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Poverty: World, Mexico, USA Copyright Community Links International, 501c3 March 2012.

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Presentation on theme: "Poverty: World, Mexico, USA Copyright Community Links International, 501c3 March 2012."— Presentation transcript:

1 Poverty: World, Mexico, USA Copyright Community Links International, 501c3 March 2012

2 1 out of 5  $1.25 per person per day threshold for extreme poverty is a standard adopted by the World Bank and other international organizations to reflect the minimum consumption and income level needed to meet a person's basic needs.  1/5 of the world’s population (1.4 billion people) fall below this line  They lack the ability to fulfill basic needs, whether it means eating only one bowl of rice a day or forgoing health care when it’s needed most. 2 Source: World Bank, World Development Indicators, 2008

3 What is Poverty?  “Poverty is pronounced deprivation in well being.” (World Bank, 2000)  Poverty is multi-dimensional  Reality varies from one country to another  Pronounced differences in quality of life across populations  Many indicators contribute to quality of life 3

4 Well-being  Capability to function in society  Poverty arises when people lack key capabilities - inadequate income or education, or poor health, or insecurity, or low self-confidence, or a sense of powerlessness, or the absence of rights such as freedom of speech. 4

5 Measuring Poverty 5 IndicatorDescription IncomeHow much we earn HousingWhere and how we live NutritionWhat & how much we eat ConsumptionThings we buy and use every day EducationAccess to and ability to go to school Medical careAccess to and ability to seek medical and dental care

6 Consumption and Income  Two common & useful indicators of poverty  Measured across many segments of population  Wealthy = those with access to many good & services in a variety of forms  Poor = those with access to limited goods & services  Monetary values are assigned to the range of wealthy vs. poor 6

7 World Poverty Levels 7

8 Poverty in Mexico 8 Food Supply Poverty insufficient resources to meet basic nutritional needs. This group doesn’t have enough food let alone anything else 14% of Mexico Asset Poverty insufficient resources to meet basic needs of nutrition, health and education. Income is not enough to secure all 3 21% of Mexico Concentrated in rural areas where there are no hospitals and only elementary schools Patrimonial Poverty insufficient resources to meet all basic needs including food, clothing, housing, health services, education & public transportation. People cannot afford all these things 44-60% of Mexico Numbers vary depending on official Mexican govt statistics versus unofficial statistics 113 million Total Mexico Population in 2010 Source: World Bank, World Development Indicators

9 Poverty in Mexico  60% of Mexicans live in some state of poverty as measured on previous slides  14% of Mexico population cannot buy enough food; lives on less than $1/day. This is part of the.88 billion people worldwide  5 million more Mexicans fell below the $1/day poverty line between 2006-2008 (causes linked to shift from US purchase of biofuels versus crude oil) 9

10 Poverty in USA  2010 Poverty rate = 15.1% (46.2 million)  2010 real median US household income = $49,445  2010 family poverty rate = 11.7% (9.2 million)  $22,314 = the weighted average poverty threshold for a family of four in 2010  16.3% without health insurance coverage  2010 was the 4th consecutive annual increase and largest number in the 52 years for which poverty estimates have been published 10 U.S. Census Bureau, published 09/13/2011 Income, Poverty and Health Insurance Coverage in the United States: 2010

11 Side-effects of Poverty 11 Poverty means….  Lower Life expectancy at birth  Less access to improved sanitation  Fewer Years of education  Lower Literacy Rate  Smaller Urban population  Fewer Usage / Access to Phones, Computers, Internet  Fewer Cars / Less access to transportation  Lower Carbon Dioxide Emissions

12 Side-effects of Poverty 12 Poverty means….  More Deaths under age 5  More Deaths caused by infectious disease  Higher Fertility Rate  Higher Population growth  Increased Net Migration Rate

13 Inequality in Poverty  2% of the population owns 50% of the world’s total wealth / global assets  1% owns 40% world global assets  10% owns 85% world global assets  50% of world's adult population account for 1% global wealth  wealth = physical and financial assets, e.g. personal savings, home, land, stock ownership, -less debts 13 Source: Study by Helsinki-based World Institute for Development Economics Research of the United Nations University, 2000, http://www.commondreams.org/headlines06/1222-04.htm

14 1964 Border Industrialization Program  Where—border towns such as Tijuana  Why---end of Bracero program led to high unemployment in border towns  How---Factories along the border where built in order to easily transport products to US  What---most factories, or “maquiladoras,” make TVs, electronics, and textiles. Copyright Community Links International, page 14

15 1994 NAFTA - North American Free Trade Act  Designed to remove trade barriers between Canada, United States, and Mexico  Results: huge increase in migration towards the border towns with maquiladoras --corn subsidies  Increased number of maquiladoras Copyright Community Links International, page 15

16 Contact Us Community Links International 916 Wren Drive San Jose, CA 95125 Phone: (408)723-5366 www.commlinks.org Jim Petkiewicz, Founder, peckos@comcast.netpeckos@comcast.net Arturo Ortega Vela, Founder


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