This paper examines the extreme case of Itaubal do Piririm, a municipality in the Brazilian state of Amapá, where approximately 93% of the population depends on the federal conditional cash transfer programme Bolsa Família for subsistence. Drawing on fiscal data from Portal da Transparência, the Cadastro Geral de Empregados e Desempregados (CAGED), the Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatística (IBGE), and the Fundo de Participação dos Municípios (FPM) system, this study documents a pathological state of fiscal and economic stagnation characterized by near-zero formal employment (29 registered workers for approximately 6, 000 residents), negligible own-source tax revenue (R800, 000 of a R20 million budget), and an oversized public apparatus consuming nearly half the municipal budget in personnel costs alone. We argue that the case of Itaubal is not an anomaly but an extreme manifestation of a systemic failure embedded in Brazil’s post-1988 fiscal federalism: the creation and perpetuation of municipalities without viable economic bases. We situate this case within the broader literature on dependency traps, rentier local governments, and the political economy of welfare distribution, and conclude with reform pathways including inter-municipal service sharing, administrative fusion, and structural economic development strategies.
Zen Revista (Wed,) studied this question.