From metropolis to megametropolis
Under the Brazilian military regime of 1964–85, São Paulo’s economy grew, and additional public works projects were initiated. However, favelas also began to envelop parts of the city during the 1960s and ’70s, when as many as 300,000 people—many of them from Brazil’s impoverished northeast—poured into the metropolitan region each year. The conservative Paulo Salim Maluf, who served both as appointed mayor (1969–71) and indirectly elected governor (1979–82), extended water and sewer services, removed favelas from central areas, and built public housing complexes on the periphery. With his eye on the presidency, he built the Inmigrantes expressway and extended the Bandeirantes expressway.
Quadros, who won the 1985 mayoral elections, promoted public safety and leveled favelas to make way for new construction. In 1989–92 the radical reformer Luíza Erundina concentrated on social welfare and low-cost housing, notably in the favelas, but Maluf, who was reelected in 1993, ended those policies, preferring massive public housing projects on the outskirts of the city. His terms were marred by corruption involving public works projects, and he was indicted. A Maluf protégé, Celso Pitta, succeeded the mayor; his term (1997–2000) was also beset with scandal. In 2000 Marta Suplicy, a Workers’ Party member, occupied the office and implemented programs aimed at improving lower-income communities while discontinuing many of Pitta’s lavish public works and construction projects. In 2004 her bid for reelection was thwarted by José Serra, one of the founders of the Brazilian Social Democratic Party (PSDB), former health minister, and runner-up in the 2002 presidential elections. During his 15 months in city hall, Serra concentrated on balancing the budget and improving health services. Like others before him, he used the office as a political springboard, winning election as governor in 2006.
Serra’s successor, Gilberto Kassab of the right-wing Liberal Front Party (PFL), came into office in the midst of major urban renewal projects, transportation expansions, and massive cost overruns. He remained mayor until 2013, when he was replaced by Fernando Haddad of the Workers’ Party. In 2014 Haddad was confronted with massive student-led street demonstrations in response to increased public transportation fares. Those demonstrations soon spread across the country and became vehicles for demands for improved education and health care as well as curbs on corruption and greater accountability from elected officials. The demonstrations continued on a smaller but more vehement scale in São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro for the rest of the year. In the 2016 mayoral election, João Doria of the PSDB defeated Haddad to take over the city’s top office.
São Paulo retains its status as one of the world’s most populous and dynamic urban areas, though it continues to be plagued by favelas, traffic congestion, lack of public services, and rates of murder and other violent crimes disproportionately high for Brazil.
Ronald Milton Schneider Aureliano Leite C.W. Minkel