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Bolsa Família

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Pigmonster64 (talk | contribs) at 15:59, 4 December 2022 (fix mistakes). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

i love men so should you

[18:07]SharkGuy13: this fortnite event might be poggers 4 December 2022 pigmonster64

started a call that lasted 3 hours.
— Today at 06:28

[10:10]pigmonster64: we won a gaim [10:11]Torrek: i'm at 28gbs btw [10:14]pigmonster64: what percenyt [10:15]Torrek: i have done 32gb and it's at 39% [10:15]pigmonster64: ok [10:15]Torrek: but it's only 38gbs [10:16]SharkGuy13: how mush gb u got left [10:16]Torrek: 4.5 [10:26]pigmonster64: is it done [10:26]Torrek: yse [10:26]Torrek: yes* pigmonster64

started a call.
— Today at 10:26

jaycon5000

left the group.
— Today at 10:27

SharkGuy13

added 

jaycon5000

to the group.
— Today at 10:27

jaycon5000

left the group.
— Today at 10:27

[10:27]SharkGuy13: yes he finally left [10:27]pigmonster64: l [10:27]pigmonster64: YES [10:27]pigmonster64: WHEN] SharkGuy13

added 

jaycon5000

to the group.
— Today at 11:19

[11:27]PiGEPON: brb ima play fn [12:31]pigmonster64: Bolsa Familia [12:33]Torrek: Bolsa Familia is good [12:37]PiGEPON: [12:50]pigmonster64: hey this is microsoft support and it seams someone is trying to accses your account reply with your login deatails so we can help [12:50]pigmonster64: reply = vbucks [12:50]Torrek: 1234helloT NEW [12:52]Torrek: Bolsa Família currently gives families with per-capita monthly income below $140 BRL (poverty line, ~US$56) a monthly stipend of $32 BRL (~US$13) per vaccinated child (< 16 years old) attending school (up to 5), and $38 BRL (~US$15) per youth (16 or 17 years old) attending school (up to 2). Furthermore, to families whose per-capita monthly income below $70 BRL (extreme poverty line, ~US$28), the program gives the Basic Benefit $70 BRL per month.[1][17]

This money is given preferentially to a female head of household,[18] through so-called Citizen Cards which are mailed to the family. This card operates like a debit card and is issued by the Caixa Econômica Federal, a government-owned savings bank (the second largest bank in the country). The money can be withdrawn in over 14,000 Caixa bank locations. This practice helps to reduce corruption,[19] a long problem in Brazil, and helps to dissociate the receipt of money from individual politicians or political parties. The names of every person enlisted in the program and the amount given to them can be found online at the Portal da Transparência, the program's website [12:52]Torrek: Bolsa Família (Portuguese pronunciation: [ˈbowsɐ fɐˈmiʎɐ], Family Allowance) was a social welfare program of the Government of Brazil, part of the Fome Zero network of federal assistance programs. Bolsa Família provided financial aid to poor Brazilian families. In order to be eligible, families had to ensure that children attend school and get vaccinated. If they exceeded the total of permitted school absences, they were dropped from the program and their funds were suspended. The program attempted to both reduce short-term poverty by direct cash transfers and fight long-term poverty by increasing human capital among the poor through conditional cash transfers. It also worked to give free education to children who couldn't afford to go to school, to show the importance of education.[1] In 2008, The Economist described Bolsa Família as an "anti-poverty scheme invented in Latin America [which] is winning converts worldwide."[2] The program was a centerpiece of former president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva's social policy and is reputed to have played a role in his victory in the general election of 2006.[3] Bolsa Família was the largest conditional cash transfer program in the world, though the Mexican Oportunidades was the first nationwide program of this kind.[4]

Bolsa Família has been mentioned as one factor contributing to the reduction of poverty in Brazil, which fell 27.7% during the first term in the administration of Lula.[5] In 2006, the Center for Political Studies of the Getulio Vargas Foundation published a study showing that there was a sharp reduction in the number of people in poverty in Brazil between 2003 and 2005.[6] Other factors included an improvement in the job market and real gains in the minimum wage.[5] About twelve million Brazilian families received funds from Bolsa Família.[7] The government cash transfer program in South Africa, for comparison, had 17.5 million individual beneficiaries in 2018 (over 75% of its labour force of 23 million) receiving a total of over US$20 billion per annum in state aid.[8][9]

In 2011, 26% of the Brazilian population were covered by the program.[10] As of 2020, the program covered 13.8 million families and paid an average of $34 per month, in a country where the minimum wage is $190 per month.[11]

ExpandTd is that [18:07]SharkGuy13: this fortnite event might be poggers 4 December 2022 pigmonster64

started a call that lasted 3 hours.
— Today at 06:28

[10:10]pigmonster64: we won a gaim [10:11]Torrek: i'm at 28gbs btw [10:14]pigmonster64: what percenyt [10:15]Torrek: i have done 32gb and it's at 39% [10:15]pigmonster64: ok [10:15]Torrek: but it's only 38gbs [10:16]SharkGuy13: how mush gb u got left [10:16]Torrek: 4.5 [10:26]pigmonster64: is it done [10:26]Torrek: yse [10:26]Torrek: yes* pigmonster64

started a call.
— Today at 10:26

jaycon5000

left the group.
— Today at 10:27

SharkGuy13

added 

jaycon5000

to the group.
— Today at 10:27

jaycon5000

left the group.
— Today at 10:27

[10:27]SharkGuy13: yes he finally left [10:27]pigmonster64: l [10:27]pigmonster64: YES [10:27]pigmonster64: WHEN] SharkGuy13

added 

jaycon5000

to the group.
— Today at 11:19

[11:27]PiGEPON: brb ima play fn [12:31]pigmonster64: Bolsa Familia [12:33]Torrek: Bolsa Familia is good [12:37]PiGEPON: [12:50]pigmonster64: hey this is microsoft support and it seams someone is trying to accses your account reply with your login deatails so we can help [12:50]pigmonster64: reply = vbucks [12:50]Torrek: 1234helloT NEW [12:52]Torrek: Bolsa Família currently gives families with per-capita monthly income below $140 BRL (poverty line, ~US$56) a monthly stipend of $32 BRL (~US$13) per vaccinated child (< 16 years old) attending school (up to 5), and $38 BRL (~US$15) per youth (16 or 17 years old) attending school (up to 2). Furthermore, to families whose per-capita monthly income below $70 BRL (extreme poverty line, ~US$28), the program gives the Basic Benefit $70 BRL per month.[1][17]

This money is given preferentially to a female head of household,[18] through so-called Citizen Cards which are mailed to the family. This card operates like a debit card and is issued by the Caixa Econômica Federal, a government-owned savings bank (the second largest bank in the country). The money can be withdrawn in over 14,000 Caixa bank locations. This practice helps to reduce corruption,[19] a long problem in Brazil, and helps to dissociate the receipt of money from individual politicians or political parties. The names of every person enlisted in the program and the amount given to them can be found online at the Portal da Transparência, the program's website [12:52]Torrek: Bolsa Família (Portuguese pronunciation: [ˈbowsɐ fɐˈmiʎɐ], Family Allowance) was a social welfare program of the Government of Brazil, part of the Fome Zero network of federal assistance programs. Bolsa Família provided financial aid to poor Brazilian families. In order to be eligible, families had to ensure that children attend school and get vaccinated. If they exceeded the total of permitted school absences, they were dropped from the program and their funds were suspended. The program attempted to both reduce short-term poverty by direct cash transfers and fight long-term poverty by increasing human capital among the poor through conditional cash transfers. It also worked to give free education to children who couldn't afford to go to school, to show the importance of education.[1] In 2008, The Economist described Bolsa Família as an "anti-poverty scheme invented in Latin America [which] is winning converts worldwide."[2] The program was a centerpiece of former president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva's social policy and is reputed to have played a role in his victory in the general election of 2006.[3] Bolsa Família was the largest conditional cash transfer program in the world, though the Mexican Oportunidades was the first nationwide program of this kind.[4]

Bolsa Família has been mentioned as one factor contributing to the reduction of poverty in Brazil, which fell 27.7% during the first term in the administration of Lula.[5] In 2006, the Center for Political Studies of the Getulio Vargas Foundation published a study showing that there was a sharp reduction in the number of people in poverty in Brazil between 2003 and 2005.[6] Other factors included an improvement in the job market and real gains in the minimum wage.[5] About twelve million Brazilian families received funds from Bolsa Família.[7] The government cash transfer program in South Africa, for comparison, had 17.5 million individual beneficiaries in 2018 (over 75% of its labour force of 23 million) receiving a total of over US$20 billion per annum in state aid.[8][9]

In 2011, 26% of the Brazilian population were covered by the program.[10] As of 2020, the program covered 13.8 million families and paid an average of $34 per month, in a country where the minimum wage is $190 per month.[11]

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