Urban Demographics

Structured Procrastination on Cities, Transport Policy, Spatial Analysis, Demography, R

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

The servant "problem" in Brazil

Gaping income inequalities; limited education for the masses; a long tradition of domestic service: Brazil at the turn of the 21st century bore striking similarities to 1880s Britain. But in the past decade Brazil’s professional classes have burgeoned and a lower-middle class—25m new consumers—has sprung into being. Most Brazilian children now go to secondary school and the country’s north-east, long its poorest region, has become its fastest-growing
[...]
In the past four years the workforce in São Paulo’s metropolitan area rose by 11% and average wages by 8%. But the number of domestics fell by 4%—and their wages rose by 21%.
[...]
Britain has passed through the servant problem that Brazil is now experiencing. So what can Britain tell Brazil of life on the other side? That service does not die, but is reborn in a different form.

So, basically, it is not a problem. People with more education are an important part of what makes a developed country. And it implies more expensive labour force. (via LMonasterio)







[image credit: The Economist]
Rafael H M Pereira
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