Summary
Contents
Subject index
Latin America 2040 presents a longer term vision of Latin American society and economies, within which current policy debates and actions must be anchored. It includes a set of multigenerational issues that must be tackled urgently in order for countries in the region to sharply reduce inequities as well as raise their economic growth rates. While most Latin Americans have weathered the latest economic turmoil reasonably well, the fact is that the region has been underperforming Asia for the past thirty years. Much of Latin America is mired in the “middle income trap”. This book argues that the current situation is untenable economically, socially and politically. At the same time, the authors believe that the region can and must aim higher and aspire to achieve much more rapid economic growth and a much faster reduction in disparities during the next three decades.
This book presents a bold and ambitious new vision of Latin America and offers an agenda for such a resurgence of Latin America. It offers a strategy for the regional economies to realize this vision by sharply raising their growth rates while achieving much more inclusive societies. This, in turn, will allow Latin America to reverse the trend of the past thirty years during which it steadily and significantly lost its share of the world economy and thus enter a new era of hope and prosperity.
Is Latin America Becoming Less Unequal?
Is Latin America Becoming Less Unequal?
After a period of rising inequality in the 1990s, Latin America's concentration of income began to fall since 2000. Of the 17 countries for which comparable data is available, 12 experienced a decline at an average pace of −1.1 percent per year (Figure 1). The fall in inequality has contributed to a faster decline in poverty for a given growth rate. Inequality in Latin America is the result of state-capture on the part of predatory elites, capital market imperfections, inequality of opportunities (in particular, in terms of access to good quality education), labor market segmentation, and discrimination against women and nonwhites.1 Hence, the observed fall in inequality is good news.
Figure 1 Change in ...
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