2014-02-10


More than a third of the Dominican Republic lives on less than $1.25 a day and over 20 percent of the country lives in extreme poverty.  Most of the poverty in the Dominican Republic is concentrated in the rural areas.  The rural poverty rate is about three times as high as the urban poverty rate.

Though the economy has been growing since 1996, economic inequality remains a major problem.  Since the government does not provide more than 4 percent of GDP spending on education, only 30 percent of children finish primary school.  In a system where education is the road to the middle class, creating economic barriers to education perpetuates a system of institutional inequality.

Half of the country does not have access to clean water, and over half of the country does not have sanitary toilets. Healthcare is expensive and hard to find in rural areas.

Since the main industry of the Dominican Republic is tourism, rural areas are often overlooked when it comes to government investment.  Though rural communities depend on the farming industry, the government has not done much to address the low agricultural productivity.  Farmers often do not own enough land to manage subsistence farming, making income-generating agriculture impossible.  Although there is technology available to increase crop production, rural farmers simply do not have access to these resources due to financial circumstances.

Natural disasters, including hurricanes, tsunamis, earthquakes, and mudslides, constantly threaten rural areas.  Much of the rural infrastructure has collapsed due to natural disasters

Though President Danilo Medina has promised to spend more on education, he has said little about his plans to increase agricultural production, increase access to healthcare, and provide aid to rural communities.  With a strong focus on tourism, the majority of the nine million people who call the Dominican Republic home are stuck in poverty.

- Stephanie Lamm

Photo: Sleeping My Way To Bliss
Sources: Huffington Post, World Bank, OPHI, Rural Poverty Portal, World Bank



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