BRASIL 8.511.966 km 2. The Flag The President: LULA Da Silva.
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Transcript of BRASIL 8.511.966 km 2. The Flag The President: LULA Da Silva.
BRASIL
8.511.966 km8.511.966 km22
The Flag
The President: LULA Da Silva
5 Regions – 27 States
39% think that Spanish is the national language
23% think the capital is Buenos Aires
67% of Americans say Brazil is their third “preferred country”, after Canada (90%) and Japan (78%)
Source: MRE/BID, USA 1999 - National Opinion Research Center (NORC) / ©Anthropos Consulting
What others think about Brazil?
190 million habitants45 million families 3,4 people/family
Source: IBGE – Pesquisa Nacional por Amostra de Domicílios – PNAD – 20 de julho de 2000 / © Anthropos Consulting
Population
Brazil – Year 2007
Population Profile
26
15171111
2027
3637
5347
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
M W AB C DE 0/9 10/14 15/19 20/29 30/39 40 +
Top 5 Countries by Population
1.322.000
1.130.000
303.092234.694
190.011
0
200.000
400.000
600.000
800.000
1.000.000
1.200.000
1.400.000
China India USA Indonesia Brazil
A Country of Huge Dimensions
. 5th in Population . 5th in Population
. 5th in Territorial Extension . 5th in Territorial Extension
. 11th largest GDP. 11th largest GDP
. Greater São Paulo = volume of . Greater São Paulo = volume of economy similar to all of Argentina’s economy similar to all of Argentina’s. State of São Paulo = volume of . State of São Paulo = volume of economy similar to all of Mexico’s economy similar to all of Mexico’s. 35+ million under age 10. 35+ million under age 10
SalvadorSalvador
ManausManaus
BrasíliaBrasília
BelémBelém
FortalezaFortaleza
GoiâniaGoiânia
São PauloSão PauloCuritibaCuritiba
Porto AlegrePorto Alegre
Rio de JaneiroRio de Janeiro
Belo HorizonteBelo Horizonte
Poor: 32 million or 8,86 million families
Middle Class: 119 million or 32 million
families
Rich: 16,7 million
Source: IBGE - “Síntese Nacional dos Indicadores Sociais” – 28 de abril de 2000 / © Anthropos Consulting
Distribution of Income
Brazil – Year 2000
School Attendance:95,7% of children (7-14 yr)76,5% of youth (15-17 yr) (59.7% in ‘92)
Average Brazilian spends 7 years in school
64% of employees haven’t finished elementary school
Source: MEC/Inep/IBGE/Simonsen Associados in Brasil em Exame 2000 / ©Anthropos Consulting
Education
Brazil – Year 2000
Fertility rate dropped from 4,35 children/woman in 1980 to 2,52 in 1995
Retirees: total number grew from 15,8 to 18,9 million during 1994-99
Source: IBGE - “Síntese Nacional dos Indicadores Sociais” – 28 de abril de 2000 / ©Anthropos Consulting
Other StatisticsOther Statistics
Brazil – Year 2000
524599,8
508,9460,6
505,4
599,7
732,1784,5
1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006
in billions of dollars
Source: Banco Central/IBGE/Simonsen Associados in Brasil em Exame 2000
GDP fluctuationGDP fluctuation
309
14,3 8,8 7,5 1,818,5 9,5 9,9 22,9
6,7
94 95 96 97 98 99 '00 '01 '02 '03*
%%
Source: FGV/Simonsen Associados in Brasil em Exame 2000 e Agência Estado/FGV
InflationInflation
*thru Sep.
Real vs. DollarReal vs. Dollar
0,4
9,1 8,0
18,5
36,0
Estimate of formal employment in ‘99 - in millions
Source: Simonsen Associados in Brasil em Exame 2000
4,3 milion companies in
operation in 99
Companies X Jobs Generated
“Unemployment in Brazil grew from 4,4%
in Jan. 95 to 7,6% in Jan. 2000.”
Source: Exame 04/2000
“41 out 69 million working Brazilians work
in the informal market”.Source: FGV/IBGE
Unemployment
One in four ends in divorce - 12% more
than in 1991
More that 15 million divorced families
A recent research shows that 44% believe
divorce is a good solution for a troubled
marriage
Marriage
Source: Veja, 10/01/96, Ricardo Grinbaum
79% Family
75% Work
68% Study
49% Religion
26% Money
10% RecreationSource: Pesquisa Datafolha - “Relatório Folha da Utopia Brasileira” - Folha de São Paulo - 23 de abril de 2000 / ©Anthropos Consulting
What Brazilians will value in upcoming years?
5,000,000
10,000,000
15,000,000
20,000,000
25,000,000
30,000,000
35,000,000
40,000,000
45,000,000
50,000,000
55,000,000
Tota
l Pro
testa
nts
1980 1982
1984 1986
1988 1990
1992 1994
1996 1998
2000 2002
2004 2006
2008 2010
1980-1991 1992-2000 2001-2010 (projection)
PROTESTANTS IN BRAZIL
Seaor Amostra
Sepal Depto. de Pesquisas - 1993de Domicilios - 1988
e Censo de 1980 Source: IBGE--2000, 1991 and 1908 Census Sepal 2003 - <[email protected]>
Protestants tripling in 30 yearsProtestants tripling in 30 years
Sources: SEPAL, IBGESources: SEPAL, IBGE
However, growth hasn’t been uniform.
Protestants / State less than 10 %
10 to 15 %
15 to 20 %
more than 20 %Sepal 2003 - (11)5523-2544<[email protected]>
BRAZIL 2002
PercentProtestantin each state
Sourece: IBGE--2000 & 1991 Census figures year 2002 - projection
The Northeast is Brazil’s neediest regionThe Northeast is Brazil’s neediest region
Half of Brazil’sIndian tribesalso remainunreached.
The 258 Brazilian Indian Tribesand the Advance of the Gospel
TR-503
Source: AMTB (indigenous Database)
113
8
121
No protestant missionary
presence
No protestant missionary
presence
Tribes with a church andautochthonous leadership
Tribes with a church andautochthonous leadership
Work inprogress
Work inprogress
16Situationunknown
Situationunknown
Cáceres2100 pessoas/igreja
Rondonópolis2500 pessoas/igreja
Cuiabá1300 pessoas/igreja
BRAZIL
Borborema, PB2400 people/church
Mata Paraibana 2300 people/church
Matinhas6000people/church
Uruaçu1700people/church
Anápolis1100people/church
São Paulo2900 people/church
Londrina1200 people/church
How many people arethere for each churchto evangelize?
Rio de J aneiro2000 people/church
Northeast Region15,000 rural communitieswithout churches
Amazon Region35,000 river communitieswithout igrejas
Sepal -1998 <[email protected]>
At least 125,000 new churches need to be plantedin the first decade of the 21st Century.
0
500
1000
1500
2000
2500
3000
1989 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002
Furlough
Active
880880
28032803
MB-504Ted Limpic Sepal 2002 www.sepal.org.br
Brazilian Cross-cultural MissionariesActive & On Furlough 1989-2002
Ted Limpic Sepal 2002 www.sepal.org.br MB-511
Who Is Sending Out Brazilian Missionaries?
Internacional Agencies with
Brazilian Leadership17%
Brazilian Agencies25%
Denominational Boards
37%
Local Churches10%
International Agencies
11%
The different types of sending structures and the number of missionaries they send
Comibam 2002
Ted Limpic Sepal 2002 www.sepal.org.br MB-518
Theological Posture of Brazilian Missionary Organizations
2 1
12
935
54
795
28 860
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
Number of Organizations Number of Missionaries
Independent
Traditional
Inter-denominational
Pentecostal
Comibam 2002
Ted Limpic Sepal 2002 www.sepal.org.br MB-513
1917 1927 1937 1947 1957 1967 1977 1987 19970
5
10
15
20
25
When Were The Brazilian Missionary Organizations Founded?
Comibam 2002Years when Brazilian missionary organizations were founded
Ted Limpic Sepal 2002 www.sepal.org.br MB-516
Single Women15%
Single Men
6%Married79%
Brazilian Missionaries: Married - Single
Comibam 2002
Percentage of Brazilian missionaries who are married or single
More than 3 Yrs50%
Less than 1 Yr7%
Ted Limpic Sepal 2002 www.sepal.org.brMB-502
How Long Are Brazilian Missionaries Staying On The Field?
Comibam 2002
From 1 to 3 Yrs43%
Brazilian missionaries and how long they have been on the field
624
184
179
172
119
108
92
90
78
76
62
60
59
0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700
Brazil
USA
Bolivia
Paraguay
Argentina
Peru
Mozambique
Portugal
Spain
Guinea Bissau
Venezuela
Uruguay
Japan
Ted Limpic Sepal 2002 www.sepal.org.br MB-517
Countries Where The Largest Number Of Brazilian Missionaries Are Serving
Comibam 2002
Number of missionariesserving cross-culturally
1434
407
303
195
159
102
29
24
17
2
0 200 400 600 800 1000 1200 1400 1600
South America
Africa
Europe
North America
Asia
Middle East
Eurasia
Mexico/Central America
Caribbean
Pacific
Ted Limpic Sepal 2002 www.sepal.org.br MB-514
On Which Continents Are Brazilian Missionaries Serving?
Comibam 2002Number of Brazilian missionaries serving by region of the world
Ted Limpic Sepal 2002 www.sepal.org.br MB-512
Where Are Brazilian Missionaries Serving?
Comibam 2002
Within Brazil23%
Ibero-America37%
Rest of World24%
10/40 Window16%
Regions where Brazilian missionaries are working cross-culturally
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
16
1989 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002
5%5%
16%16%% of active missionaries who serve inside the
10-40 Window
% of active missionaries who serve inside the
10-40 Window
Brazilian Missionariesand the 10-40 Window
1989-2002
MB-503Ted Limpic Sepal 2002 www.sepal.org.br
0
500
1000
1500
2000
2500
1989 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002
Inside
Outside
Brazilian Cross-cultural MissionariesWorking Inside & Outside of Brazil
1989-2002
MB-501Ted Limpic Sepal 2000 www.sepal.org.br
Ted Limpic Sepal 2002 www.sepal.org.br MB-001