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Brazil to Sell 7 Million Popular Computers. Only 17% of Homes Have One PDF Print E-mail
Written by Alana Gandra   
Tuesday, 14 February 2006

Brazil's National Economic and Social Development Bank (BNDES) announced Monday, February 13, its approval of the first direct transaction involving computer purchases as part of the Connected Citizen program.

The BNDES is lending a total of US$ 13.8 million for the Magazine Luiza S.A. department store chain to buy at least 22,000  microcomputers for resale on easy terms.

The government's digital exclusion map shows that 55% of the Brazilian population has never used a computer and that computers are present in only 16.6% of Brazilian households.

The BNDES had already approved an earlier, US$ 2.1 million loan to the Pão de Açúcar ("Sugarloaf"), Americanas.com, and TV Sky-Shoptime groups, which also plan to facilitate computer purchases.

According to the BNDES press office, 7 million computers are expected to be sold in the next three years. 5 million of them will be for low-income Brazilian families, while the rest will go to micro, small, and medium-size firms. The computers will be sold at a cash price not exceeding US$ 648.

The Connected Citizen program, created by the federal government in 2005, is designed to foster digital inclusion by giving the low-income population greater access to information technology and the Internet at a lower cost.

Agência Brasil

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written by Guest, February 15, 2006
Ok, I agree that computers became part of our lives. I agree that we need them. However, what about give basic education to children? Day after day and after reading the news, I have the sad feeling that, the little 12-year-old boy that I met a while ago during my vacation in Recife and to whom I taught the simple ABC while I was there, is again ignored and forgotten.
So many families simply cannot try to improve their lives through technology because they simply dont send their kids to school. Or because schools are too far, or because there arenҒt enough teachers there, or because their kids have to work, or simply because they do not know how important education is to life
Ok, it is a so-many-times-spoken speech, but I always feel that the great scenario is not being considered againŅ
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