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Details

Autor(en) / Beteiligte
Titel
Social Gains in the Balance : A Fiscal Policy Challenge for Latin America and the Caribbean
Ort / Verlag
Washington, DC
Erscheinungsjahr
2014
Link zum Volltext
Quelle
Alma/SFX Local Collection
Beschreibungen/Notizen
  • In 2012, the Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) region continued its successful drive to reduce poverty and build the middle class. The proportion of the region's 600 million people living in extreme poverty, defined in the region as life on less than $2.50 a day, was cut in half between 2003 and 2012 to 12.3 percent. Reflecting the upward mobility out of poverty, households vulnerable to falling back into poverty became the largest group in LAC in 2005, and represent almost 38 percent of the population. However, in the last two years, the share of vulnerable households has started to decline. The middle class, currently 34.3 percent of the population, is growing rapidly and is projected to replace the vulnerable as the largest economic group in LAC by 2016. The Southern Cone region (including Brazil) continued to be the most dynamic region and the main driver of poverty reduction in LAC, while poverty in Central America and Mexico proved more stubborn. About 68 percent of poverty reduction between 2003 and 2012 was driven by economic growth, with the remaining 32 percent arising from decline in inequality. Overall, equality of access to basic childhood goods and services has improved in recent years. Yet access can be further improved, and serious issues remain concerning the quality of those goods and services, particularly in education and housing infrastructure. Moreover, access increases with parental education and income or assets, reflecting low intergenerational mobility in many countries in the region. As with poverty reduction, most of the progress in equality of access since 2000 has come in the Southern Cone and the Andean regions, while many of Central America's countries managed only small improvements. There are also severe differences at the subnational level and between urban and rural areas, highlighting the need to strengthen the capacity of local governments to deliver high quality basic services to all their citizens.
Sprache
Englisch
Identifikatoren
ISBN: 9781464802911, 1464802912
DOI: 10.1596/978-1-4648-0291-1
Titel-ID: cdi_worldbank_openknowledgerepository_oai_openknowledge_worldbank_org_10986_17198
Format
Schlagworte
absolute terms, access to education, Access to electricity, access to running water, access to sanitation, access to schooling, access to services, Andean Region, annual rate, average annual, average growth, average income, basic infrastructure, capital accumulation, capital gains, Caribbean Region, cash transfer programs, cash transfers, concentration coefficients, consumption growth, country level, developed countries, developed economies, differences in income, dimensional poverty, direct transfers, Disposable Income, drivers of poverty reduction, earning inequality, economic development, economic efficiency, economic growth, economic growth prospects, economic performance, equal distribution, equitable access, Estimates of poverty, extreme poverty, extreme poverty line, extreme poverty lines, farmers, financial crisis, GDP, Gini coefficient, Gini index, growth rates, health expenditures, health insurance, high correlation, household head, household income, household survey, household survey data, Household surveys, housing, human capital, impact analysis, incidence analysis, Income, income concepts, income distribution, income groups, Income growth, income inequality, income redistribution, Income Share, Income Source, income transfer, incomes, individual countries, inequality, inequality reduction, intergenerational mobility, international poverty lines, labor force, Labor income, labor market, labor markets, Low income, macroeconomic implications, macroeconomic stability, Market Income, mean income, middle class, minimum level, negative coefficients, net effect, nutrition, pensions, per capita growth, per capita growth rate, per capita income, Personal income, Personal income taxes, policy implications, poor, poor people, poorer areas, poverty changes, poverty indices, poverty lines, poverty rate, Poverty rates, Poverty reduction, poverty reduction strategy, power parity, private consumption, private transfers, productive potential, Public expenditure, public expenditures, public goods, public investment, public spending, public transfers, quality of life, real per capita income, redistributional impact, redistributive impact, reducing inequality, reducing poverty, reduction in poverty, reduction of income, regional data, regional growth, regional level, regional poverty, regional reports, running water, rural, rural areas, rural household, rural households, rural regions, sanitation, school attendance, schooling, significant differences, significant impact, social progress, social security, social spending, sub-region, sub-regions, sustainable growth, targeting, taxation, unemployment, vulnerable households, Wages, wellbeing

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