Poverty reduction stalls in most of LatAm: UN

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Xinhua, Santiago :
A majority of Latin American countries have stopped making headway in poverty reduction, a United Nations agency said Monday.
The Santiago, Chile-based Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC) presented a study that shows poverty affected 28 percent of Latin Americans last year, meaning “its decline has stalled at around that level since 2012.”
More tellingly, the study, titled “Social Panorama of Latin America 2014,” reveals rate of poverty rose from 11.3 percent to 12 percent over the same two-year period.
While ECLAC acknowledged that the projections appear “in an overall context of economic deceleration,” it also noted a lack of social spending on the part of regional governments.
“In 2012 and 2013 a deceleration of social spending growth was observed, which is mainly due to the global economy’s limited dynamism and greater investment in non-social sectors,” said ECLAC, calling on the governments “to strengthen social protection policies that reduce vulnerability in the face of economic cycles, ” to meet poverty eradication targets established by the UN as part of its post-2015 development agenda.
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