It also distributes other agricultural products produced in very large quantities such as wheat, rice, corn and citrus fruits which are important crops of the country. Brazil has one of the most established industrial districts which contributes over 28% of GDP to the Brazilian economy. The large resources provide raw material for most of Brazil's industrial industry and have contributed enormously to the growth of the industrial sector. 14% of the Brazilian workforce is involved in jobs related to the industrial division. These include industries such as automotive, food processing, mining, aviation, and consumer goods (Marques & Nakatani, 2015). However, agriculture is part, directly or indirectly, of the Brazilian workforce. Five million agricultural workers are wage earners concentrated on plantations in the North and South. Furthermore, 70% of these workers do not have formal agreements and benefits and less than 40% are employed all year round (Brazil Economy, 2015). There are also 4.8 million families who survive as sharecroppers, tenant farmers and casual workers. In the last decades of the 20th century, the increasing systematization and domination of prime agricultural land by trade accelerated the dislocation of small family farms. However, there are approximately five million family farms ranging in size from 12 to 250 acres occupying approximately 143 million acres. In
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