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Mario Garnero, Chairman of Brasilinvest, is a partner in the development of one of the world's tallest buildings, the Maharishi Tower in Sao Paulo.

The Ford Motor Company are proud of their community involvement. Ford Brazil have their own commercial website (in Portuguese) showing the models made (or not) by Geraldo). So do Volkswagen Brazil.

You can look at the list of Jon Alpert's Emmy awards and nominations on the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences website.

You can read the World Bank's current assessment of Brazil and its economy, and the International Monetary Fund's pages on Brazil and the IMF.

The International Labour Organization (ILO) has produced a report on The social and labour impact of globalization in the manufacture of transport equipment for a meeting held in April 2000 in Geneva.

You can join an electronic debate on Globalization, Development and Poverty sponsored by the World Bank and the Panos Institute.

A useful source of links on poverty issues is the World Bank's PovertyNet Web Guide.

OneWorld Online has a Guide onGlobalization.

The British Government's Department for International Development (DFID) aims to ensure that its aid goes towards helping the poorest. See Clare Short's speech at Seattle on poverty and globalization.

The UN's Gateway to Social and Policy Development includes links to the World Summit for Social Development (1995) and the UN General Assembly's Special Session on Social Development.

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Geraldo Off Line

Geraldo da Souza was sacked by his employers, Ford Brazil, on December 22, 1998, along with two thousand fellow workers at Ford's Sao Paulo car plant. They'd done nothing wrong - except to entrust their livelihoods to a vast multinational employer bound to the vagaries of the global economy and the company's head-office strategists.

When the Russian economy went into tailspin in early '98, international capital - fearing repercussions in other emerging markets - fulfilled its own prophecy by withdrawing from Brazil: the government was forced to raise interest rates, local consumption and production fell, and Geraldo lost his job.

Problems without borders require solutions without borders. But Geraldo himself has his hands full, with a home to keep (indeed, without a job he may soon have to borrow against it), work to seek, and protest marches to attend.


 

So TV reporter John Alpert traverses the world on his behalf, interviewing representatives of capital and labour, and briefing Geraldo via an internet link-up on their reactions and reflections. He meets economists and unionists, made as well as broken businessmen, and slum tenants forced to sleep eight to a room in the most inequitable society on earth. Ford sends a fax, insisting that it remains dedicated to the Brazilian market. Does that include Geraldo? The World Bank's Gobind Nankini suggests we look at the bigger picture: there's lots of light at the end of a not-too-long tunnel.

"He says, 'hold on, Geraldo,' and everything is going to be okay," Alpert translates. "I feel very small and helpless," responds the man at the other end of the line.


 

Geraldo does eventually get his job back, but he's only one of a handful - over 90 per cent of those laid off are less lucky. How can they share the confidence in the Brazilian economy of millionaire banker Mario Garnero, financing the construction of the world's tallest building in Sao Paulo?

TRANSCRIPT Read the full transcript of Geraldo Off Line





 


 

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To order tapes of any of the programmes in the Life series please contact tve's distribution office by clicking here.

Life Series 1 is produced by TVE with support from:

» The John D and Catherine T MacArthur Foundation


» The Netherlands Ministry of Foreign Affairs

» The Department for International Development UK (DFID)

» The European Commission's Directorate General for Development

» The Rockefeller Foundation

» The Royal Danish Ministry of Foreign Affairs

» The Swiss Agency for Development and Co-operation

» The World Health Organization

» The Netherlands National Committee for International Co-operation (NCDO)

» The Netherlands Organisation for International Development (Novib)

» Unicef and the United Nations Department for Public Information


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