Moving Up the Income Ladder? Obstacles to Indigenous Population in Latin America

Latin America is traditionally the region with the highest income and wealth inequality and the indigenous people are the most socially excluded group of the society. The obstacles they face on their way to becoming middle class are numerous. Markets sometimesoperate in an anti-poor way, e.g. capita...

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Main Author: Ivan Grgurić
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Institute of Public Finance 2005-12-01
Series:Financial Theory and Practice
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ijf.hr/eng/FTP/2005/4/grguric.pdf
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author Ivan Grgurić
author_facet Ivan Grgurić
author_sort Ivan Grgurić
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description Latin America is traditionally the region with the highest income and wealth inequality and the indigenous people are the most socially excluded group of the society. The obstacles they face on their way to becoming middle class are numerous. Markets sometimesoperate in an anti-poor way, e.g. capital market imperfections. Next, many Latin American countries are agrarian societies with high land inequality. Also, indigenous people continue to have lower health and education indicators. Possible solutions should include state intervention in providing easier access to credit for the indigenous, land reform, health and education systems that are more universal and better targeting of social transfers.
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spelling doaj.art-c70688b5f5c94fa3aa322fc447db23652022-12-21T23:02:49ZengInstitute of Public FinanceFinancial Theory and Practice1846-887X1845-97572005-12-01294361381Moving Up the Income Ladder? Obstacles to Indigenous Population in Latin AmericaIvan GrgurićLatin America is traditionally the region with the highest income and wealth inequality and the indigenous people are the most socially excluded group of the society. The obstacles they face on their way to becoming middle class are numerous. Markets sometimesoperate in an anti-poor way, e.g. capital market imperfections. Next, many Latin American countries are agrarian societies with high land inequality. Also, indigenous people continue to have lower health and education indicators. Possible solutions should include state intervention in providing easier access to credit for the indigenous, land reform, health and education systems that are more universal and better targeting of social transfers.http://www.ijf.hr/eng/FTP/2005/4/grguric.pdfindigenous peoplepovertyLatin America
spellingShingle Ivan Grgurić
Moving Up the Income Ladder? Obstacles to Indigenous Population in Latin America
Financial Theory and Practice
indigenous people
poverty
Latin America
title Moving Up the Income Ladder? Obstacles to Indigenous Population in Latin America
title_full Moving Up the Income Ladder? Obstacles to Indigenous Population in Latin America
title_fullStr Moving Up the Income Ladder? Obstacles to Indigenous Population in Latin America
title_full_unstemmed Moving Up the Income Ladder? Obstacles to Indigenous Population in Latin America
title_short Moving Up the Income Ladder? Obstacles to Indigenous Population in Latin America
title_sort moving up the income ladder obstacles to indigenous population in latin america
topic indigenous people
poverty
Latin America
url http://www.ijf.hr/eng/FTP/2005/4/grguric.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT ivangrguric movinguptheincomeladderobstaclestoindigenouspopulationinlatinamerica