Posted on November 20, 2017

Brazil Marks Black Awareness Day Under Racism Cloud

Louis Genot, AFP, November 20, 2017

Brazil promotes itself as a harmonious blend of races, but the reality as the country celebrates Black Awareness Day on Monday is that the darker your skin, the less chance you have of getting ahead.

The numbers are hard to ignore.

According to the state statistics office, only about five percent of management jobs are held by non-whites, who account for 54 percent of the population, according to the latest census.

Among the richest 10 percent of Brazilians, 70 percent are white. Among the poorest 10 percent, 74 percent are black. Blacks are also hard to find in prominent media jobs or in fashion.

These inequalities are highlighted in a video called “White Privilege Game” published by the anti-racism group ID_BR that has received 1.2 million views so far on Facebook and been aired on several television programs.

Based on an original version created by BuzzFeed in the United States, the video shows a contest where participants have to take steps back or forward from the starting line depending on how they answer questions about their color or wealth — or if they have been the target of racist remarks about their hair.

In highly graphic form, the process shows how people get a head start, or are held back. Inevitably it’s blacks who end up at the back of the line.

Affirmative action

“White privilege means getting a whole range of advantages over others without even realizing,” said Giovana Freitas, a historian at Rio Federal State University.

A survey from the Institut Locomotiva, which studies poverty, found that black men with university degrees in Brazil earn about 29 percent less than white men with the same qualification, while the figure was 27 percent for black women.

“If blacks earned the same salaries as whites, there’d be 808 million reais ($247 million) injected into the economy,” said Locomotiva president Renato Meirelles.

There have been positive changes over the last decade and a half as the effects of racial quotas at universities, introduced by the leftist government at the time, take effect.

The proportion of non-whites entering higher education has risen from eight percent to 27 percent.

“All these policies of affirmative action have started to produce results,” said Esteban Cipriano, who manages education programs at ID_BR.

The problem is what happens after.

“These people with degrees then have a really hard time on the jobs market,” Cipriano said.

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