Posted on Thursday, 06.07.12
'SOCIAL INCLUSION'
Inequality still haunts Latin America
BY CHRISTOPHER SABATINI
csabatini@as-coa.org
To talk of Latin America as if it were a meaningful unit has always been
forced, if not artificial. But now, as a recently released social
inclusion index reveals, the region is becoming even more divided
between countries — while remaining so within many.
Measuring the performance of 11 countries in the hemisphere by
race/ethnicity and gender in access to public and private goods as well
by political and civil rights, Americas Quarterly's social inclusion
index reveals huge differences between countries in the region. At the
top, with a score of 71.9, stands Chile, with Uruguay just behind at
71.2. Contrast that with the lowest performers, Guatemala at 7.5 and
Nicaragua at 10.3. Brazil is third, but a distant third.
Looking closely you realize that contrasts are stark, not just in the
tremendous gaps between the countries, but within them, explaining their
wildly divergent scores. For all the genuine gains of a rising middle
class in the region, some countries and populations are clearly being
left behind. To give a few examples, in Guatemala while 58 percent of
school-aged children of European descent are enrolled in school, only 35
percent of those of indigenous or African descent are. In Bolivia those
same numbers are 86 percent and 72 percent.
Not surprising, then, that the differences in those countries between
the poor and those approaching middle class are also stark . . . and
based on race and ethnicity. In Guatemala, while 62 percent of
Guatemalans of European descent live on more than $4 per day (slightly
above the poverty line) only 23 percent of their fellow Guatemalans of
indigenous/African descent do — a whopping difference of 39 percent. In
Bolivia the difference between the groups just out of poverty is 17
percent . . . and, of course, in favor of the whiter Bolivians.
As you would expect, countries such as Chile and Uruguay that lack large
indigenous populations and the ugly legacies of massive exclusion and
racism, do not exhibit the same gross distortions in access to public
goods, the market and riches. And that explains, in part, their high
ranking regionally.
Here the scores of two other countries in the index are illuminating.
First is the region's darling of the moment, Brazil. While the country
that put the B in the BRIC countries (in addition to Russia, India and
China) places third in the index, Brazil scores only 51.4. But here's
the good news: With the highest percent of its economy spent on social
programs and its ranking as the third country in the region in civil and
political rights, we see the reasons for Brazil's recent successes in
poverty alleviation, why it scores so well on the lack of differences by
race and its potential.
Peru tells another story. While it ranks third from the bottom (after
Guatemala and Ecuador) in terms of percent of its economy spent on
social programs, it ranks number four in the region in economic growth
and in both political and civil rights. Peru's challenge is to leverage
its economic and fiscal boom and its positive political and economic
environment for broader social inclusion.
There were also three countries that Americas Quarterly could not
include in its index. Unfortunately, despite their professed commitments
to social justice and inclusion, the data collected by the governments'
surveys in Cuba, Argentina and Venezuela were not considered reliable
enough to include in the index.
Ironic, no?
Christopher Sabatini is editor-in-chief of Americas Quarterly and senior
director of policy at the Americas Society/Council of the Americas.
http://www.miamiherald.com/2012/06/07/2838078/inequality-still-haunts-latin.html
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment