Monday, December 31, 2012

Catching up to the 1st world

Brasil is one of the BRIC countries. It has been prosperous for the past ten years. 
Like China, the population of the middle class had quite an expansion.
Brazilians go to the malls which they call ~Shopping~.
Inflation is definitely here. 10 years ago a carton of Marlboro box cost about R$25. Today it is R$53 .
Like all currencies, R$ is worth less everyday. 

To be like everyone else in the world, Brazilians catch up on acquiring goods. Malls are favorite destinations.
Many of them also buy things they don~t need, with money they don~t have.
What else is new!! Take a look at the ads below.


,

You can buy things in installments, even shoes and clothes.
The merchants either accept post dated checks or debit their credit cards each month.

Prices you see in Brazil include taxes. When I ask what is the sales tax rate, no one seems to know. 
.And I manage to find out from the internet. No wonder they don~t know!


BRASIL ! Brazilian Taxes



Taxes on Goods and Services — 
ICMS — Impostos Sobre Circulação de Mercadorias e Prestação de Serviços 
is largely a hidden tax.

powdered chocolate
37.84%
 gasoline
53.03%
 rice
18.00%
 pencil
36.19%
car (w/ 1.0 liter engine)
39.29%
 bed sheet
37.51%
cookies
38.50%
 books
16.72%
toys
41.98%
pasta/macaroni
21.52%
notebook (school)
36.19%
 table
30.57%
coffee
36.52%
 microwave oven
56.99%
footwear
37.37%
 tomato sauce
36.66%
bed
30.57%
 toilet paper
40.50%
pen
46.69%
 plants/flowers
14.64%
beef
18.67%
 cymbals
44.76%
house (average)
49.02%
soda pop
47.00%
beer (canned)
56.00%
clothes
37.84%
cigarettes
81.98%
powdered soap
42.27%
computer
38.00%
bath soap
42.00%
water service (utility)
29.83%
sofa
34.50%
deodorant
47.25%
telephone service
45.65%
detergent
40.50%
bricks
34.23%
DVD
51.69%
television
46.14%
stove/oven
47.25%
wine
47.20%
fruit
22.98%
cough syrup
36.00%

If without 82% tax, a pack of Marlboro cigarette is less than R$1.00, about C$0.55. 
Imagine there is no sales tax even in your country! Things are actually very cheap to acquire.

Sunday, December 30, 2012

2012 New Year Eve

   


 I have been here over a month now. I don~t have a cell phone or a watch. I cannot drive. It costs over R$200 to obtain a 30-day driver license, plus certified translation of my Canadian license. I just let Adriana does the driving. She is the best woman driver I have ever met, except I am slightly better. Ha!

Every time I come here, I lose weight. I am absolutely spoiled by Vancouver~s Chinese food. Brazilian food is just not my ~bowl of rice~. 

I must have been here about 8 times. My curiosity is diminishing. My Brazilian relatives and friends are nice to me. My routine here is similar to Canada - breakfast+coffee, internet, lunch+coffee, internet, coffee, internet, shower, dinner, internet. Cigarette breaks here and there. 


TOM365.com  provides me a few pretty new HD movies.
  
  

I am kind of used to not knowing what the Brazilians are talking around me. I don~t feel left out. Occasionally I get a translation. 

Despite different culture, language, customs and traditions, people are all the same regardless of their country origin. People complain. People shop. People here have no lack of passion. They watch TV. They pursue what everyone else is pursuing. 

So far it is warm but not hot. I get to sleep in an air conditioned room. The sky is mostly cloudy but only scattered shower. I had only a few mosquito bites. So lucky!!

On Boxing Day, Adriana fell and fractured her left wrist bone. That makes her less active - letting the house works go. Good thing she still can drive. 

We~ll be off to the beach again in a week, this time with Rubens and his gf. 

New Year firework in Rio de Janeiro is the most grand in Brazil.
2011 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CI6QQoEUgjU

We don~t like crowds. Will watch it at home.


Friday, December 28, 2012

Soda Nation

    

 

I drink more soda here in one month than a year in Canada.

According to the internet, US is No. 1 soda consumption nation. But I have not seen any soda line up in Costco or any supermarket as huge as here in Brazil. 2L and 3L bottles are very popular here.
I have even seen restaurant customers having 2L soda bottle sitting on their table. 






As I read the ingredient label, I find only sugar - no corn syrup here, but the diet soda contains aspartame - a cancer causing chemical. 

   
Coke Zero here has your name on it!

 


COKE HAPPINESS REFILL




21 MOST SODA-CRAZED COUNTRIES, FROM THE U.S. TO MEXICO 
http://www.thedailybeast.com/galleries/2012/06/02/21-most-soda-crazed-countries-from-the-u-s-to-mexico-photos.html#slide_0

Condomínio Fechado - Gated Communities

When watching news in Brazilian TV channels, there are always crime reporting. Everyday there are murders and robbery. As a matter of fact, a bar was robbed and bartender shot yesterday in Limeira where we are staying.

When in São Paulo, we have to roll up all the car windows and lock all doors. In some cities, cars are allowed going thru red traffic lights after 7pm.

In Brazil, the most widespread form of gated community is called "condomínio fechado" (closed housing estate) and is the object of desire of the upper classes. Such a place is a small town with its own infrastructure (backup power supply, sanitation, and security guards). The purpose of such a community is to protect its residents from outside violence.


       

Like in Hong Kong, high rise buildings have its own security. 
Individual houses are mostly high walled with deterrence features such as electric wires, broken glasses on top of walls. 



Welcome to Alphaville—a gated community of over 20,000 residences in the suburbs of São Paulo.

Driving through Alphaville, Sao Paulo, Brazil


When it comes to peace of mind, Canada is heaven.