Brazilians chase civil servants' "train of happiness" (Reuters)
BRASILIA (Reuters) - Late into the night, students diligently rehearse exam questions at dozens of schools in downtown Brasilia that offer people the chance for a better, more prosperous life -- that of a Brazilian bureaucrat.
Generous pay, stability, and often easy hours will attract applications from as many as 10 million people this year for civil service jobs. Brazilians often refer to getting a government job as catching the "train of happiness."
In a country with glaring poverty, grossly inadequate public services and a towering public debt, civil servants do very well, as the many luxurious homes with pools, servants and shiny cars in the capital Brasilia's residential areas show.
There are an average of 700 applicants per job and some candidates study for years to pass an entry exam.
"My parents are civil servants and I want the pay and security they have so I can buy a house and other things," said Rodrigo Hugueney, a 19 year-old law student in the capital Brasilia. He is applying at one of the two state-owned banks.
The problem is that Brazil's bloated public sector is a burden on business and the economy, leaving little money to invest in education or infrastructure.
Business leaders frequently complain about excessive red tape and the complex maze of requirements they face in getting environmental licenses of even filing their taxes. Rather than slashing jobs, the government is adding more.
Despite an economic boom in recent years, Brazil ranks poorly in international competitiveness comparisons, due mostly to an unwieldy state apparatus that consumes about 38 percent of gross domestic product.
An accountant or administrator in one of the gray-green ministries that flank the main avenue of Brasilia's government quarters can earn more than 10,000 reais (3,165 pounds) a month, or roughly 20 times the minimum wage.
A police inspector or public prosecutor can bring home twice as much, the equivalent of around $150,000 a year. In contrast, Brazil's per capita national income stands well below $10,000 annually.
In addition, most civil servants cannot be fired unless they break the law and many receive pensions worth 100 percent of their last salary upon retirement.
Such benefits resulted mostly from years of pressure by unions and politicians eager to satisfy their constituents.
In some government agencies, such as the Federal Police or National Revenue service, rigorous hiring, training and performance controls improved efficiency.
But many areas remain plagued by incompetence, overstaffing and corruption, says Jose Matias Pereira, a public administration professor at the University of Brasilia.
"The public sector needs a major reform, a more corporate management. But, unfortunately, that's not in sight," he said.
TWO-HOUR LUNCHES
Experts say the work ethic has improved in recent years but remains lax, and two-hour lunches still cause traffic jams at midday in Brasilia.
"People don't hang their coats and leave for the day anymore -- things have changed," said Jose Wilson Granjeiro, who was a civil servant for 17 years and runs a school to prep candidates in Brasilia.
"Now you work six hours or whatever and then do another job, you can easily double your income," he added.
Only a public outcry this month stopped ruling party and opposition senators from appointing themselves another well-paid staffer each, posts widely thought to favour friends or political allies.
Opinion polls show that less than 1 percent of Brazilians trust Congress, which has been plagued by corruption scandals.
President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, a former union leader, cut some pension benefits during his first year in office but since has hired as many as 95,000 civil servants and is expected to hire 56,000 more by next year in part to help replace cheaper, outsourced labour.
Despite the tax burden, union leaders are pleased.
"We're rolling back privatization, which wanted to cut our benefits," said Sergio Ronaldo da Silva, director of the Condsef civil servants confederation.
(Additional reporting by Ana Paula Paiva; Editing by Kieran Murray)
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