Surprising News From Brasil-Millions of Immigrants Wanted

bill barilko

Senate Member
Mar 4, 2009
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Vancouver-by-the-Sea
Of course the grey shaky handed hordes on this board rarely leave the shopping mall but maybe some younger people are accidentally perusing this board and will see this post.It's surprising because it was so difficult to immigrate to Brazil in the past a friend of mine worked for Booz-Allen back in the 80's and it took all the leverage the company had to get him in for just a few years.I've often told younger people to look to the developing economies of Colombia & Brazil if they wanted opportunities outside the stifling atmosphere in Canada and I'm glad to hear it'll be easier for them now.Also Note the article is actually three pages long I've only C&P'ed one


Brazil is in the market for immigrants — millions of them


Skilled workers for Brazil's burgeoning oil and gas industry are needed. Brazil wants to attract more immigrants to help in development of the country. In this Oct. 28, 2010 file photo, an oil worker looks at a Petrobras offshore ship platform over Tupi field in Santos Bay off the coast of Rio de Janeiro.


While the United States wrangles over immigration policy, Brazil has already made up its mind about immigrants. It wants more — as many as 6 million more.

They’re needed, said Brazilian officials, to accelerate Brazil’s development.

“In a globalized world, we need not only the flow of goods and services but also the flow of minds,’’ said Brazil’s Secretary of Strategic Affairs Ricardo Paes de Barros. “We’re not after population; we’re after talent and human capital. By opening society, we can accelerate the development process.”

For a country that once prided itself on its immigrant past, Brazil now has one of the lowest rates of foreign-born citizens in the world.

“Brazil has become very, very closed to immigration,’’ said Paes de Barros. “We used to pride ourselves as a nation made by immigrants. But that just isn’t true anymore.’’

Brazil’s so-called “big migration” came in the second half of the 19th century. Between 1888 and 1929 — excluding World War I — more than 100,000 immigrants arrived annually with Italians leading the way, followed by immigrants from Portugal, Spain, Germany, the Middle East, Poland, Russia and the Ukraine. At first they came to work Brazil’s coffee plantations but then they were needed on the factory floor as Brazil rapidly industrialized.

There also was brisk migration from Japan in the 1920s and 1930s. But after that, with the aim of preserving the Brazilian identity, immigration quotas were created and the torrents of new arrivals slowed to a trickle, except for a brief spurt after World War II.

A century ago, Paes de Barros said, 7.3 percent of the Brazilian population was foreign-born. Now that figure has dropped to just .3 percent. In contrast, the 2010 U.S. Census found that nearly 13 percent of the U.S. population was foreign-born.

“We want to get up to at least 2 percent — perhaps 3 percent,’’ Paes de Barros said in a telephone interview from his office in Brasilia. With a current population estimated at 199 million, Brazil is potentially in the market for as many as 6 million immigrants.

“And it’s OK if foreigners come temporarily and then want to go back to their home countries,’’ Paes de Barros said. “We prefer to think of it as knowledge-sharing, not a brain drain.’’

Another reason more immigrants are desirable is that fertility rates have declined rapidly since the 1960s, resulting in slower population growth. Brazil is still a relatively young nation, demographically speaking, but that will start to change around 2025. At that point, people of working age will start to decline with the elderly accounting for a higher percent of the population.

Even though the number of work visas Brazil has granted foreigners has increased in recent years, the administration of President Dilma Rousseff realizes more needs to be done.

Getting a work visa can be cumbersome. It can take many months and, in some cases, as many as 19 documents must be submitted at a Brazilian consulate, said André Sacconato, research director at Brazil Investments & Business, whose acronym is BRAiN. It serves as a catalyst for the consolidation of Brazil as an international business and investment center and it has conducted studies for the government on the impact of immigration.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
119,181
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Low Earth Orbit
What? No moonbeam tree freaks lurking around looking for a meal and working for a ticket home? My how times have changed. Personally, I'd head to Chile, last I was there the Pinochet museum was hiring.
 

Nuggler

kind and gentle
Feb 27, 2006
11,596
141
63
Backwater, Ontario.
Tierra del Fuego was a rough and rugged land when we went there with a prospecting team way back in the early 60's. Still is I guess. Their government of the day was looking for anything they could find. Mostly we found high wind and rough seas.

Then a change in government necessitated a return home, quickly. Was sort of fun while it lasted.

If'n I was a youngun today, I'd head for western Canada. Lots of opportunity still there.

Being of the not particularly shakey hand, but definitely grey, guess I'll be staying home.

That's a pretty good OP, Willy. Unfortunately you colour it with your typical know nothing trolling intro. If you finally do grow up you may find a big place for yourself in journalism-----------or the corner of Jane and Finch, doing the blow jobs at which I understand you excel.

Looking forward to your next "piece"

Carry on.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
119,181
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Low Earth Orbit
I neve made it that far south in Chile. Patagonia on the Argentine side. It is like going to eastern side of the Rockies 100 years ago.
 

EagleSmack

Hall of Fame Member
Feb 16, 2005
44,168
96
48
USA
I can see this... Brazilians are settling in the US like crazy. The south side of my small town is becoming little Brazil complete with stores and restaurants catering to Brazilians... as well as the Brazilian Travel Agency that tends to pop up when the Brazilian population grows in a specific area.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
119,181
14,640
113
Low Earth Orbit
I can see this... Brazilians are settling in the US like crazy. The south side of my small town is becoming little Brazil complete with stores and restaurants catering to Brazilians... as well as the Brazilian Travel Agency that tends to pop up when the Brazilian population grows in a specific area.
Coke smugglers.
 

Timetrvlr

Electoral Member
Dec 15, 2005
196
0
16
BC interior
A friend of mine bought a modest cabin in a small fishing village south of Rio and thinks he lives in paradise on the beach. He and his wife are retired and had hoped to move there permanently but are still tied to BC's medical system for her cancer treatments. So, at the moment they are only snowbirds.

Skilled workers for Brazil's burgeoning oil and gas industry are needed. Brazil wants to attract more immigrants to help in development of the country.
From the above article. Note the word skilled, every country wants skilled labour, not the bums getting out of high school and resting on their hamburger-flipping laurels or those that major in history or music appreciation.
 

darkbeaver

the universe is electric
Jan 26, 2006
41,035
201
63
RR1 Distopia 666 Discordia
I can see this... Brazilians are settling in the US like crazy. The south side of my small town is becoming little Brazil complete with stores and restaurants catering to Brazilians... as well as the Brazilian Travel Agency that tends to pop up when the Brazilian population grows in a specific area.

Yes, well this is easily explained, they have no brains and they will help put down the next American revolution.
 

CDNBear

Custom Troll
Sep 24, 2006
43,839
207
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Ontario
Why don't they just ask the Brazilians working in Japan to come home?

Oh ya, they make way to much money and live way better, lol.
 

darkbeaver

the universe is electric
Jan 26, 2006
41,035
201
63
RR1 Distopia 666 Discordia
A friend of mine bought a modest cabin in a small fishing village south of Rio and thinks he lives in paradise on the beach. He and his wife are retired and had hoped to move there permanently but are still tied to BC's medical system for her cancer treatments. So, at the moment they are only snowbirds.

From the above article. Note the word skilled, every country wants skilled labour, not the bums getting out of high school and resting on their hamburger-flipping laurels or those that major in history or music appreciation.

Certainly there can't be an overabundance of history graduates as it seems if there were they learned absolutely nothing about the mistakes of the past or they were instructed with BS commercial generic history.