Extreme poverty increases with “educational blackout” in LA

Extreme poverty will rise to 82 million people in Latin America in 2022, despite a decline in poverty in general, in a context of economic slowdown and high inflation, ECLAC warned Thursday.

“It has not been possible to reverse the impacts of the pandemic in terms of poverty and extreme poverty and the countries face a silent crisis in education, which affects the future of the new generations,” said José Manuel Salazar-Xirinachs, executive secretary of the Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (Cepal), when presenting the report Social Panorama of Latin America and the Caribbean 2022.

According to ECLAC, in 2021 the poverty rate in Latin America reached 32.3% of the total population, marking a decrease of 0.5 percentage points (pp) compared to 2020. In 2022, the percentage will drop slightly, to 32.1% or 201 million people.

But this year, extreme poverty will reach 13.1% or 82 million people, when in 2021 that figure stood at 12.9% of the regional population. If compared to 2019, the year before the pandemic, there will be 12 million more people in extreme poverty and 15 million more in a situation of poverty, according to ECLAC.

In education, Latin America and the Caribbean suffers the consequences of the long time in which schools were closed during the first two years of the pandemic: on average, 70 weeks of closure of educational establishments compared to 41 weeks in the rest of the world . The consequences of this great educational blackout are already visible, according to ECLAC.

Young people (18 to 24 years old) who neither study nor work for pay increased from 22.3% in 2019 to 28.7% in 2020.

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