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South America

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South

America

By: Tiffany Byers

Rachel Backman

Jeremy Petrous

Anthony Leo

Guyana

Population

 767,245 people (est. 2006)



 Growth Rate 0.3%



 Largest City of Guyana is Georgetown

with 227,700 people.

Age Distribution

 0-14 years: 26.2%

(male

102,551/female

98,772)

 15-64 years: 68.6% Age Distribution

5%

(male

26%

265,193/female

260,892)

 65 years and over: 0-14

15-64

5.2% (male 65+

17,043/female

22,794) 69%

Geography

Geographic Size

 214,969 square kilometers or …

 83,000 square miles



 Guyana is approximately the same

size as Idaho.

Population Density

 9.1 people per square mile

 3.6 people per square km

Gender Distribution of

Workforce

 The economic and political spheres are

dominated by men.

 There are few women in the government.

 There has been a woman President.

 Women play significant roles as farmers,

market vendors, teachers, nurses, civil

servants, and clerks.

 In the past few years, more women have

been attending college and girls have been

out performing boys on regional exams.

Type of Political

System



Republic

Executive Branch

President: Bharrat Jagdeo

Prime Minister: Samuel Hinds

Legislative Branch

Judicial Branch

Ethnic Groups





7%

7% East Indian



Black



50%

Amerindian

36%

White,Chinese,

or Mixed

Major Religous Systems



60

50

50



40 35

%









30



20

10

10 5



0

Christian Hindu Islam Other



Religous Group

Language/Currency

 Official Language is English

 Some: Amerindian Dialects, Creole,

Hindi, and Urdu.



 The Official Currency is Guyanese

Dollar.

 1 U.S. dollar = 200.94 Guyanese

dollars

Life Expectancy

 Overall life expectancy is 62

 Males is 61



 Females is 64

Adult Literacy

 Male average is 99%

 Female average is 98.2%







 10 years of Compulsory Schooling

 27 Students/Teacher in Guyana vs. 15

Students/Teacher in U.S

Economy

 Per Capita Income:$4,700

 GDP (PPP): $3.62 Billion



 GDP earned by Major Sectors:

– Agriculture: 35.5%

– Industries: 19.3%

– Services: 45.2%

Economical Trends:

Guyana

1. Guyana is the most liberalized market in the

Caribbean

 removed most non-tariff barriers

 highest tariff rate in 1998 was 20%

 Guyana has a top corporate tax rate of 35%.

An additional 10% is applied to profits of

commercial companies

Economical Trends:

Guyana

2. Guyana receives economic aid

– $84 Million from Economic Aid Recipient

– $253 Million from Heavily Indebt Poor

Country Initiative (HIPCI)

– Guyana’s economy has grown rapidly in

the past seven years. The major sources

of growth came mainly from forestry,

gold, bauxite, sugar, rice and fishing.

Economic Trends:

Guyana

3. The Guyanese economy has

deteriorated under government

management policies.

 Members of the ruling People's



National Congress (PNC) political

party were placed in managerial

positions, removing former managers

and clerical workers.

Social Trends in

Guyana

1. Less people have AIDS than in the past

– In 2001, the prevalence rate for AIDS in adults

was 2.7%

– In 2003, the prevalence rate for AIDS dropped to

2.5%

2. The annual suicide rates in the Guaraní went

from 121.5 per 100,000 population for males in

2000 to 113.2 in 2005 and from 63.7 per

100,000 population for females in 2000 to 59.1 in

2005

3. Infant mortality rates have lowered in recent

years

1. The political climate in Guyana is insecure after the 1997

December elections because the PPC/Civic coalition won a second

consecutive victory even though they were accused of electoral

fraud.

2. There are two main political parties in the Guyana

government: the PPP and the PNC. The PNC was started in

1957 when it broke away from the PPP to start its own party.



3. Guyana’s political relationship with Cuba used to be very close

in the 1970s and early 1980s. But after the U.S. invasion of

Grenada, Guyana distanced itself from Cuba fearing U.S.

intervention in Guyana. Currently, the relations with Cuba have

been cordial but not close.

Technological Trends:

Guyana

1. There were 60.1085 televisions per 1000 people in

2003

 There were 55 televisions per 1000 people in

1997

2. There were 548.817 radios per 1000 people in

2003

 There were 498 radios per 1000 people in 1997

3. There were 133.856 telephones per 1000 people in

2006

 There were 79 telephones per 1000 people in

1997

Brazil

Population



 2006 = 188 million people

 2050 = 260 million people

 1.04% growth rate

 1991 = 2.7 births per woman

 2004 = 2.3 births per woman

 # of elderly people 70+ is on the rise

 20.1 people per sq. km

Age Distribution

 0-14 years: 25.8% (male

24,687,656/female

23,742,998)

 15-64 years: 68.1% (male

63,548,331/female 64,617,539)

 65 years and over: 6.1% (male



4,712,675/female 6,769,028)

Geography

•5th largest country in the world and largest

in Latin America

•Size of U.S. excluding Alaska

•Brazil total area 8,511,965 sq km

•U.S. total area 9,826,630 sq km

•184,184,264 people in 2005

•Demographic Density is low – 80% live

within 200 miles of Atlantic Coast

•21.5 people per square km

•2.1 children per woman

•Style of development doesn’t favor

incorporation of women in the economy

•Brazilian women are paid less than

similarly qualified men.

•Brazilian women are disproportionately

concentrated in the lowest-paying economic

sectors

•Largest single job for women is domestic

servant

Political System

 Brazil is a federal republic w/26 states and 1

federal district

 Capital = Brasilia

 Each state is technically autonomous w/ a

legislative body and an elected government

 The President is the head of the states and

government

 Voting is universal and compulsory for ages 18-

70

 Voluntary voting is allowed for 16-17 year olds

and those over 70

Ethnic Groups

White (53.7%)





Mulatto (38.5%)





Black (6.2%)





Japanese/Arab/A

meridian (0.9%)

Other (0.7%)

 Largest Catholic country in the world

– 73% is Catholic, but mostly by tradition, not by faith







 Catholic Church and state have very

close relationship



 Catholic Holidays are public holidays

•Federal Government supports religious educational

institutes

Interior of Brazil is “folk Catholic” (includes beliefs and practices

long abandoned in cities)



•Varies from rural to urban cities

•The faithful take vows to make a pilgrimage to honor

the saint who fulfilled their request (like a recovery

from an illness or getting a job). Then they will offer

the saint a carved likeness of the body part that was

cured.

•African religions also in Brazil due to slaves and

protestant nations.

•Candomblé is most well-known, and is centered

in Salvador

Originated from West Africa



•Pentecostal churches becoming popular now, as

well as charismatic Catholicism

Language







 Official Language = Portuguese

 English, German, and French are

popular 2nd languages

Health

 Life expectancy = 71 years old

 60% of population depends on

public health care system

 Excellent medical care is available

in the cities to those who can afford

it

Education

 Adult Literacy rate = 86.4%

 11 years of schooling is required

Economy

Per capita income GDP (purchasing power

parity)

 Brazil = $8,600 = $1.616 trillion

Major Sectors

 Guyana = $4,700= $3.62 billion agriculture: 8%

 U.S. = $43,500 = $12.98 trillion industry: 38%

services: 54%

Currency

 1 Brazil real = 0.45634 U.S. dollars



 1 U.S. dollar = 2.19132 reals

Economical Trends:

Brazil

1. Brazil launched an initiative to make Northeastern

states more prosperous, like southern states

(want to elevate economies to same level)

2. Trying to get tourism rates to increase in the

Northeast by a “brand identity” with their

beaches, natural beauty, culture, and historic

cities

3. Realized that fruits were an untapped resource

and had potential for a major export industry.

Now expanding market to North America.

Social Trends: Brazil





 Mean heights at ages 7 and 22 are

estimated for three group of males and

females born around 1952, 1967 and

1982

 Modest height gains of around 1.0 cm

per decade

Social Trends: Brazil



 The public health care sector is moving

toward the purchaser-driven stage and

away from the provider-driven stage.

– Provider-driven is where quality is assumed

– Purchaser-driven is where quality is ignored

 Private sector is moving toward consumer-

driven

– Quality is demanded

1. Since the end of military rule in 1985, unionization,

collective bargaining, and frequent strikes have become

commonplace among federal employees in all three

branches.



2. Prior to 1932, the national code didn’t allow women to

vote. In 1932, the new national election code allowed women

to vote in the May 1933 elections for the 1934 Constituent

Assembly.



3. From 1945 to 1979, presidents had five-year terms.

Following President Figueiredo's six-year term, the 1988

constitution again set the term at five years, but the 1994

constitutional revision reduced the mandate to four years.

Technological Trends





1. Brazil has become one of the world's most prominent

battlegrounds of the Microsoft Windows versus Linux war

 Linux is based on open source code that users can study and

modify (as opposed to Microsoft's proprietary software). Brazil's

government and citizens are moving towards Linux

 In 2004 alone, 15 federal organizations adopted Linux. Saved

US$11.8 million in licensing fees. The government estimates

further switchovers could save up to $84 million.

Technological Trends:

Brazil

2. Brazil is moving away from their

dependence upon imported energy

sources and moving towards bringing

digital technologies to Brazil.

3. Brazil is trying to develop modern

health care services by importing

much technology.

The flag was designed by a painter named Decio Vilares.



The white strip contains the inscription "Ordem e Progresso",

meaning "Order and Progress. "

 "Brazilian Flag." Log on and Learn. 17 Feb. 2007

.

 "Brazil." Ita. 17 Feb. 2007

.

 "Brazil." Technology. 18 Feb. 2007

.

 "Brazil." The Word Factbook. 17 Feb. 2007

.

 "Developing Countries Can Capitalize on Global Economic Trends." Consult. 18

Feb. 2007 .

 "Economic Situation and Prospects." Guyana. 17 Feb. 2007

.

 "Guyana." Encyclopedia Britannica. 18 Feb. 2007

.

 "Guyana Facts and Figures." Carribeanlime Travel Services USA. 18 Feb. 2007

.

 "Health Care Trends in Brazil and Other Latin American Countries." 18 Feb. 2007

.

 "Latin American Research Reviews." JSTOR. 17 Feb. 2007

.

 "Media Statistics." NationMaster.Com. 18 Feb. 2007

.

 "Medical Technology and Developing Countries: the Case of Brazil." PubMed.

18 Feb. 2007

.

 "Secular Growth Trends in Brazil Over Three Decades." PubMed. 17 Feb.

2007

.

 "The Guyana Economy: an Overview." Investment Guide. 17 Feb. 2007

.

 "THE STATE OF ECONOMIC FREEDOM IN GUYANA." 18 Feb. 2007

.

 "Trends." The Communication Initiative. 17 Feb. 2007

.



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