The Olympics, starting August 5, have been hit with a steep cut in the operating budget, which was drawn up before Brazil's slide into its worst recession since the 1930s. Penny pinching also extends to Rio's carnival, an annual contest between different samba schools which starts officially on Friday.
The Uniao da Ilha samba school, which has chosen an Olympics theme for its dancers and floats competing in the Sambadrome stadium, says things are far from the carnival's usual image of excess.
The Uniao da Ilha's entry features dancers clad in ancient Greek-style costumes and "tells the story of how Rio is preparing" for the Games, director Paulo Menezes said. "The gods come down from Mount Olympus to see the city and then decide to stay, enchanted."
But the administrative chief for the samba school, Marcio Andre Mehry de Souza, says the financial gods show no sign of blessing pre-Olympics Rio.
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"We spend 15 million reais ($3.8 million) for each parade and only half of that has financing. With the recession it has got even worse," he said, complaining that neither the mayor's office nor the Olympic organizing committee contributed anything, despite the samba school promoting the Games.
"We began working in June on the understanding that we'd get financing, but it never arrived."
Another letdown was the decision by troubled state oil giant Petrobras, which faces a huge drop in oil prices and a crippling corruption scandal, to start giving out its sponsorship in installments.
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Even the wealthier samba schools with big backers -- often someone in Rio's underground betting industry -- are in difficulty.
Neguinho, singer for the famous Beija Flor samba school, told O Globo newspaper that they'd been "negotiating" over salaries for participants just to be able to handle the expenses.
The carnival is embedded in Rio's calendar, but de Souza said samba schools are starting to consider the unthinkable: a strike.
"There's starting to be a consensus on the need to stop taking part in the parades in the future" if the authorities don't help more with funding, he said.
De Souza suggested that tourists to Rio pay a USD 10 tax that would go to supporting the carnival.