging and harrowing crisis is having chronic poverty in this country.”

The new programme aims to raise 16.2 million people above the level of extreme poverty, defined as an income of less than 70 reais ($44) per month, through a multi-pronged approach of expanded financial aid, improved education, access to water and energy, as well as job training.

The Bolsa Familia programme, which gives a monthly stipend to families based on their children's school attendance, will be expanded to another 800 000 families, officials said. The programme, which has been praised by the World Bank and copied by other developing countries, already reaches more than a quarter of Brazil's 190 million population.

Officials say poor families will also be provided with education and job training under the programme, noting that 40 percent of those in extreme poverty are under the age of 14.

Families will be able to claim Bolsa Familia payments for five children, up from three now, resulting in another 1.3 million children included in the programme.

The new anti-poverty drive will also quadruple the number of poor rural farmers who benefit from government food purchases and payments of up to 2 400 reais every six months to improve their productivity.

A separate Bolsa Verde (Green Stipend) programme will hand out 300 reais every three months to families who help to preserve forests where they live.

“It is the state arriving where the poverty is, not the poor having to seek help,” said Tereza Campello, the social development minister.

“It's a challenge implementing the policies.”

Officials did not say how much the new programme would cost.

The Bolsa Familia programme has been widely praised for its simplicity and cost-effectiveness. While critics say it creates dependency on state handouts, the programme stands in stark contrast to previous attempts in Brazil to reduce hunger that were bogged down by food distribution problems and theft. - Reuters

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