Can Esperanto help them ?

I saw this on the facebook note and i copied it here.

It is sad and the world will be come a mess if things are not tackle from the roots.

Corruption etc work in every country.

Just wondering the Mexico Esperanto Association aware of this and thinking some ways to help solving the problem via the Esperanto university.

Many Esperanto associations in the world are not using fully of the facilities that Esperanto University provides.

They have to read this site.




According to a study in Mexico, most young people in the country inherit the inequality and poverty of their families.

The aspiration of almost anyone is to live better than their parents did. But in Mexico, that dream seems very hard... to reach.

Experts warn that most young people inherit the inequality and poverty of their families and are less competitive in the labor market.

The circle of poverty, then is hard to break, says the study, “Multidimensional Poverty among Youth,” prepared by the Center for Social Studies of the Chamber of Deputies, the lower house in Mexico’s federal legislature.

Many of those in school drop out to help their families, but his lack of preparation leads them to poorly paid jobs.

The informal economy is an increasingly common alternative, according to the government's National Institute of Statistics and Geography (NISGI).

The problem exists not only in marginal areas of the country since the phenomenon is increasingly common in cities, according to Alfredo Nateras, a researcher at the Autonomous Metropolitan University (UNAM in its Spanish acronym).

"They have little chance to pursue their dreams right now because their future options are very limited," said Nateras.

According to the National Government Council for Evaluating Social Development Policy (GCESD), in Mexico there are 14.9 million young people between ages 12 and 29 years of age living in multidimensional poverty--in other words who lack access to least two basic services, such as education or health.

Of these, 3.3 million are considered extremely poor since their own income or their family’s is insufficient to buy food.

The lack of employment opportunities, health services, and education is a problem occurring among poor people and those who are not, experts say.

"A person will not necessarily be poor because their parents were," said Rodolfo de la Torre, coordinator of the Office of Research on Human Development (ORHD) in Mexico. "But inequality is cumulative and can become a vicious circle."

As time passes, the gaps among poor people are widening. And when they have families for the next generation this disadvantage becomes more heavily entrenched.

So far, government actions to reduce social inequality "leave much to be desired," says De la Torre.

Many of those in school drop out to help their families, but their lack of educational preparation leads them to low-paid jobs.

Some of the country's public subsidies benefit those who do not need them, as with the price of gasoline or support for various crops.

Instead, programs to alleviate poverty among young people, such as grants and other resources for those who are in school, or Popular Insurance (low–cost health services) have a smaller budget than the ones available for other subsidies. Thus, experts agree, young Mexicans face a difficult and complex social situation.

The governor of the Bank of Mexico (Mexico’s central bank), Agustin Carstens, recognizes that the economy will not grow enough to generate the necessary jobs for this year.

The opportunities for millions of teenagers and young Mexicans, especially in urban areas-are very limited, says researcher Nateras, and are limited to life as a street vendors, low-paying jobs without social security, migration to the United States, a life in organized crime--not just drug trafficking, but kidnapping or human trafficking.

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