Santa Fe New Mexican

Virus takes poverty in Latin America to new nadir

- By Patrick Gillespie and Maya Averbuch

The coronaviru­s pandemic has sent a wave of poverty racing across Latin America, deepening declines that began over the past decade and consigning millions to lives of deprivatio­n.

The world’s most unequal region saw 22 million people — the equivalent of everyone in New York state — join the ranks of the poor from 2019-20, unable to meet basic needs. In all, about one-third of Latin America’s roughly 600 million residents live in poverty or what the United Nations defines as extreme poverty: subsisting on less than $1.90 a day.

Short of vaccines and hospital beds, Latin America has been uniquely hard-hit due to the intensity of the pandemic and the steepness of its recession, the worst in two centuries. The region accounts for about 30 percent of the world’s COVID-19 deaths, despite having only 8 percent of its population. Its economy contracted 7 percent last year, more than double the decline of any other region.

The crisis is warping societies in ways large and small. A massive Rio de Janeiro library and cultural complex has become a riotous, besieged soup kitchen. In Bogotá, idled musicians serenade the rich, who toss them bags containing small bills with a coin or two for ballast as they fall from the balconies of luxurious apartments. In Mexico City, even attorneys are resorting to pawnshops.

Workers who had attained a tenuous stability are finding themselves jobless. People who labor in the vast informal sector are finding traditiona­l networks of casual employment disrupted. For the unluckiest, life has been reduced to a constant search for food.

In Mexico City’s Calle Monte de Piedad, lawyer Juliana Ortega Aguilar, 36, waited outside the charity that gives the street its name. The centuries-old institutio­n was founded to give the poor affordable loans. Inside, Ortega’s mother was pawning jewelry; the legal office where her husband works closed amid the pandemic. Ortega said few cases were arriving on her own desk.

“We’re a house full of lawyers, but there’s no work,” Ortega said. “We all have to pay rent or a mortgage, the electric bill and even if the kids aren’t going to school, they have to eat, and they get sick.”

Across the region, people who reached the middle-class life are trying to cling to it.

After years of renting in La Plata, Argentina, Romina Bravo, 44, and her husband in 2017 bought a three-bedroom house where 7-year-old Benicio and Valentino, 14, could grow up. They signed up for a government-promoted mortgage with payments tied to inflation, which was supposed to go down.

Instead, it soared, because of a lack of confidence in the peso and a failure of government price controls. Bravo lost her bank job of 22 years right before the pandemic, and her new position as a court administra­tor pays the equivalent of about $320 a month, a fraction of her previous salary. A mortgage payment freeze just expired. Bravo put the house on sale in March.

“It’s either I eat or I pay,” said Bravo. “I’m hoping for help. Otherwise, I’ll be the next one evicted.”

Latin America had made strides in recent decades. By 2019, half its college-age population was enrolled in some form of higher education, up from 23 percent in 2000, according to UNESCO. The middle class expanded to 46 million households in 2018, up from 33 million a decade before, Euromonito­r estimated.

Many countries finally stamped out runaway inflation.

Stable policies and currencies paved the way for foreign investment and job growth. Brazil hosted the Olympics; Argentina held the G20 Summit; Facebook chief executive officer Mark Zuckerberg chose Colombia for his first internatio­nal town hall.

The region’s single dominant economic driver has historical­ly been exports of raw commoditie­s like soy, beef and metals. China’s demand for those materials, a catalyst for growth in the 2000s, is surging again, causing prices to spike and giving policymake­rs hope for growth. But government­s remain heavily indebted — Argentina, Ecuador, Suriname and Belize all restructur­ed their sovereign debt amid the pandemic — and few have money for social spending that could keep citizens afloat.

Glitzy events are now gone, violence is increasing, especially against women, and progress is unraveling. The region lost over 34 million jobs during the pandemic and workers saw more hours cut than in any other region, according to the Internatio­nal Labor Organizati­on. Instead of reaping the economic reward of higher commodity prices, the poor often experience them as soaring food costs. Millions of Venezuelan­s, fleeing a broken, mismanaged country, have spread across the region, adding acute challenges.

The public’s anger is spreading: Faced with its worst contractio­n on record, Colombia is trying to rein in its budget deficit and stave off credit rating downgrades that could send borrowing costs soaring. This week, the government shelved a plan to raise taxes after deadly street protests.

“It really is bad news all around. Unless there’s some serious changes in the structures of social protection in the region, the outlook isn’t promising,” said Santiago Levy, a former top Mexican official who is a senior fellow at the Brookings Institutio­n in Washington. “There’s going to be a long-term loss of human capital.”

In Mexico City, the pawnshops are filled with artifacts of a better life. People — most of whom never redeem their collateral — have left engraved gold wedding rings, refrigerat­ors and washing machines. On a recent visit, those in the city’s historic center offered video game consoles, GoPro-style cameras, hair straighten­ers and blood pressure machines. One employee said she had even accepted a gold flask with a tiny spoon that looked like it was designed for cocaine.

“The middle class is no longer the middle class,” said Erika Guarneros, who buys and sells gold from her family’s stall. “It’s basically turned into the class of the poor.”

The informal sector accounts for at least half the region’s workforce, with people catching jobs where they can, often for cash. The crisis has disrupted traditiona­l labor markets.

In Bogotá, musicians for years used business cards and word-ofmouth to find steady work, and one could hire mariachi troupes directly off the streets. But since the pandemic stopped weddings and quinceañer­as, wealthy neighborho­ods have been filled with musicians playing everything from folk tunes to opera.

 ?? IVAN VALENCIA/BLOOMBERG NEWS ?? Elio Materan, a harpist; his wife, Karla Rivero, a maracas player; and their 9-year-old daughter, Karlieth, walk to meet others April 25 to play llanero music for money in Bogotá, Colombia.
IVAN VALENCIA/BLOOMBERG NEWS Elio Materan, a harpist; his wife, Karla Rivero, a maracas player; and their 9-year-old daughter, Karlieth, walk to meet others April 25 to play llanero music for money in Bogotá, Colombia.

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