People of São Paulo
The original settlers of São Paulo were relatively poor and largely from southern Portugal. They were, however, a restless people who sought actively to improve their status in life. Among them were the bandeirantes (explorers) who formed expeditions that pushed far into the interior of South America in search of slaves and mineral wealth, extending, in the process, the frontiers of what has become present-day Brazil.
The great expansion of coffee cultivation in São Paulo state after 1880 instigated a massive immigration of Europeans—mostly Italians but also many Portuguese, Spaniards, Germans, and eastern Europeans. In the early 1900s other settlers came from Japan and the Middle East. Today more Japanese reside in São Paulo than in any other community outside Japan, and Brazilians of Japanese extraction constitute a large proportion of the highly educated professional strata. By the 1930s São Paulo’s growth was based on internal migration, primarily from northeastern Brazil and some from the interior of the state. This migration, which continued for decades, included many descendants of African slaves. By 1970, many Koreans and Bolivians had immigrated to the city. A high degree of assimilation exists among the different ethnic communities, which are dispersed across São Paulo. Many well-to-do immigrants have their own social clubs. Rural immigrants from northeastern Brazil often gather on weekends at particular squares and parks in lower-income areas of the city. As in Rio de Janeiro, the dispersal of population is largely along socioeconomic lines; social tensions are generally much more rooted in economics than in ethnicity.
In 1940 the city had a population of about 1,300,000 and its immediate suburbs slightly more than 100,000. By 1960, however, the population of São Paulo proper had tripled and that of the near suburbs was about six times larger; moreover, a second ring of suburbs had developed with a population approaching 300,000. By 1970 nearly six million people lived in the city and more than one million lived in the immediate suburbs, while the secondary ring roughly doubled and a third ring had begun expanding rapidly. Astonishing growth continued through the 1970s and ’80s, as São Paulo remained a magnet attracting a surplus population from other regions. By the 1990s the growth of the city, with a population exceeding nine million residents, began to slow, but the expansion of the outlying areas of Greater São Paulo continued apace.
As a result of these migratory inflows, nearly two-thirds of São Paulo’s population is of European descent, and slightly less than one-third are of African descent or are mulatto (mulato; person of mixed African and European ancestry).
The remainder of the population is made up of Asians, mainly Japanese, and other very small ethnic groups. Roman Catholicism is the dominant religion, and the archdiocese of São Paulo is one of the world’s largest in number of adherents; yet thriving Pentecostal Christian groups are making serious inroads. There is a significant Jewish community as well. Other religions are represented in smaller numbers, and many Paulistanos attend the rites of Afro-Brazilian, syncretic, and spiritist groups. Portuguese is the predominant language, although other languages, including English and Spanish, are spoken by the more highly educated.
Economy
São Paulo is one of the world’s largest diversified economic centres. It is an international leader in industry, from heavy to high tech; in banking and finance; in commerce; and in global trade. As the capital and core of a state with a gross domestic product (GDP) larger than that of most countries, it has an immense government services sector and looms large in communications and transportation.
Manufacturing
Industrial development, beginning in the late 19th century but intensifying after World War II, has transformed metropolitan São Paulo into the foremost industrial centre in Latin America. The city has outgrown its status as the “Chicago of South America,” because it actually plays a greater role in Brazilian commerce and industry than any one city in the United States. The value of its industrial production is by far the largest of any Brazilian city. Its leading industries produce textiles, mechanical and electrical appliances, furniture, foodstuffs, and chemical and pharmaceutical products. Heavy metallurgical plants located in nearby Taubaté, oil refineries and chemical plants in Cubatão, and plants manufacturing motor vehicles, transportation equipment, and farm machinery in Santo André, São Bernardo do Campo, São Caetano do Sul, and Diadema make large contributions to production. Computer industries and the manufacturing of electrical appliances are on the rise, as are automobile components. The several thousand manufacturing establishments in São Paulo provide employment for more than one-tenth of the population. Despite its rapid growth in recent decades, however, the industrial sector has been able to absorb only a small fraction of the growing labour force. Hence, unemployment and underemployment are continuing problems for the poorly educated, contributing to high crime rates. On the other hand, the very active construction industry provides significant employment.
Finance and other services
Commerce, both wholesale and retail, is well developed and spread over the city by zones according to specialty—for example, the wholesale garment district in Bom Retiro and Brás. Banks are concentrated in the central Triângulo, as well as along Avenida Paulista, but maintain branches in almost every district. All but the smallest Brazilian banks also represent interests from North and South America, Europe, Asia, and Africa. São Paulo’s stock market has taken on global significance, and diversified financial services rival those of other world centres. No less important in terms of employment are street vending, peddling, and neighbourhood stores. Yet huge shopping malls have sprung up near residential neighbourhoods, and new service industries spawned by the computer age provide increasing employment opportunities for the great number of graduates produced by São Paulo’s many universities and technical institutes.