Country facts:
| Flag: |
 |
| Area: |
8,511,965 sq km |
| Population: |
184,101,109 |
| Languages: |
Portuguese (official), Spanish, English, Frenc |
| Currency: |
real (BRL) |
| Climate: |
mostly tropical, but temperate in south |
Brazil
Brazil country information
Brazil is the only Latin American nation that derives its language and
culture from Portugal. The native inhabitants mostly consisted of the
nomadic Tupí-Guaraní Indians. Adm. Pedro Alvares Cabral claimed the
territory for Portugal in 1500. The early explorers brought back a wood
that produced a red dye, pau-brasil, from which the land received its
name. Portugal began colonization in 1532 and made the area a royal
colony in 1549.
During the Napoleonic Wars, King João VI, fearing the advancing French
armies, fled Portugal in 1808 and set up his court in Rio de Janeiro.
João was drawn home in 1820 by a revolution, leaving his son as regent.
When Portugal tried to reimpose colonial rule, the prince declared
Brazil's independence on Sept. 7, 1822, becoming Pedro I, emperor of
Brazil. Harassed by his Parliament, Pedro I abdicated in 1831 in favor
of his five-year-old son, who became emperor in 1840 (Pedro II). The
son was a popular monarch, but discontent built up, and in 1889,
following a military revolt, he abdicated. Although a republic was
proclaimed, Brazil was ruled by military dictatorships until a revolt
permitted a gradual return to stability under civilian presidents.
President Wenceslau Braz cooperated with the Allies and declared war on
Germany during World War I. In World War II, Brazil again cooperated
with the Allies, welcoming Allied air bases, patrolling the South
Atlantic, and joining the invasion of Italy after declaring war on the
Axis powers.
After a military coup in 1964, Brazil had a series of military
governments. Gen. João Baptista de Oliveira Figueiredo became president
in 1979 and pledged a return to democracy in 1985. The election of
Tancredo Neves on Jan. 15, 1985, the first civilian president since
1964, brought a nationwide wave of optimism, but when Neves died
several months later, Vice President José Sarney became president.
Collor de Mello won the election of late 1989, pledging to lower
hyperinflation with free-market economics. When Collor faced
impeachment by Congress because of a corruption scandal in Dec. 1992
and resigned, Vice President Itamar Franco assumed the presidency.
A former finance minister, Fernando Cardoso, won the presidency in the
Oct. 1994 election with 54% of the vote. Cardoso sold off inefficient
government-owned monopolies in the telecommunication, electrical power,
port, mining, railway, and banking industries.
In Jan. 1999, the Asian economic crisis spread to Brazil. Rather than
prop up the currency through financial markets, Brazil opted to let the
currency float, which sent the real plummeting?at one time as much as
40%. Cardoso was highly praised by the international community for
quickly turning around his country's economic crisis. Despite his
efforts, however, the economy continued to slow throughout 2001, and
the country also faced an energy crisis. The IMF offered Brazil an
additional aid package in Aug. 2001. And in Aug. 2002, to ensure that
Brazil would not be dragged down by neighboring Argentina's
catastrophic economic problems, the IMF agreed to lend Brazil a
phenomenal $30 billion over fifteen months.
In Jan. 2003, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, a former trade union leader
and factory worker widely known by the name Lula, became Brazil's first
working-class president. As leader of Brazil's only socialist party,
the Workers' Party, Lula pledged to increase social services and
improve the lot of the poor. But he also recognized that a distinctly
non-socialist program of fiscal austerity was needed to rescue the
economy. The president's first major legislative success was a plan to
reform the country's debt-ridden pension system, which operated under
an annual $20 billion deficit. Civil servants staged massive strikes
opposing this and other reforms, and Lula's popularity temporarily
slid. But while public debt and inflation remain a problem in 2004,
Brazil's economy showed signs of growth and unemployment was down.
Polls in Aug. 2004 demonstrated that the majority of Brazilians
supported Lula's tough economic reform efforts.