Jamaica Gleaner

POVERTY RISES

Capital sees bump in number of persons falling on hard times after years of decline, rural areas record small dip

- Livern Barrett/Senior Parliament­ary Reporter

THE NUMBER of Jamaicans living in poverty climbed to a shade below 20 per cent in 2017, a document released by the Government has revealed.

Ministry Paper 51, which was tabled in the Senate yesterday, indicated that 19.3 per cent of the Jamaican population was living below the poverty line.

This is 2.2 percentage points higher than the 17.1 per cent recorded for 2016.

The figures were included in a report drafted by the finance ministry using data from the Jamaica Survey of Living Conditions.

According to the document, the increase was fuelled by a 5.2 percentage point spike in poverty in the Kingston Metropolit­an Area (KMA).

“The report also informed that the KMA, after recording declines for four consecutiv­e years, registered the largest increase in

poverty, reflecting a decline in mean per capita consumptio­n in real terms by 30 per cent,” the ministry paper said.

Poverty in other towns climbed by 4.1 percentage point, the second straight year it went up, “which worsened the standard of living in that region”.

Overall, the poverty rate for the KMA was 17.1 per cent and 20.1 per cent for other towns.

For rural areas, the number of persons living in poverty remained relatively flat, inching down from 20.5 per cent in 2016 to 20.1 per cent the following year.

“The measures introduced by the Government assisted in curtailing an increase in the poverty rate [for those areas],” the document noted.

Opposition senators used the figures to ridicule their government colleagues. The governing Jamaica Labour Party campaigned on the theme ‘From Poverty to Prosperity’ in the lead-up to the 2016 general election.

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