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Quality of life improves: significant increase of middle class in the Caribbean

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

A recent World Bank report has found there has been a 50 percent increase in the number of people joining the middle class in the Caribbean and Latin America over the last decade.

The report, titled “Economic Mobility and the Rise of the Latin American Middle Class” notes that the middle class in the region grew to an estimated 152 million in 2009, compared to 103 million in 2003.

“The recent experience of the Caribbean and Latin America shows the world that policies balancing economic growth while still expanding opportunities for the most vulnerable can spread prosperity to millions of people,” said World Bank President Jim Yong Kim.

“Governments in the Caribbean and Latin America still need to do much more. One third of the population is still in poverty, but we should celebrate this achievement of growing the middle class and learn from it,” he added.

For decades, the World Bank said poverty reduction and middle class growth in the Caribbean and Latin America region crept along at a very slow pace, as low growth and stubborn inequality held back progress.

Over the last 10 years, however, the Washington-based financial institution said the region’s fortunes improved dramatically due to changes in government policies that emphasized the delivery of social programs alongside economic stability.

As a result, the bank said the region’s middle class grew by a half to include 30 percent of the region’s population in 2009.

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