Team Assistant - Brasilia - IFC Systems Corporation

IFC Systems Corporation
IFC Systems Corporation
Empresa verificada
Brasilia

há 3 semanas

Ana Silva

Postado por:

Ana Silva

beBee Recruiter


Descrição

Team Assistant

Job #:

- req25967
Organization:


  • World Bank
    Sector:
  • Administration/Office Support
    Grade:
  • GB
    Term Duration:
  • 3 years 0 months
    Recruitment Type:
  • Local Recruitment
    Location:
  • Brasilia,Brazil
    Required Language(s):
  • Portuguese, English
    Preferred Language(s):

Closing Date:


  • 2/19/2024 (MM/DD/YYYY) at 11:59pm UTC
    Description

Regional Context
The World Bank Group serves 30 client countries in the Latin America and the Caribbean Region (LCR). Clients range from large rapidly growing middle-income clients to IDA countries to small Caribbean states to one fragile state.

Despite immense resources, dynamic societies, and an average annual per capita income of about $4,000, deep inequalities persist in most LCR countries, with nearly a quarter of the Region's people living in poverty.

The Bank's strategy in LCR is focused on five pillars:
(a) stimulating growth and improving competitiveness. (b) reducing poverty and inequality. (c) making governments and institutions work for people. (d) providing a platform for addressing global issues (climate change, gender, trade, disease, migration), and (e) reducing risk, whether from extreme weather events, climate change, crime and violence or other.


Country Unit and Position Context
Brazil experienced a strong rebound in after negative average growth in and the drastic impact of COVID-19 in 2020.

Growth rebounded to 5 percent in 2021 and 2.9 percent in 2022, propelled by a strong fiscal stimulus, a successful vaccination campaign, favorable commodity prices, and demand for services.

Growth then remained solid in 2023, expected to reach 2.6 percent, driven by agriculture, and boosted by households and government consumption.

Brazil's growth is expected to hover between 1.3 and 2.4 percent in the next four years.

Poverty rates remained stagnant between 2014 and 2022.

Poverty was cut in half (with 27 million of Brazilians lifted out of poverty) from 2001 to 2012 thanks to economic growth, increased labor formalization and the expansion of social policies, but the crisis that started in 2014 led to stagnant income growth among the poorest and little progress in poverty reduction.

Brazil implemented a bold set of emergency measures during the COVID-19 pandemic to help protect the most vulnerable populations, in large part through the expansion of the Bolsa Família (BF) program, and increased job opportunities arose as part of the economic recovery.

Overall, poverty is estimated at 24.3 percent in 2022, on par with 2014 levels, after peaking at 28.4 percent in 2021.

The 2023 poverty estimates are promising, but faster job creation and stronger investments in human capital are needed to reduce striking inequalities.

Yet Brazil remains one of the most unequal countries in the world, with a Gini coefficient of 0.53 in 2021 and the wealthiest one percent owning almost half of the country's household wealth.

Inequalities are striking across regions, particularly between the poorer northern and the richer southern regions, but also within cities and between rural and urban areas.

Female-headed households, Afro-Brazilians, and indigenous populations are overrepresented among the poor, as they face worse labor market outcomes and enduring wage gaps (even within comparable sectors and levels of skills).

Today, nearly half of Brazil's children, the country's future workforce, are growing up in poor households.

Brazil also faces significant climate change impacts compounded by deforestation and land degradation.

Climate change is altering temperature and rainfall patterns in the country, resulting in reduced water availability and extended droughts, and could push another 800,000 to 3 million Brazilians into extreme poverty as soon as 2030.

Continued deforestation in the Amazon and Cerrado biomes remains a matter of urgency, as it has increased land-use emissions - the main source of greenhouse (GHG) emissions in Brazil.

Strengthening resilience to climate change and protection of natural assets, especially the fragile ecosystems of the Amazon and Cerrado, is essential for environmentally sustainable economic growth.


Role & Responsibilities:

The Country Management Unit (CMU) is currently looking for two experienced, hard-working Team Assistants (TA). The incumbents would work closely with other members of the World Bank's country office team in Brazil. The selected TAs will be based in Brasilia, Brazil.

They will report to the Operations Manager (OM) and will also work under the close day to day supervision of the Senior Executive Assistant (Sr.

EA)/support staff (A2D) coordinator.

The TAs' duties will include - but are not limited to - the tasks listed below. They will be prioritized further based on the specific team and activities that each TA will support.

  • Drafting routine correspondence and proofreading materials using proper grammar, punctuation, and style.
  • Assisting

Mais empregos da IFC Systems Corporation