Nicaragua’s poverty rate dropped from 29.6 percent to 24.9 percent last year, the Central Bank of Nicaragua, BCN, said Monday.
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According to the National Survey of Measurement of Life, extreme poverty in the country fell from 8.3 to 6.9 percent, and the Gini Coefficient of Inequality improved from 0.38 to 0.33 percent.
Based on this result, "the survey indicates that both poverty and inequality continue to decline at the national level," the BCN President Ovidio Reyes said.
Reyes said the result is good news for everyone in the country because it proves that the model adopted and the nation's economic and social policies are really achieving their objectives.
The International Monetary Fund’s recent assessment of Nicaragua said the country’s economic activity remained robust. Economic growth is projected at 4.7 percent in 2017, supported by strong agricultural and commercial activity.
However, Nicaragua still has the lowest level of GDP per capita in Central America.
"We know that we face a great challenge and that there is still a long way to go. The country needs to improve its per capita income even more, which can be achieved through higher rates of economic growth that allow the creation of jobs and more Income for families," Reyes said.
The survey was conducted in October 2016 among 2,800 households.