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Naming Brazil's previously poor: “New middle class” as an economic, political, and experiential category
Author(s) -
Klein Charles H.,
Mitchell Sean T.,
Junge Benjamin
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
economic anthropology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2330-4847
DOI - 10.1002/sea2.12104
Subject(s) - socioeconomic status , middle class , social class , politics , poverty , inequality , sociology , consumption (sociology) , gender studies , economic growth , class (philosophy) , political science , development economics , geography , social science , demography , economics , population , law , mathematical analysis , mathematics , artificial intelligence , computer science
The early years of the twenty‐first century were historic for socioeconomic relations in Brazil. While long known for stark socioeconomic inequality, the nation became internationally celebrated for its economic growth and successful poverty‐reduction initiatives, which together propelled some 35 million “previously poor” Brazilians into what became called a “new middle class.” The apparent rise of this “new” class has generated contentious debate and a range of social science studies in Brazil; yet this literature is little known in the Anglophone academic world. While some have interpreted this demographic transformation as an expansion of the existing middle class, others have questioned the utility of income‐ or consumption‐based criteria for the category “middle class.” Drawing from ongoing research in working‐class neighborhoods in three Brazilian cities (Recife, Rio de Janeiro, and São Paulo), this article reviews and engages these important debates, examines the extent to which Brazil's class structure has changed, and presents a conceptual framework for understanding experiences of socioeconomic mobility and class subjectivities among Brazil's “previously poor.”