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  • Brazil’s economy is changing, and its people are changing with it. Over the past decade,

  • more than 40 million Brazilian citizens have entered the middle class. This emerging class,

  • known asClass C”, currently makes up more than half of the population, and wields

  • significant power. So, what is Brazil’s Class C? And how is it changing Brazil?

  • Well, Brazil’s socioeconomic classes are rigidly structured based on monthly income.

  • The classes are ranked from A to E, and were originally used as descriptors for marketing

  • research. The wealthiest group, Class A, earns more than $3,365 [USD] per month, while the

  • poorest, Class E, earns less than $336.50. And in between, youve got Class C making

  • between $700 to $1,700 per month.

  • That may not seem like middle class material in the United States or Europe, but in Brazil

  • it’s pretty substantial. Brazil’s income inequality has been staggeringly high. Were

  • talking apartheid-like conditions where the poor living in favelas and the wealthy in

  • the city. The newmiddle classstatus has given Brazil’s previously poor residents

  • considerably more say as consumers and citizens.

  • Advertisers have taken notice of the C classnew spending power and are heavily targeting

  • them. In recent years, theyve focused less on celebrity or luxury, and more on hard work

  • and life lessons. The emerging middle class is also outspending their wealthier counterparts

  • through sheer size alone. One mall in Rio De Janeiro has attributed half of its sales

  • to Class C shoppers. Across the board; housing, cars, electronics and clothes are financially

  • dominated by Brazil’s growing middle class.

  • But, not everyone is excited about the new spenders. Some of the country’s wealthier

  • residents have blasted the influx of this new middle class into previously exclusive

  • activities, like tourism.

  • Brazil’s economic upturn has been largely credited to ex-President Lula da Silva. His

  • social welfare programs and fiscally responsible spending turned Brazil into the 8th largest

  • economy in the world. Between 2003 and 2014, the lower D and E classes shrunk by nearly

  • 50 million to about half their original size. And the new policies widely increased standards

  • of living and disposable income for the lower classes. The changing face of Brazil’s economy

  • could be a huge step in easing long standing social tensions between classes.

  • Over on AJ+, we investigated the dreadful conditions in Brazil’s favelas in more detail,

  • take a look at our video here. Thank you for watching TestTube, don’t forget to subscribe!

Brazil’s economy is changing, and its people are changing with it. Over the past decade,

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崛起的中產階級如何改變巴西? (How The Rising Middle Class Is Changing Brazil)

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    Shuo Gao 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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