Auxílio Brasil, a cash transfer program that should replace Bolsa Família in November, should benefit close to 17 million people, and reach an average of R$300 a month, the Minister of Citizenship, João Roma, reaffirmed this Sunday. , in an interview with TV Brazil, ensuring that the government will have “fiscal zeal” in implementing the measure. The two numbers are higher than the current program, which serves 14.6 million people, with an average monthly payment of R$190.
Even though he has to increase government spending to support the increase in the benefit to the lower-income population, one of Jair Bolsonaro’s banners for the 2022 elections, the minister stated that the government will not lose control of expenses. “You need to be very careful and very careful in your fiscal responsibility,” he said.
The government’s biggest difficulty is finding sources of funds to fund the new program. Rome stressed that two forms of financing are being discussed in Congress and the expectation is that they will be approved. They are the PEC dos Precatórios, which intends to release a portion of resources within the ceiling to pay for the greater expense, and the Income Tax Reform (IR). “The pandemic is passing, but social effects of the pandemic are not passing. It is natural for the Brazilian state to give this answer.”
“Auxílio Brasil is an evolution of the income programs carried out by the federal government,” said the minister today. Rome highlighted that the new program will integrate public policies for low-income or vulnerable populations, with transfer of resources and professional training.
One of the main differences between the new program and Bolsa Família, according to him, is that it offers social protection and the possibility of social transformation, through training people to access the labor market. For this, the government must have the support of Sistema S, which includes Sesc and Senac.
To encourage people to train without fear of losing the benefit, the Minister of Citizenship said that the new program should have a permanence rule in which the beneficiary of the aid, even if she gets a job, can keep the benefit for up to two years , he said on the TV Brasil program. “At Auxílio Brasil, we are making a permanence rule viable,” said the minister.
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