We explain what poverty is and how it is suffered in Mexico. In addition, its general characteristics, percentages, and consequences.

What is Poverty?

Poverty is the lack of inputs and conditions to meet the own basic needs (physical and mental) in a dignified and satisfactorily. Thus, it is about much more than simply the lack of money or goods, although the term " poor " is often used to indicate economic scarcity or to refer to the weakest classes in the social structure.

Poverty indices are a reflection of a country's development capacities and are usually measured through a complex series of indicators that include unemployment, food, own housing, and access to basic services such as health, education, drinking water, or electricity.

In 2014, it was estimated, according to the United Nations Development Program, that one in five people in the world lives in poverty.

Characteristics of poverty in Mexico :

Determining factors

Poverty in Mexico is measured, according to the laws of this country, based on a series of determining factors, which are: food, access to drinking water and electricity, social security, housing, educational backwardness in the family nucleus, economic income, and social cohesion. These factors determine the index of "social development" of a given sector of the population.

Classification

Classification

Five types of poverty are recognized, according to their specific measurement modes:

  • Moderate poverty. The population living on less than USD 20 a day.
  • Coneval poverty. The population that lives on less than 10 USD per day.
  • Relative poverty. The population that lives on less than 5 USD per day.
  • Absolute poverty. The population that lives on less than 2 USD per day.
  • Extreme poverty. The population that lives on less than 1.25 USD per day.

Percentages

Although the Mexican population has less than 50% of citizens living below the international poverty threshold postulated by the World Bank, it is estimated that in terms of national measurement, the percentage is quite different.

Of the 100% of the Mexican population, 76.9% of the total population would live in moderate poverty, 45.3% in Coneval poverty, 28.2% in relative poverty, 13.4% in absolute poverty, and 1, 8% in extreme or critical poverty. These percentages (obviously not cumulative) come from the 2015 United Nations Human Development Report.

Official figures

The above percentages translate into: 87.7 million people living in moderate poverty; 52.8 million in poverty Coneval ; 33.6 million in relative poverty; 15.2 million in absolute poverty; and 2.2 million in extreme poverty.

Social consequences

Social consequences

The social consequences of poverty in Mexico are numerous, and have to do with student desertion, leading in turn to child employment (illegal, but profitable for unscrupulous employers) and also to gender inequality: women are more prone to live in poverty than men, a factor surely attributable to the culture of machismo and unplanned motherhood.

Economic consequences

The poverty of Mexico affects, as in all third world countries, the unemployment rate and the rise in crime, given the impossibility of keeping young people in an educational system that reinforces the values of order and work.

This often leads to the inability to consume and the widening of the differences between the consumption patterns of the middle, upper, and lower social classes.

Psychological consequences

Psychological consequences

The psychological consequences of poverty are more or less universal, as they point to decreased self-esteem, depression, anxiety and insecurity, emotional factors that make job performance even more difficult and often lead to easy outings: alcoholism, drug addiction, etc., thus aggravating the problem even more.

Health consequences

Poverty has an intense impact on the health of the inhabitants, since the most critical cases do not manage to gather the daily calories necessary in their diet to stay healthy, and they are often victims of seasonal diseases, winter cold or health consequences derived from a desperate job, without provisions or medical support of any kind. This, in any case, weakens collective health much more.

Political consequences

Poverty often excludes individuals from the educational system or makes it excessively difficult for them to study, which often results in a state of educational backwardness or ignorance, which is in turn reintroduced to the system through political participation, particularly susceptible to disruptions. populisms and campaign promises. This is the basis of most Latin American populisms.

Racial consequences

Racial consequences

Mexican poverty is closely linked, as in most of the countries of the continent, with the ethnic segregation of a historical nature experienced by Latin American societies, in which the elites have tended to be white and Hispanic, while the black and indigenous majorities are socioeconomically disadvantaged.

If to this we add that 15% of Mexicans belong to indigenous peoples not always contemplated in the school model or reluctant to it due to cultural reasons, it will not be surprising that many of those who live in the lower limits of poverty are of origin. indigenous.

The above content published at Collaborative Research Group is for informational and educational purposes only and has been developed by referring to reliable sources and recommendations from technology experts. We do not have any contact with official entities nor do we intend to replace the information that they emit.

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Anas is an editor of a prestigious publishing company in the United States. She studied Mathematics in Arizona. Anas is also a teacher and one of her long-term goals is to build an institution that offers free education to everyone who are financially not stable. .

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