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TERRAVIVA,
the Daily Record of Copenhagen+5.
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LATIN AMERICA: Poverty Drops But Income Gap Widens By Gustavo González In the case of Chile, that achievement was based on a high level of economic growth, which did not bring about any shift in income distribution, while Uruguay, with a lower level of growth, reduced the gap between the rich and poor. ''The intensity of the economic restructuring process that Latin
America and the Caribbean have been experiencing for over a decade
has defined new winners and losers,'' says the report. As
a result, the gap in productivity has widened between the large
companies, leaders in the modernisation process, and a wide range
of trailing sectors, where the bulk of jobs are concentrated,
says ECLAC. That situation lays the foundations for even greater social inequalities,
by widening the internal productivity and income gap,
the report adds. The
informal sector accounted for 69 of every 100 new jobs created
in the region from 1990 to 1997. Thus, the weight of the informal
economy -- in which 47 percent of employed urban Latin Americans
work -- grew, with the consequent impact on productivity and
wages. But
the problem is not exclusive to the informal sector. In nine
of 16 countries for which figures were available, between 30 and
60 percent of private sector wage-earners lived in poverty. The problem also touches public employees, 20 to 40 percent of whom live below the poverty line in Bolivia, Ecuador, Honduras, the Dominican Republic and Venezuela; around 15 percent in Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, El Salvador, Mexico and Paraguay; and roughly five percent in Argentina, Chile, Costa Rica, Panama and Uruguay. Poverty leads people to join the labour force at an early age, while dropping out of school sets a cap on possibilities of getting a better job in the future. In 1997, according to ECLAC, 22 percent of the region's 13 to 17-year-olds were working for pay. (END/IPS/)
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Read TerraViva The IPS renowned international newspaper will publish a special edition in Geneva, at the United Nations General Assembly Special Session (Copenhagen+5). Follow the conference on line day by day from June 26 through July 1, with exclusive reports by a team of 13 IPS journalists from Asia, Africa, the Caribbean, Europe, North America and Latin America. A selection of the IPS Coverage from Geneva will also be carried by TerraViva Daily Journal (New York) and TerraViva Europe (Brussels),. |
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Has the world lived up to its 1996 commitments..? |
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Solidarity 2000 starting 17th of June! MS's big summer event Solidarity 2000 will start very soon now, with a week-long variety of debates and arrangements. The activities range from encounters between young people from Balkan, Africa and Central America to big conferences on the planet's social development and environment. |
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Judge by yourself: The 1996 Copenhagen Social Summit final report in English, French and Spanish. |
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